Archive for March, 2008

Get your Bot Mag back issues right here!

Tuesday, March 25th, 2008

We now have the full run of Robot Magazine back issues available in our catalog, for just $5.99 per issue.  That’s almost three years of robot goodness!  Every issue is packed with product reviews, robot building tips, industry insights, and more.  Visit our Robot Magazine back issue section for more information about each issue, as well as links to free online content.

I can only assume that, having seen this, you’re about to go order all of the back issues so you can catch up on all the cool news you’ve been missing.  Go do that, and then head over to BotMag.com and subscribe!

Adaptive Walking Hexapod from Micromagic Systems

Wednesday, March 19th, 2008

Matt Denton, of Micromagic Systems, posted a few cool videos of his latest hexapod in our forum today.  You may remember news of his iC Hexapod making the rounds last year.  The project he's showing off right now is the B.F. Hexapod (V5).  One of the main features of this robot is its adaptive walking style.  Thanks to its gimbal-mounted, contact sensitive feet and its on-the-fly gait adjustments; it is perfectly suited to uneven terrain.

I'd be a damn fool if I didn't include his demonstration videos, so here they are:

Here’s another video.
Yet another.
Just one more.

If you want to discuss how awesome this robot is, visit the forum thread.

Rest In Peace, Sir Arthur Charles Clarke.

Wednesday, March 19th, 2008

On behalf of all of the innovators, visionaries, and futurists of the world; we’d like to express our deepest respect in recognising the departure of a great mind from this wonderful and beautiful universe in which we all reside. Arthur C. Clarke, may we all forever bask in the light of your genius, and may your memory forever shine with the light of the stars.

Arthur C. Clarke, 1917-2008

Trossen Robotics Garage Sale!

Tuesday, March 18th, 2008

It's spring cleaning time, folks!  We're clearing out some of our storage space to make room for new stuff, so we're offering up some great kits for dirt cheap.  Here are some recent additions to the Trossen Robotics Garage Sale:

Superdroid Tri-Wheel Omni-Directional Vectoring Robot Kit

Vectoring omni-directional bots are really cool, and you know you've always wanted one.  Buy this kit, give it a brain, and then come post about it in our forums.  The platform is 12" on each side, so there's plenty of room for a small single-board computer.

Included: All the nuts and bolts, 2 platforms, battery packs, dual-layer omni-wheels, hubs, motors, and wires.  Basically a complete hardware package.  All it needs is motor controllers, a brain, and… you.

Sale Price: $200

 
24V 3.6Ah NiMH Intercooled battery pack

The cells are spaced for air flow, and and the pack is equipped with two built-in fans.  Active cooling allows for longer high-current operation and faster charging.

Sale Price: $40

 
BattleKits Feather Weight Kit

16 inches wide by 16 inches long, this is the baby of the BattleKits family.  Despite (or perhaps because of) it's small size and simple design, this is a bad ass battle bot platform.  It has great mobility thanks to its two 3-horsepower 24V motors, and the slotted top panel allows the wheels to be in contact with the ground even if the bot gets flipped.

Included: Chassis, motors, wheels, battery pack, Ampflow Mini motor controller… all you need is an R/C receiver or other control signal source, and of course some flame throwers and pneumatic rams and spinning blades and whatnot.

Sale Price: $700

 
BattleKits Light Weight Kit

16 inches by 18 inches, four wheel drive.  Chassis only.  No motors, batteries, or controller.

Included: Chassis, wheels, and drive mechanism.

Sale Price: $400

 
BattleKits Middle Weight Kit

21 inches by 22 inches, four wheel drive.  Comes with two S28-400 dc motors, each churning out a hefty 4.5 horsepower.  The motors themselves are worth the price of this kit.

Included: Chassis, wheels, drive mechanism, motors.

Sale Price: $600

 
BattleKits Heavy Weight Kit

This is the granddaddy of the BattleKits line.  The chassis itself (which, coincidentally enough, is all we're selling here) is 30 inches by 24 inches and weighs 87 lbs.  This thing is solid as a rock.

Included: Chassis, wheels, and drive mechanism.

