It would be great if you could provide dimensional drawings of your aluminum brackets and parts. This is exactly the kind of robot arm I have been searching for. Would you consider doing this?
I thank you very much for your appreciation of my work. Know that I work alone, and do original things by not copying other people's projects. I have just finished doing Leonardo da Vinci's animatronic and immediately start with another difficult and complex project. What I can tell you watch this other video of two animatronic arms plus the head. ua-cam.com/video/peLYnVdkEaU/v-deo.html
Really cool! I'm curious how noisy it is when running? I imagine it would be hard to use in an animatronic if the motors and gears are all grinding and whirring so loudly that the audience can't hear anything else going on.
Thanks for the compliment! The animatronic arm was built by me and not copied from other sites. as a matter of time, I go directly to working with aluminum without making technical drawings. consider that in a few months I had to build Leonardo da Vinci's entire body, including mechanics, electronic sculpting of the face, hands, eyes, teeth and programming.
dont forget the gears and gears ratio. and also winded springs... atlas uses hydraulicle actuators. but virtually no gears, seems one on one. straight on the motor. with proper gears then you can power a car with a hairblowerdryer. wich is a handheld device.
It never raised the arm straight up. Is the servos strong enough? I have heard linear actuator is better. Can we get the actual servo size instead of just big or small as a description?
I use the electric motors that my mechanic gives me, they are 12V motorized windows and wipers and they are reduced in speed. I add the feedback potentiometer to it and build myself the controller. These motors are very strong, the arm raises it with ease.
Hello I build everything in my workshop from waste materials from other processes, and this gives me even more satisfaction. Know that I have been doing this job as a profession for many years, so I know what to do.
@@alvaropasseri5754 è una bella notizia. Io lavoro per il Carnevale di Viareggio, realizzo pupazzi in cartapesta di 3 metri, sto iniziando a farli muovere con motoriduttori e attuatori lineari, mi piacerebbe imparare ad utilizzare i servomotori.
I built the servo motors by myself, using simple low-cost gearmotors, such as car wiper motors, and window lifts. The trick is to put a potentiometer on each axis of the motor and control them with a controller.
It would be great if you could provide dimensional drawings of your aluminum brackets and parts. This is exactly the kind of robot arm I have been searching for.
Would you consider doing this?
ua-cam.com/video/rak1w1sRp5Y/v-deo.html
I thank you very much for your appreciation of my work.
Know that I work alone, and do original things by not copying other people's projects. I have just finished doing Leonardo da Vinci's animatronic and immediately start with another difficult and complex project.
What I can tell you watch this other video of two animatronic arms plus the head.
ua-cam.com/video/peLYnVdkEaU/v-deo.html
Good
Really cool! I'm curious how noisy it is when running? I imagine it would be hard to use in an animatronic if the motors and gears are all grinding and whirring so loudly that the audience can't hear anything else going on.
Wow
Great and awesome build! Can you provide a link to where you got the bearing for the bicep? Or did you make it?
Thanks for the compliment!
The animatronic arm was built by me and not copied from other sites. as a matter of time, I go directly to working with aluminum without making technical drawings.
consider that in a few months I had to build Leonardo da Vinci's entire body, including mechanics, electronic sculpting of the face, hands, eyes, teeth and programming.
dont forget the gears and gears ratio. and also winded springs... atlas uses hydraulicle actuators. but virtually no gears, seems one on one. straight on the motor. with proper gears then you can power a car with a hairblowerdryer. wich is a handheld device.
Sorry, but I don't understand what the question is.
It never raised the arm straight up. Is the servos strong enough? I have heard linear actuator is better. Can we get the actual servo size instead of just big or small as a description?
I use the electric motors that my mechanic gives me, they are 12V motorized windows and wipers and they are reduced in speed.
I add the feedback potentiometer to it and build myself the controller.
These motors are very strong, the arm raises it with ease.
can it be build using carbon fiber 3D printer? I can't afford metal
Did you create the bicep bearing from scratch or did you purchase it?
Hello
I build everything in my workshop from waste materials from other processes, and this gives me even more satisfaction.
Know that I have been doing this job as a profession for many years, so I know what to do.
are you going to make the rest of the robot?
You can see the finished full body by clicking on my channel, the round icon under the youtube video, or @alvaropasseri5754
Bellissimi movimenti, hai in mente di realizzare qualche tutorial?
Si, tra qualche giorno!
Si tra qualche giorno!
@@alvaropasseri5754 è una bella notizia. Io lavoro per il Carnevale di Viareggio, realizzo pupazzi in cartapesta di 3 metri, sto iniziando a farli muovere con motoriduttori e attuatori lineari, mi piacerebbe imparare ad utilizzare i servomotori.
Sir, What type Servo motors are you Sir? Can you give the details of it?
please Sir
I built the servo motors by myself, using simple low-cost gearmotors, such as car wiper motors, and window lifts. The trick is to put a potentiometer on each axis of the motor and control them with a controller.
@@alvaropasseri5754 Thank you for your reply.
Now I got the concept Sir.
Price
Are you referring to how much the whole arm costs with the control electronics, which is not framed in the video?
Did I seriously just get flipped off by an animatronic?
come mai vieni preso in giro da un animatronico?