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Robot gashapon from Japan

A toy robot, four centimetres high.

Mare Island Naval Base, abandoned.

more "robots powered by the dreams of animals" series

Cerro Catedral - Bariloche - Río Negro - Patagonia - Argentina

 

I took my robot, which was part of a contest, and although I did not win, the robot seems to be happy, so, it worth it :P

A robot clock at my mum's.

A reference for a 3d render

 

www.recyclart.org/2012/07/robot-assemblage-sculpture-nigh...

 

If you don't find me at auto and marine salvage yards, scrap metal yards, military surplus shops, construction site dumpsters, yard sales, swap meets, etc... then I will be in my workshop scratching my head trying to figure out how to connect items that were never meant to be put together.

  

++ More information at Talbotics website !

Idea sent by Tal Avitzur !

Tweaked in Aviary

Trabalho que fiz ha uns 3 anos na facul, feito em PU (poliuretano) esculpido ,lixado e pintado.Bom Hj acho q faria melhor , mas qd fiz achei o máximo ...rsrsrsrs

Tem projeto novo logo logo postarei aqui...aguardem

This is the robot my friends built for their robotics course. It can (in theory) move in any direction and rotate independently. It is programmed to find an object using the camera (e.g. your leg) and to bop it with the little telescopic arm in the bottom-left of the photo. Which is quite amusing :)

A robot from my collection...

This is the latest pencil sharpener I bought. I got it on a childrens flea market. If you sharpen a pencil (or alternatively use the key that comes with the robot), you are winding it up and afterwards he is walking.

A robot at the science fiction exhibition currently on at the British Library

Robot gashapon from Japan

The Robot Junior was introduced in 1954 by Otto Berning & Co. in Schwelm, Westphalia. This internationally much advertised steel-camera of the ingenious constructor Heinz Kilfitt had two remarkable features, first a modern type of film advance with double exposure lock and coupled shutter cocking, and second a multi-speed kind of rotating shutter from Gauthier, made completely of metal.

 

The Robot 2's special feature was the most significant for the whole camera series: a strong spring motor for film advance, made by the Black Forest clock maker Baeuerle & Söhne. That allowed to make a series of images in a few seconds. Maybe this feature plus the camera's robust stainless steel body made it one of the prefered cameras of the German army. Especially the German Luftwaffe owned special versions of it with more robust spring motor and a 75mm Xenar lens.

 

With the Junior, film could now be rewound into the feed cassette in the camera as in other 35 mm cameras but loses the angle finder and the rewind mechanism of the Star.

-Camerapedia

 

A doodle with MS paint of a robot attacking a city.

este es un arte que pense para un juego de robots

Sparky from my Robot Wars papertoy/wind-up kit available now at Barnes and Noble.

Robotic arm at Autofuss.

Robot learn from Humans? Humans learn from Robot? #edcmoocw3

Tomy Nostalgic Heroes Series - Large blowmolded reissue Johnny Soko Robot

i want my own robot

Pages from a great book about robots by Jasia Reichardt published by Thames & Hudson in 1978.

I decided to attempt a revamp of one of the new HF mechs using TheBoltTron's style. I think it turned out quite well, although it isn't very poseable. I especially like how the cockpit area turned out.

 

If you want to see more mech revamps in a similar style, go check out TheBoltTron's photostream! :D (spoilers, most of them are better than this)

"Robot II Luftwaffe Eigentum Black, an outstanding Army Robot Camera.

During the world war II, Otto Berning produced his famous Robot Luftwaffe Eigentum

( Air force property), this was a special production of flight recognized cameras.

This is a beautiful F serial, 4th version of 1942, with Long-long advance knob

(48 exposures) and two holes on top. The F serial comes from the german

word "Flieger" or "Flyer", with the famous Sonnar 7,5 cm lens,

in aluminium body of 1941, a rare war time lens, the most popular lens was the

Tele-Xenar of 7,5 cm, the Biotar 2,0, and the Xenon 1,9 lens. Only a few units of this

versión was fited with the Carl Zeiss 7,5 cm Sonnar.

The camera was used in several German fighter planes like the Messerschmitt BF 109 and 110

and the Focke Wulf 190. In the last one the camera was mounted in a cradle in the right

wing and was connected with the guns. The camera could also be used handheld by the crew

This is a very little master piece of collection. Some research say that 20.000 units

were made."

/ robot-zeiss-kodak.blogspot.com /

   

I first learned of this robot on the Roadside America website and this is how they described it:

In the town of East Durham, on the property of Blackthorne Resort, there is a 17-foot-tall steampunk robot. It looks like a perfect representation of its theme and should please any steampunk fan. As you roll into the property you should see it on the left, inside a tall, open, prefab steel building.

 

The robot is a permanent guest of the resort, and was built in 2014 by Thomas Willeford, a famous steampunk "maker." He said he eventually wants to build a 25-footer with room for him to sit inside and operate the controls.

 

Technically finished on Christmas Day! I pinned the completed control panel to the robot so that he would be in the recipient's stocking in the morning. . .

 

From Hillary's pattern!

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