Sale Price: $500

 
BattleKits Drive Modules
Module A, Module B

Don't want a whole BattleKits chassis?  Bolt these onto your own design.  We only have one of each (form A and form B) left in stock, so it's perfect if you only need two wheels.  Motors not included.

Included: Chassis, wheels, and drive mechanism.

Sale Price: $80 per module

 

That’s it for now, but keep your eye on the Garage Sale.  You never know what you’ll find.

Gepetto is on the TV!

Thursday, March 13th, 2008

Gepetto, one of the runners up in our last contest, got some airtime on G4 TV’s "Attack of the Show" this past Tuesday!  This bot has been generating quite a bit of buzz, which isn’t surprising.  It has style, good mechanical design, brains, and high-caliber weaponry.  Also, people just can’t resist videos of a robot attacking its creator (TR community member darkback2).  In the video, Gepetto is featured along with Plen and the CMU snake robot.

Congratulations!

Linkage:
AotS Blog post
Video

We don’t want to take too much credit here, but let’s not forget where we first saw Gepetto.  Right here, in the Trossen Robotics Community.  Booyah.

RoboGames 2008!

Monday, March 10th, 2008

Get your robots ready, people.  Time is running out to register for the 2008 RoboGames!  This is a huge and diverse event, and chances are good that if you have a robot, they have a competition for you.  To see a complete list of competitions and entry fees, go to the RoboGames event list page.  Tons of remote and autonomous combat categories for those of you who like to see the sparks fly, football competitions for wheeled and legged bots, micromouse maze racing, sumo, various autonomous and R/C humanoid competitions, Tetsujin, and more!

Awesome poster designed by Josh Ellingson

So, head over to the RoboGames site, and register your robot for some events!

February TRC Project Contest Winners!

Tuesday, March 4th, 2008

In case you’re new to the Trossen Robotics Community, here’s a quick refresher on how this contest works:  First, all kinds of fantastically talented and dedicated people come to our Project Showcase forum to tell us all about the projects they’ve been working on.  Periodically, we (the Trossen Robotics team) sort through these projects, and score them very scientifically in the following categories: "Wow" factor, Ingenuity, creativity, and presentation (this includes graphics, videos, documentation, explanation, etc.).  This is the fourth contest we’ve run here at Trossen Robotics, and the projects just keep getting cooler!  This time around, we extended the deadline and upped the stakes.  Since the last contest, the community has grown and expanded well beyond our expectations, and this has resulted in some of the best work we’ve seen yet.  If you showed off your project in our Project Showcase forum, give yourself a big ol’ pat on the back.  Now, let’s get to the meat and potatoes.  Here are the runners-up and winners, in suspense-building ascending order!

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Honorable Mention

Project: "Johnny 5.3"

Creator: Andrew Alter (Tyberius)

We’ve been working a little too closely with Andrew to let him enter the contest, but we can’t totally leave him hanging.  He’s been building a "Johnny 5"-inspired humanoid/trackbot hybrid, and it’s really coming together.  His brain (Johnny’s, not Andrew’s) is a Pico-ITX running Windows XP Pro.  It has a vocal synthesizer, great big grippers, a reinforced suspension system, a snarky personality, and I’ve heard that it drives around harassing Andrew’s baby.  It’s the embodiment of robotic awesomeness, in other words.  Check out his thread, picture gallery, and his blog.

Runners-Up

Project: "Leviskate"

Creator: Rodger Cleye
Average Score: 7.63 / 10
Prize: $20 Trossen Robotics Gift Certificate!

The Leviskate is a "self-balancing motorboard."  Kind of like a Segway for people who really like head injuries.  Seriously though, this contraption is truly awesome.  There are some cool videos in Rodger’s thread, too.  Our favorite thing about the videos is that Rodger sounds genuinely amazed that it actually works.

Project: "The Bratinator Project"

Creator: SN96
Average Score: 7.67 / 10
Prize: $20 Trossen Robotics Gift Certificate!

It walks, it talks, it scares the kids.  It’s… the Bratinator.  Built around the Lynxmotion Brat biped, this monstrosity features speech, binaural hearing, a custom-machined aluminum head.

Project: "Gepetto"

Creator: darkback2
Average Score: 8.25 / 10
Prize: $20 Trossen Robotics Gift Certificate!

