Ghost Robotics, a new R&D firm founded by University of Pennsylvania PhD candidates, has unveiled a dog-like robot that runs, climbs, leaps, and even uses its legs to open doors. While other research groups have already created similar adorable and functional robots (MIT's cheetah, for example), this one is different because it is completely gearless. In technical terms, Ghost Minitaur is the first direct-drive legged robot using conventional rotary electric motors. What that translates to in real life is the patent-pending design eliminates the gearbox, which is a part that is expensive, complicated, and fragile. Direct drive also gives the motors the ability to act like springs, since the legs are adjusted and controlled via software instead of hardware. Jiren Parikh, CEO of Ghost Robotics, tells ZDNet that getting rid of the gears helps minimize the equipment that stands between the robot and its environment, thus making the legs more sensitive and reactive. He says, "The legs have enough power to jump and do flips, but can also sense contact with an egg without breaking it. If it had gears, it would be much slower and tasks like this would be problematic." The Minitaur can be used as a platform to carry small payloads to hazardous environments where people can't or shouldn't travel. Traditional wheeled or tracked robots have trouble getting around rough terrain, but the direct-drive legs are agile.
- See more at: http://www.whyps.com/News/New-projects/this-robot-runs,-climbs,-/32454#sthash.perSKKWv.dpuf
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