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"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 was experimenting with my pieces trying to figure out a way to create a joint similar to a ball & socket joint, just smaller, so i came up with this little guy

Here's my latest Great Ball Contraption module. It features a robotic arm with five degrees of freedom using two networked NXTs. It's an incredible overkill for moving LEGO balls from one spot to the other - but that's whole point of GBCs, isn't it!

 

Thanks to Akiyuki for inspiration and the wrist design.

 

You can see this module in person at some upcoming LEGO fan festivals - BrickFair NE in Manchester, NH in early May, or at BrickFair VA in Chantilly VA in early August. www.brickfair.com

 

Here is a video featuring the GBC module: www.youtube.com/watch?v=NuDCUx8rbSQ

 

Here is a second video that focuses specifically on the robot arm: www.youtube.com/watch?v=bKafht51Juw

Add credit please c: either to my flickr or amber-d00d.tumblr.com

These three subjects are styrene space figures made by Lido in the early 1950s. There were eight different robots and aliens in this series. They were sold in groups and were also available in large playsets, notably tied into the Captain Video television show. As a kid, I had some of these 2¼” figures, but not all of them. Some of my originals survived and I managed to get several others off eBay back in 2008, but I’m still missing one of them. These eight figures, plus a separate set of four humanoid spacemen (I don’t have any of those guys), were scaled down and offered as premiums in Post Raisin Bran, during the early ‘50s. I’ve managed to get all twelve of these mini versions, again with the help of eBay, although some of the figures are later test shots, not original production pieces.

 

Robot “B” – The original bolt heads on the feet were inconsistent, so I replaced them. Otherwise, changes were just removal of the molded-on base and parting line. I added height to the board game piece devise so its top wouldn’t be at the same level as the robot’s arm. The textured terrain is a piece of sheet styrene that was vacuum formed over coarse sandpaper!

  

Robots, such as that shown above, could help farmers with some of the work, while providing volumes of information to help plant, manage and harvest better crops.

Posted via email to ☛ HoloChromaCinePhotoRamaScope‽: cdevers.posterous.com/robot-triceratops-artisansasylum. via Tweetbot for iOS ...

 

 

Quoting from the Artisan's Asylum First Winter Open Studios! Facebook event page:

 

Yes, Artisan’s Asylum is holding its first Winter Open Studios on Saturday December 1st, from noon to 5PM. It’s FREE, open to the public, and families are welcome; so come join the fun, and tell your friends that this is a chance to see what everyone's talking about.

 

More than twenty makers, crafters, jewelers, engineers and artists will participate. Tour group workshops and individual studios, observe demonstrations, purchase unique artworks and talk to who made them. Enjoy dragons, robots, collages, and interactive computer-generated music installations. Watch welders and glassworkers first-hand, and see jewelry being made on a 3D printer.

 

Artisan’s Asylum is now one of the largest collaborative maker/art/hacker spaces in the USA, with robust shop facilities for making almost anything you can dream up. Classes range over media including woodworking, metalworking, electronics, robotics, silk-screening and more. You can even sign up for one when you visit this event.

 

For more information, visit Artisan's Asylum's website, as well as on Facebook and Twitter. And there is also, of course, a Flickr account and Flickr group.

 

 

I also have other photos of Artisan's Asylum, many related to SYBS: Somerville Youth Build and Sail, a project where we are building Optimist sailboats with our kids, and they will in turn learn to sail in them on the Mystic River.

A picture of a robot with his legs thru the view of a disposable camera

If using this image please attribute to "Kitmondo PPM" -http://www.kitmondo.com/used-process-and-packaging-equipment.

 

Images from listings on our website Kitmondo.com in the process, packaging and manufacturing section. See a range of processing, packaging and general manufacturing machinery, robotics and equipment from across the globe on our site..

Im Zucker in Bremen

Insect robot build after the description in Oreilly Make Arduino Bots and Gadgets

Detail: Just a quick working model hold together with tape velcro and cable binders ;-) Big eyes wrking with ultra sonic to measure the distance to avoid obstacles.

 

Video of V 0.0.1.2 here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=UHLnzWc7X3I

 

More pictures and another video here: xinchejian.com/2011/04/11/insect-robot-from-lumi/

Valeria is a particular robot. She's built from an old drill, her arms consist by sugar tongs, and her legs are constituted by two engines of mixer. Valeria means Versatile Artificial Lifeform Engineered for Repair and Immediate Assassination

If you can find me a bigger robot made of legos, I will marry you.

