View allAll Photos Tagged robot
Using the robotic vehicle trainer developed at Picatinny Arsenal, a student attempts to place a brick of C4 explosive in a location that would destroy nearby improvised explosive devices within a virtual training environment. U.S. Army photo.
Read more: go.usa.gov/4GE
We are teaching a new maker art class called ‘Robot World’, to help 4th and 5th graders create their own artistic robot. This after-school class is taking place in fall 2017 at the Lycée Français in Sausalito. Students are learning how to make their bots move in a variety of ways, as well as play sounds and light up, using a programmable Arduino board.
This photo set covers the first half of our 12-part course, when students get to build their robots. Each student received their own robot kit, which they learned to assemble, control and program. They first built a chassis, then wired up the electronics, assembled a remote control, then added a head and arms, with servo motors to make them move.
We then laser cut wooden figures and body parts based on their designs, which included a police bot, a swat bot, a devil bot and a chef bot. Once their bots are designed and assembled, they will learn how to program them and make them move in different ways, then decorate them, give them a story, and present a robot show to their friends and families in December.
For this course, my partner Edward Janne and I created our own robot kit, using an Arduino Feather M0 for the robot, an RF remote, a custom chassis, plus three additional servos and more parts. Our robot kit is similar to commercial products, but with a lot more features, at a lower cost. It was a lot of work, but we’re very happy with the final results, and our students seemed to really enjoy the class. We hope this will encourage other teachers, students and makers to create their own animated characters, for art and technology’s sake.
View more photos of our ‘Robot World’ class:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157687758927575
View photos of our ‘Create a Robot‘ class:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157687842857094
Read our online student guide to learn how to create your own robot:
Learn about our ‘Robot World’ class for children at the Lycee:
fabriceflorin.com/2017/08/18/robot-world/
Learn about our ‘Create a Robot’ class for adults at Tam Makers:
www.tammakers.org/create-a-robot/
Learn about our Maker Art classes:
fabriceflorin.com//teaching-maker-art/
Learn about Tam Makers, our makerspace in Mill Valley:
#arduino #robots #makers #makerart #makered
Two robots conducting experiments in polar regions run on solar and battery power, making weight an important issue in their construction. These robots currently use ATV tires, which, while functional, are extremely heavy. Student designed, built, and tested new wheels to replace the ATV tires, reduce the total robot weight, improve traction, and reduce snow infiltration into wheel assembly. Each wheel consists of an aluminum frame, a rubber tread, and two plastic covers and weighs 3.5 kg.
Students Diana Blank, Ian Graves, David Heinicke completed this project for their ENGS 190/290 engineering design course.
With work in 3D and Cam captures Sunil has made an application that lets you build robots with custom patterns including your face if you wish. These can be printed out and turned into a real robot. Or placed on a virtual 3D robot. Very Japanese ;-) I think it was nice to see the students from different cultures see how their cultures are overlapping.
The Heavy Bob its a ScrapBot build by the Scrapmaster, to clean the junk yard. He are good with it's job, but sometime stops to see the seagulls flying above the Junk yard...
In a PUMA robotic arm wrist joint the fifth gear is turned by the large 90 degree ring gear. Concentric with the drive gear is a small drive gear that turns a smaller ring gear, which in turn drives the sixth axis via a short shaft.
We are teaching a new maker art class called ‘Robot World’, to help 4th and 5th graders create their own artistic robot. This after-school class is taking place in fall 2017 at the Lycée Français in Sausalito. Students are learning how to make their bots move in a variety of ways, as well as play sounds and light up, using a programmable Arduino board.
This photo set covers the first half of our 12-part course, when students get to build their robots. Each student received their own robot kit, which they learned to assemble, control and program. They first built a chassis, then wired up the electronics, assembled a remote control, then added a head and arms, with servo motors to make them move.
We then laser cut wooden figures and body parts based on their designs, which included a police bot, a swat bot, a devil bot and a chef bot. Once their bots are designed and assembled, they will learn how to program them and make them move in different ways, then decorate them, give them a story, and present a robot show to their friends and families in December.
For this course, my partner Edward Janne and I created our own robot kit, using an Arduino Feather M0 for the robot, an RF remote, a custom chassis, plus three additional servos and more parts. Our robot kit is similar to commercial products, but with a lot more features, at a lower cost. It was a lot of work, but we’re very happy with the final results, and our students seemed to really enjoy the class. We hope this will encourage other teachers, students and makers to create their own animated characters, for art and technology’s sake.
View more photos of our ‘Robot World’ class:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157687758927575
View photos of our ‘Create a Robot‘ class:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157687842857094
Read our online student guide to learn how to create your own robot:
Learn about our ‘Robot World’ class for children at the Lycee:
fabriceflorin.com/2017/08/18/robot-world/
Learn about our ‘Create a Robot’ class for adults at Tam Makers:
www.tammakers.org/create-a-robot/
Learn about our Maker Art classes:
fabriceflorin.com//teaching-maker-art/
Learn about Tam Makers, our makerspace in Mill Valley:
#arduino #robots #makers #makerart #makered
Corpo Automi Robot. Tra arte, scienza e tecnologia.
25 ottobre 2009 - 21 febbraio 2010
Villa Malpensata - Villa Ciani
Lugano -Svizzera
La mostra “Corpo, automi, robot. Tra arte, scienza e tecnologia”, organizzata dal Museo d'Arte in collaborazione con la Fondazione Antonio Mazzotta di Milano e con la partecipazione del Museo Nazionale della Scienza e della Tecnologia “Leonardo da Vinci” di Milano e del Museo Cantonale d’Arte di Lugano, affronta con un approccio interdisciplinare il rapporto tra il corpo umano e la rappresentazione che di esso è stata data da parte delle arti, della scienza e della tecnologia, soprattutto per quanto riguarda la dinamica dell’imitazione del corpo (con gli automi) e della sua sostituzione (con i robots).
I sketched my robot tea strainer - twice! - and put them on top of a prevously prepared background I had sitting in a pile.
Swapbot: Robot PC (Amazing Mail ART group)
São Paulo (SP) 10.03.2022 - 9º Congresso Brasileiro de Inovação da Indústria - Robótica
Glenda Kozlowski, Paulo Mól, diretor-superintendente do SESI, na premiação da categoria aliança finalista, os ganhadores são os times Starbots (MG) e BrainMachine (GO)
Foto: Mario Castelo/CNI