RHex, six-legged robot, devours rough terrain, Boston Dynamics, Inc., Kod*lab, USA


RHEX - KodLab (long)

Uploaded on Nov 3, 2009


RHex Rough-Terrain Robot

Published on Mar 27, 2012

RHex is a 30-lb robot designed for mobility on rough terrain. It is operated remotely via an RF link that includes a high-resolution video uplink. RHex can operate right-side-up or up-side down, as shown in the video, and goes for up to four hours on one charge of its batteries. RHex has been around for several years, but we redesigned this version for ruggedness, long battery life, maintainability, and improved mobility. This version of RHex was funded by the US Army's Rapid Equipping Force.
 

RHex the Parkour Robot

Published on Jul 23, 2013

RHex is an all-terrain walking robot that could one day climb over rubble in a rescue mission or cross the desert with environmental sensors strapped to its back.

Pronounced "Rex," like the over-excited puppy it resembles when it is bounding over the ground, RHex is short for "robot hexapod," a name that stems from its six springy legs.

Legs have an advantage over wheels when it comes to rough terrain, but the articulated legs often found on walking robots require complex, specialized instructions for each moving part. To get the most mobility out of RHex's simple, one-jointed legs, Penn researchers are essentially teaching the robot Parkour. Taking inspiration from human free-runners, the team is showing the robot how to manipulate its body in creative ways to get around all sorts of obstacles.

The RHex platform was first developed through a multi-university collaboration more than a decade ago. Graduate student Aaron Johnson and professor Daniel Koditschek, both of the Department of Electrical and Systems Engineering in the School of Engineering and Applied Science, are working on a version of RHex known as XRL, or X-RHex Lite. This lighter and more agile version of the robot, developed in Koditschek's Kod*Lab, a division of Engineering's General Robotics, Automation, Sensing and Perception (GRASP) Lab, is ideal for testing new ways for it to run, jump, and climb.

By activating its legs in different sequences, XRL can execute double jumps, flips, and, through a combination of moves, even pull-ups. For the tallest obstacles, the robot can launch itself vertically, hook its front legs on the edge of the object it's trying to surmount, then drag its body up and over. The researchers fully demonstrated this particular maneuver under more controlled conditions in the lab.

The paper where Johnson and Koditschek outlined these capabilities—"Toward a Vocabulary of Legged Leaping"—was selected as a finalist for best student paper at the IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation in May.

"What we want is a robot that can go anywhere, even over terrain that might be broken and uneven," Johnson says. "These latest jumps greatly expand the range of what this machine is capable of, as it can now jump onto or across obstacles that are bigger than it is."


RHex - The Extended Cut

Published on Jul 25, 2013
 

RHex Robot With Ninja Legs Walking, Standing

Published on Dec 9, 2013

"Ninja Legs: Amphibious One Degree of Freedom Robotic Legs," by Bir Bikram Dey, Sandeep Manjanna, and Gregory Dudek from the Centre for Intelligent Machines at McGill University, was presented last month at IROS 2013 in Tokyo, Japan."]Published on Dec 9, 2013
"Ninja Legs: Amphibious One Degree of Freedom Robotic Legs," by Bir Bikram Dey, Sandeep Manjanna, and Gregory Dudek from the Centre for Intelligent Machines at McGill University, was presented last month at IROS 2013 in Tokyo, Japan.
 

Rhex Amphibious Robot Beach Test

Published on Dec 9, 2013

"Ninja Legs: Amphibious One Degree of Freedom Robotic Legs," by Bir Bikram Dey, Sandeep Manjanna, and Gregory Dudek from the Centre for Intelligent Machines at McGill University, was presented last month at IROS 2013 in Tokyo, Japan.
 

D-RHex 2.0: Jornada and White Sands Mobility Failure Cases

Published on Nov 20, 2014

In fall 2014 we took two new X-RHex generation robots outfitted for desert research to the Jornada desert and White Sands national monument. In this video, we demonstrate the two mobility failure cases that we found at White Sands: motor stalling and slippage.
 

Published on Nov 25, 2014

On 11/21/2014, Kodlab and RHex visited the RAIR, Recycled Artist in
Residence and Revolution Recovery recycling center in Philadelphia.
RAIR creates awareness about sustainability through art and design and
is hosted at Revolution Recovery, a recycling center specializing in
construction and demoltion. We ran the robot up piles of drywall, wood
chips, concrete pieces, and some looser debris in an effort to see how
the robot would perform in "rubble."

RHex does well on both steep inclines and unstable surfaces, but the
combination is very challenging. Recently, we've been exploring robot
performance in different kinds of unstable materials such as sand

The other challenge we encountered at the recycling center was large
chunks of concrete that the robot couldn't clamber over. Jumping up
onto boulders that would otherwise be impossible to overcome was the
focus of our most recent PhD, Aaron Johnson's, thesis

We are planning to go back to the recycling center this winter and use
some of the insights from our desert trips and Aaron's work to overcome
the challenges we encountered during this trip.
 

RHex Paints

Published on Jan 22, 2015

Shortly before the Penn School of Design classes began, this past summer RHex borrowed a studio and explored its artistic abilities. RHex had three artist assistants, Anna, Mauricio and Diedra, to help with the execution. The path of the robot was not preplanned but in the future RHex will have the ability to walk without human assistance. Most of the painting was done using a tripod gait. Other mark making was done by using the turn in place behavior – can you identify how turn in place works?
The turn in place enabled the legs to have longer contact with the ground to make more interesting marks. At first the tire treads from its C shaped legs left decisive traces on the paper. Sponge brushes attached to the legs had the most painterly results.
 

RHex dances

Published on Nov 10, 2016

#tbt to 2013 when Kod*lab hosted a dance competition in lab to program RHex or another lab robot to dance in preparation for our exhibition at Discovery Day at Clark Park 2013, as part of the Philadelphia Science Festival.
 

Lapsis, the making of, with Kod*lab

Mar 8, 2021

Kod*lab PhD students Abriana Stewart-Height, Diego Caporale and Wei-Hsi Chen, with former Kod*lab student Garrett Wenger were on set in the summer of 2019 to operate RHex for the filming of Lapsis, a first feature film by director and screenwriter Noah Hutton. These RHex robots had been previously built by Kod*lab at the University of Pennsylvania for the Museum of Science and Industry’s (MSI) exhibition Robot Revolution. We were grateful that MSI could then lend them to us to use in the film. Lab Coordinator Diedra Krieger shot behind the scenes video of work in progress on set. This video offers a look at the process and team work to create Lapsis.
 
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