It really pains us to see Gepetto in the runners up, instead of placing in a cash-winning position, but sometimes that’s just the way it goes.  This was a very close race.  This bot is beautifully made from wood and metal, has a really cool suspension system, carries its laptop brain around with it, and is programmed with some really interesting behavior/mood software.  That’s really just the tip of the iceberg, so you’ll have to read through the thread to see Gepetto’s full story.

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Third Place

Project: "eyeRobot"
Creator: Nathaniel Barshay
Average Score: 8.38 / 10
Prize: $100 Trossen Robotics Gift Certificate!

The eyeRobot is a robotic guide for people with vision impairments.  It has a whole slew of IR and ultrasonic range sensors for collision avoidance, and pathfinding software to keep it moving through the clearest area.  This was a proof-of-concept prototype meant to "marry the simplicity of the traditional white cane with the instincts of a seeing-eye dog."  This project is going places, and hopefully one day it will help other people go places.

 

Second Place

Project: "Frameless Laser Harp"
Creator: Stephen Hobley
Average Score: 8.88 / 10
Prize: $250 Trossen Robotics Gift Certificate!

Twenty-two years ago, he saw Jean-Michel Jarre play a laser harp at a concert, and from that day he’s been on a mission.  This mission finally came to fruition last month, when he completed his own laser harp, and let me tell you, it’s a pretty stunning piece of equipment.  Using a galvanometer to very rapidly and precisely aim a pulsing laser, light sensors to detect where a beam has been interrupted, and an Arduino brain; the harp sends MIDI control signals to a synthesizer.

 

First Place

Project: "Phoenix"
Creator: KÃ¥re Halvorsen
Average Score: 9.63 / 10
Prize: $500 Trossen Robotics Gift Certificate!

Phoenix is a six legged walking robot.  Wait, we know some of you out there may be thinking that hexapod robots are old hat.  Well, you’re wrong.  So very wrong.  Wait until you see it move.  Phoenix’s real beauty lies in her graceful motion, which is some of the most convincing and eerily lifelike that we’ve seen in a robot that uses standard hobby servos and a common off-the-shelf servo controller.  The kinematics are computed by an intricately programmed spreadsheet, which we highly recommend you check out if you’re a fan of trigonometry.

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We want to thank everyone for their great submissions.  If all goes as planned, the next contest (which is already underway) will conclude at the end of May 2008.  You can stay up to date on contest rules and regulations at the Trossen Robotics Project Contest page, and start posting your projects in our Project Showcase Forum.

Grant Imahara VEXplorer Robot Challenge

Monday, March 3rd, 2008

I’m sure most of you have already heard of Grant Imahara from Mythbusters on the Discovery channel. If you haven’t, please crawl out of the rock you’ve been hiding under for the past several years ;) .  Did you also know that Grant is heavily involved in robotics and robotic competitions like FIRST? Well… now you do!

Anyways, enough intro. We just got word that Robot Magazine is teaming up with Grant Imahara, Revell, Innovation First, Inc. and SolidWorks Corporation for a really exciting competition. So of course we wanted to share this info with everyone here!

So, without further ado:

 

 

  Revell, Innovation First, Inc., Robot magazine and SolidWorks Corporation, with Grant Imahara, are pleased to announce the Grant Imahara VEXplorer Robot Challenge. Grant Imahara is one of the hosts of Discovery Channel’s hit television show Mythbusters. He is a special effects expert who has worked on some of the most famous robots in history, such as R2-D2 and The Energizer Bunny, and is the author of Kickin’ Bot, a book that explains how to build your own combat robot. This contest will give 25 robot enthusiasts a chance to compete for a $5,000 scholarship grand prize and various other prizes.

Winners will receive:

  • 1st Place: $ 5,000 college scholarship *
  • 2nd Place: $ 2,000 college scholarship *
  • 3rd prize (10): $200 gift certificates to vexlabs.com

*Payable in the form of a 529 Qualified Tuition Plan.
 

 

 

For more information, check out BotMag’s Grant Imahara VEXplorer Robot Challenge page.

Interested in getting a VEXplorer or want more info on one? Check out the VEXplorer kit in the TR Catalog.