The robot jockey was controlled by a wireless car key. The unlock button made the whip spin. Since 2005 the government of Qatar has imposed severe punishments for using children as jockeys

Taller de Armado y Programación de Robots en el 2do. Campamento Científico del Uruguay

 

Este innovador taller, que dio inicio a un Programa llamado "Robot Diplomacy", de la embajada de Estados Unidos en Uruguay, tuvo lugar en el marco del 2do. Campamento Latinoamericano de Ciencias, que lleva adelante la Dirección de Innovación Ciencia y Tecnología del MEC, con el apopo de ANEP y UTU en Minas, departamento de Lavalleja. La Ingeniera Mecánica Theresa Dixon, de la embajada de los Estados Unidos en Montevideo, fue la encargada de dictar este taller.

 

[U.S. Embassy Photo: Pablo Castro / Copyright info]

Victorian Refugee Week Launch 2016

Wind-up robot is tin with plastic arms. Posts in feet give him a funny walking action, while head and shoulders turn side to side and he makes funny faces. A 1960s robot made in Japan by Yonezawa

Robot Gothic

LF 4x5 Adox chs100

Speed Graphic

Un-named Petzval

LEGO Mindstorm NXT Robotics in VET IT

Modélisation / Rendu de robots pour la marque Sika (silicon worlds)

Odaiba, Tokyo Japan

Robot Casero - Home made Robot

 

Taller de Armado y Programación de Robots en el 2do. Campamento Científico del Uruguay

 

Este innovador taller, que dio inicio a un Programa llamado "Robot Diplomacy", de la embajada de Estados Unidos en Uruguay, tuvo lugar en el marco del 2do. Campamento Latinoamericano de Ciencias, que lleva adelante la Dirección de Innovación Ciencia y Tecnología del MEC, con el apopo de ANEP y UTU en Minas, departamento de Lavalleja. La Ingeniera Mecánica Theresa Dixon, de la embajada de los Estados Unidos en Montevideo, fue la encargada de dictar este taller.

 

[U.S. Embassy Photo: Pablo Castro / Copyright info]

We are teaching a new maker art class called ‘Robot World’, to help children create their own artistic robots. This class for grades 4-5 is taking place 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 our our first classes, when students designed their own robots, as well as a magical world for them to live in. They imagined a future space city connected to earth by a long elevator, and populated by robots and friendly demons. They named it Foodville: a peaceful world filled with food, including soda fountains, cars powered by slushies, with cotton candy clouds and a sea of apple juice.

 

Students created animated characters designed to make their world a better place: two police bots, a care bot and a friendly devil. They can throw marshmallows and cotton balls, to insure a life of ‘everlasting fun.’ In coming weeks, we will laser cut wooden figures based on their designs, and they will assemble their bots, make them move, then decorate them, give them a story, and present a robot show to their friends and families.

 

Each student received their own robot kit, which they will learn to assemble, control and program. They will then take their completed robot home with them, after the class ends. For this course, my partner Edward Janne and I have 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.

 

View more photos of our ‘Robot World’ class:

www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157687758927575

 

Learn more about our ‘Robot World’ class at the Lycee:

fabriceflorin.com/2017/08/18/robot-world/

 

Learn more about our Maker Art classes:

fabriceflorin.com//teaching-maker-art/

 

Learn more about our ‘Create a Robot’ class for adults at Tam Makers:

www.tammakers.org/create-a-robot/

 

Learn more about Tam Makers, our makerspace in Mill Valley:

www.tammakers.org/

 

#arduino #robots #makers #makerart #makered

 

Robot War show at Robot Restaurant in Shinjuku, Tokyo, Japan.

    

© 2013 Christian Lau - All Rights Reserved

A "herbie" style LM386 based light-seeking robot, with two reversing switches. The front switch is a bump switch. The second switch is a foot in front that makes it back up when it tries to drive off the table.

Dreamer, a mobile humanoid robot, is the brainchild of mechanical engineering Assistant Professor Luis Sentis, who established the Human Centered Robotics Lab in 2010. (Photo courtesy of Cockrell School of Engineering)

Unimpressed with the 500USD device. Very loud.

Arena Backstage.

 

I attended this Robot Wars style live event with my friend's team, who were competing in the featherweight class.

 

As well as helping to prepare the featherweight machines, I had a go at driving them, and also brought along my LEGO robots to display in the pits.

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