Penny the hexapod
Published on Feb 8, 2014
3 servo hexapod named Penny. Uses a Cheapduino board from DFRobot and a pair of IR sensors.
Omnidirectional Hexapod Robot Walking on Uneven Terrain - Laboratory experiments
Published on Oct 26, 2016
Laboratory for Robotics and Intelligent Control Systems (LARICS), University of Zagreb, Zagreb, CroatiaAdaptive Analytically-founded Yaw Control Algorithm for Omnidirectional Walking of Hexapod Robot on Uneven Terrain (supplement to the article submitted to IEEE Transactions on Robotics)
RobotGeek Antsy - Arduino 3 Servo Hexapod
Published on Nov 23, 2016
RobotGeek 'Antsy' - Arduino Compatible 3 Servo HexapodIntroducing Antsy! RobotGeeks new 3 servo hexapod. Antsy is Arduino controlled that comes with sensors with the option of 3D shelling.
Six-Legged Robots Faster Than Nature-Inspired Gait
Published on Feb 17, 2017
"Six-Legged Robots Faster Than Nature-Inspired Gait"Researchers at EPFL and UNIL have discovered a faster and more efficient gait, never observed in nature, for six-legged robots walking on flat ground. Bio-inspired gaits – less efficient for robots – are used by real insects since they have adhesive pads to walk in three dimensions. The results provide novel approaches for roboticists and new information to biologists.
by Laure-Anne Pessina
February 17, 2017
Legged robots walk the walk
Published on Jul 18, 2017
"Legged robots walk the walk"In an emergency, first responders often have to make a very tough call: is it too dangerous to send someone in? In the future, this decision will hopefully be much easier with the help of some six legged robots: hexapods. Creating robots that can go into an unpredictable, unstable environment and help people escape it would be a literal life-saver.
by Eliza Keck
July 19, 2017
AMBLER Walking Robot
Published on Oct 7, 2012
AMBLER (acronym for Autonomous MoBiLe Exploration Robot), developed by Carnegie Mellon University and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. This behemoth stands about 5m (16.4ft) tall, is up to 7m (23.0ft) wide, and weights 2500 kg (5512 lb). It moves at a blistering 35 cm (13.8 in) per minute. Just sitting still, it consumes 1400 W of power. Ask it to walk and it sucks up just about 4000 W.
Technion hexapod Electrical Engineering student project
Feb 4, 2020
Technion-Israel Institute of Technology students Amir Belder and Nadav Siegelman from the Andrew and Erna Viterbi Faculty of Electrical Engineering build this Hexapod in the Control Robotics and Machine Learning Lab. The students were supervised by Koby Kohai.
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