Inflatable Robots - Safe and a Lot of Fun!
Written by Harry Fairhead   
Saturday, 26 November 2011

With funding from DARPA, Otherlab has designed a pneumatic robot arm and a six-legged inflatable robot, strong enough to carry people around. Watch the video to see how this works.

If you have seen the sort of big robots that DARPA tends to build, you will know that they are slightly scary. Any time metal moved by actuators comes close to humans there is the possibility of an accident. With a pneumatic robot - a "pneubot" - everything is different. It's soft, but still very strong. DARPA gave some funding to Otherlab and they created Ant-Roach and a pneubot arm.

Essentially they are big blow up toys but with pneumatic or hydraulic actuators. Ant-Roach is a big six-legged cross between an insect and an anteater weighing only 70lbs. but it is strong enough to carry people as it walks. The inflatable robot arm is less than 2lb but can lift a few hundred pounds.

The best way to see why these robotic platforms are special is to see them in action: 

The movement may not be smooth but it can be carried into position by one man and two or three people can ride on its back.

 

antroachride

If you find that you can't take Ant-Roach seriously try the inflatable robotic arm:

 

You also need to keep in mind that these are prototypes and they seem to be improving rapidly. It is clear that pneubots have a role to play in a lot of niche applications. I also think that the basic idea is simple enough for amateurs to incorporate into a design.
An inflatable Asimo anyone?

More Information

There is a very long account of the idea at Hizook and the Otherlab blog has a lot more information and videos.

 

To be informed about new articles on I Programmer, sign up for our weekly newsletter, subscribe to the RSS feed and follow us on Twitter, Facebook or Linkedin.

 

Banner


OpenAI Releases Swarm
25/10/2024

OpenAI has released an experimental educational framework for exploring ergonomic, lightweight multi-agent orchestration. Swarm is managed by the OpenAI Solution team, but is not intended to be used i [ ... ]



CSS Ecosystem In the Spotlight
06/11/2024

The 2024 edition of the State of CSS has been posted, revealing that the latest features of the language not only do away with extra tooling, but even start taking on tasks that previously requir [ ... ]


More News

Last Updated ( Sunday, 15 October 2023 )