After a few days of improvement work, we have made some new designs of the robot arm. Make some changes of the structure to make the arm stable. Add a small gripper and the new sucker holder. Then we decide to try some other materials to make the robot arm. So we got a laser cut Basswood one.
Here is the laser cut Basswood parts.
Do the assembling.
The finish Basswood uArm.
More details of this arm.
Here the small gripper and the new sucker holder.
Change the head of the arm and install the gripper on the arm.
What’s more, we also made a transparent one by acrylic this time.
Here is the way that you can install the sucker with the new holder on the robot arm.
So far, we have 3 uArm?, the black acrylic one, the basswood one and the transparent acrylic one.
More testing videos and improvements will be updated soon. We are going to make this arm better, more stable and more accurate.
I know you still want to test and improve, but I would really love to get my hands on one soon! When do you anticipate release?
As we call this open source robot arm. So of course we will make it open and release both the design of the mechanical and electronic with the final source files after we finish this project.
If you want to build one by yourself, we can send you the files after we finish the project.
Will a project like this ever be finished though? 8)
Would be nice to publish the arm frame plans in a pdf format which could be printed out on standard printer paper (larger parts might have to be split between two sheets of paper). I like the wood arm frame as wood can be easily worked with simple tools. 2'x2' sheets of 5.2mm lauan plywood are available at the US home improvement stores for ~$3.
Yep zk- although I've made contact with a local laser cutting outfit, I've been wondering about doing it manually too. Looks like a shit-house full of parts to work by hand, though.
I'd like to see a pdf of just one part, to give it a whirl.
PDF patterns would allow dimensionally accurate patterns to be printed, then traced onto what ever the construction material is. A long time back I started making an arm out of craft sticks which are light and fairly strong when doubled up and braced. The important part is getting accurate dimensions of the parts, the holes and the pivot points used in the arm. Below is an arm of somewhat similar design.
zoomkat:
Would be nice to publish the arm frame plans in a pdf format which could be printed out on standard printer paper (larger parts might have to be split between two sheets of paper). I like the wood arm frame as wood can be easily worked with simple tools. 2'x2' sheets of 5.2mm lauan plywood are available at the US home improvement stores for ~$3.
Yes, our goal is to make a cheap and easy build robot arm. I have sent you a message about the pdf file.
I have 3D printer, if you want i can try to print it with ABS. That would give an easy solution for making the arm.
Thanks and best regards
Hi malopezn,
The 3D print one may be a cool idea of building this robot arm. But it may take a lot of time by making the parts by the 3D printer. While using laser cutting, it may be faster and easier.
The second version of the robot arm is quite stable now. Here is a stacking test by using the gripper. More applications and test videos will be updated soon.
A Vacuum Gripper Suction Cup is often used on industry robot arm in manufacture. And we also add a small one on uArm.
The Vacuum Gripper Suction Cup is controlled by a small Vacuum Pump and a Solenoid Valve.
We made the first load test of the robot arm by using the Vacuum Gripper Suction Cup. It can lift a 330ml Coca Cola and move it to another place. More applications and test videos with the Vacuum Gripper Suction Cup will be updated soon.
Hi everybody!
First of all I want to congratulate you for this project, it´s a really cool arm, the movements are very smooth.
I´m doing something like that for my graduate project, is an aluminum arm and I'm trying to make the kinematic control. I have simulated the movement of all axes with 5 order polynomics, but I have not yet tested physically.
Can you share your code? it´s really interesting how the arm work.
I hope my local laser cutting guys that I approached get back to me soon... If not, I'll look further afield. Those guys are like 15 minutes drive away....