How is this robot able to turn?

Discussions regarding building a walking robot at home. Most of the robots participating at Robo-One competitions are custom fabricated.
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How is this robot able to turn?

Post by Joe » Mon Jul 01, 2013 8:59 pm

Post by Joe
Mon Jul 01, 2013 8:59 pm

I'm fascinated by the Robo-One Light champion robot design most recently dubbed "Centauro" — previous incarnations have gone by such names as "Hiten". It's interesting because as far as I can tell, it uses only four servos per leg. There are two at the top of each leg: one swings the leg out to the side, and one bends the upper leg forward (using a parallelogram linkage, so the knee stays level with the hip). One servo in the knee bends the lower leg backward, again using a parallelogram linkage. And one servo in the foot bends the foot sideways, countering the same axis rotation at the hip.

Image

The end result of all this is that the robot can squat either leg down, just like we do, or stick a leg out to the side, while keeping the foot flat on the floor. You can see that in this image (though one foot is still tilted up here):

Image

The weird thing is, there is no servo in the legs to rotate them around a vertical axis. No "twist" at ankle or hip. Now, in practice, the robot gets around mostly by crab-walking sideways, as is pretty typical for Robo-One robots. But it's certainly able to turn, and quite nimbly. (You can watch it in action in this video.)

I don't understand how the robot is able to turn without any leg twist. For that matter, I don't see how it could possibly walk forward/backward either, and I thought this was a requirement to qualify for Robo-One.

Anybody have any insight?

Thanks,
- Joe
I'm fascinated by the Robo-One Light champion robot design most recently dubbed "Centauro" — previous incarnations have gone by such names as "Hiten". It's interesting because as far as I can tell, it uses only four servos per leg. There are two at the top of each leg: one swings the leg out to the side, and one bends the upper leg forward (using a parallelogram linkage, so the knee stays level with the hip). One servo in the knee bends the lower leg backward, again using a parallelogram linkage. And one servo in the foot bends the foot sideways, countering the same axis rotation at the hip.

Image

The end result of all this is that the robot can squat either leg down, just like we do, or stick a leg out to the side, while keeping the foot flat on the floor. You can see that in this image (though one foot is still tilted up here):

Image

The weird thing is, there is no servo in the legs to rotate them around a vertical axis. No "twist" at ankle or hip. Now, in practice, the robot gets around mostly by crab-walking sideways, as is pretty typical for Robo-One robots. But it's certainly able to turn, and quite nimbly. (You can watch it in action in this video.)

I don't understand how the robot is able to turn without any leg twist. For that matter, I don't see how it could possibly walk forward/backward either, and I thought this was a requirement to qualify for Robo-One.

Anybody have any insight?

Thanks,
- Joe
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Post by Bullit » Mon Jul 01, 2013 11:27 pm

Post by Bullit
Mon Jul 01, 2013 11:27 pm

I believe that's a shuffle turn. One foot forward, one foot back, then return, very quickly. Notice the pads on the corners of his feet when he falls in the video. These pads should aid with friction at the outside corners of the feet.
I believe that's a shuffle turn. One foot forward, one foot back, then return, very quickly. Notice the pads on the corners of his feet when he falls in the video. These pads should aid with friction at the outside corners of the feet.
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Post by Joe » Mon Jul 01, 2013 11:37 pm

Post by Joe
Mon Jul 01, 2013 11:37 pm

Bullit wrote:I believe that's a shuffle turn. One foot forward, one foot back, then return, very quickly.

Yeah, but how do you do that on a bot that can't move its feet forward or back? These legs should move only sideways and up/down, right?
Bullit wrote:I believe that's a shuffle turn. One foot forward, one foot back, then return, very quickly.

Yeah, but how do you do that on a bot that can't move its feet forward or back? These legs should move only sideways and up/down, right?
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Post by Joe » Tue Jul 02, 2013 6:28 am

Post by Joe
Tue Jul 02, 2013 6:28 am

Doh! Never mind, I see it now. The legs can move forward/back, a little, because the upper and lower legs are separate DOF.
Doh! Never mind, I see it now. The legs can move forward/back, a little, because the upper and lower legs are separate DOF.
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