View Full Version : DelFly, very small autonomous flapping wing MAV, Micro Air Vehicle Laboratory, Delft University of Technology, Delft, Netherlands
Airicist
2nd January 2014, 22:19
Developer - Micro Air Vehicle Laboratory (https://pr.ai/showthread.php?7693)
DelFly (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DelFly) on Wikipedia
Airicist
2nd January 2014, 22:20
https://youtu.be/tNPfD9l14Js
Robot dragonfly DelFly Explorer flies autonomously
Published on Dec 15, 2013
The DelFly Explorer is the first flapping wing Micro Air Vehicle that is able to fly with complete autonomy in unknown environments. Weighing just 20 grams, it is equipped with a 4-gram onboard stereo vision system.
The DelFly Explorer can perform an autonomous take-off, keep its height, and avoid obstacles for as long as its battery lasts (~9 minutes). All sensing and processing is performed on board, so no human or offboard computer is in the loop.
"Autonomous Flight of a 20-gram Flapping Wing MAV with a 4-gram Onboard Stereo Vision System", by C. De Wagter, S. Tijmons, B.D.W. Remes, and G.C.H.E. de Croon, (submitted).
Airicist
17th February 2015, 11:03
https://youtu.be/GFIAglmjj-s
DelFly flight caught on high speed camera
Published on Feb 17, 2015
We had some high speed camera video of the DelFly we wanted to share with the world.
I love how the structure in the backgroud and the DelFly wings are flexing in the background.
Airicist
13th September 2018, 21:22
https://youtu.be/N_N_EXZtw3E
DelFly Nimble flying robot mimics insects
Published on Sep 13, 2018
Researchers developed a programmable and agile autonomous free-flying robot controlled through bio-inspired motion changes of its flapping wings. The robot can rapidly accelerate from hover to fast forward flight, make a 360° roll flip maneuver, make a 360° pitch flip maneuver and a fly inspired rapid banked turn.
Credit:
A tailless aerial robotic flapper reveals that flies use torque coupling in rapid banked turns
Matěj Karásek, Florian T. Muijres, Christophe De Wagter, Bart D. W. Remes, Guido C. H. E. de Croon
Science, DOI: 10.1126/science.aat0350