News

Posted in 3d Printer hacks, Arduino Hacks, Robots Hacks Tagged 3d printed, arduino, bluetooth, gesture control, hc-05, mpu6050, robotic arm, tutorial Post navigation ← Scanner Snooping Uncovers ...
The LittleArm robotic arm can be constructed using a little Arduino hardware together with a few 3D printed parts,. The robotic arm has been created by Slant Robotics as a kit which you can now ...
An Arduino Nano based expansion board is used to control the arm, with a HC-06 Bluetooth module to allow it to be controlled via a smart phone app. Various sensors can also be added to expand the ...
ARCTOS 3D printed robotic arm. Features of the ARCTOS robot arm include six degrees of freedom, together with a 600mm reach, and the ability to lift anything up to 500 g in weight, all the ...
For Easton LaChappelle, a 19-year-old from Colorado in the United States (U.S.), the difficulty with robotics has never been the technology itself - something he says he managed to master in a ...
One resourceful inventor has hooked his 3D-printed teapot to an Arduino board to create this cute little robot that also happens to dance.
The current iteration of the project is a 3D printed robotic arm that has the ability to convert text into sign language. It features 25 3D printed parts, 16 servo motors, 3 motor controllers, and ...
The robot’s name is actually an acronym for “Antwerp’s Sign Language Actuating Node,” and is comprised of 25 3D-printed parts, and 16 servos controlled by an Arduino board.
Vietnamese scientists at Australia's University of New South Wales have invented a mini robot arm capable of 3D printing biomaterial directly within a person's body. The research group from the ...
Or — and this one is real — a robot arm that can perform rudimentary sign ... It was designed from scratch and built from 25 3D-printed parts, with 16 servos controlled by an Arduino board.