Saturday, June 7, 2014

ROBOTS: “Legged” Robots – LittleDog Does It First

5 June 2014

            In 2005, Boston Dynamics unveiled BigDog (also search “Big Dog”) a four-legged (quadrupedal) robot.  The project, funded by DARPA, was intended to develop the robotic equivalent of a pack mule to work directly with soldiers in the field.  As a “legged” robot, BigDog was expected to go where wheeled vehicles couldn’t. 
 
 
          Then came “Alpha Dog,” the LS3, an advanced version of BigDog.
 
 
Alpha Dog
             Boston Dynamics has continued with the on-going development of a faster quadruped, Robo-Cheetah.  Even as Robo-Cheetah took the speed record for “legged” ‘bots, topping 28 mph on an in-lab treadmill, developers remain optimistic that this ‘bot will, someday, reach even higher speeds. 
 
Robo-Cheetah

            While Robo-Cheetah stayed tethered to its treadmill, last October, a slightly smaller and slower spin-off, the Wildcat, jumped off the treadmill.   The Wildcat left its “power cord” behind running at speeds of just over 15 mph.
 
WildCat

            But that’s not all.  A bipedal robo-ostrich, “FastRunner,” has been modeled (computer simulated prototype) as, yet another, more advanced battle ‘bot.  FastRunner’s two legs will allow it to gain more speed and move with more agility than any four-legged robot ever could.
FastRunner / "Robo-Ostrich"
            But let’s take a few steps back.  There’s a smaller less celebrated robot that has had a significant place in the development process of all this robotic technology.  I can’t call this an “unsung” robot, but it’s certainly “less-sung” than the full sized robots we’ve been talking about.  To many, this small robot seems almost like a detail on the R & D trail to the ever-growing family of ever more amazing legged robotic achievements.  But, sometimes, there's more than you'd suspect "in the details."  
LittleDog
            LittleDog was developed by Boston Dynamics with DARPA funding.  Unlike other robotic prototypes, Little Dog was never intended as a stand-alone “field” robot.  LittleDog was, and is, a “testbed.”

            A testbed is a sort of a standard “model” of a device of a certain type -- such as an automobile, airplane, computer, or computer operating system.  This model is used to test new components.  So, let’s say an automobile manufacturer develops the prototype of an innovative new automobile engine or chassis.  The manufacturer’s research division will maintain a sort of “standard” or “model” vehicle into which the newly developed component and be installed and tested. 

            So, LittleDog, “The Legged Locomotion Learning Robot,” is not, and never will be, a robot for use in the field.  Instead, it is a model used to test components being developed for other projects.  And there is more perfected technology stuffed into this small ‘bot than you'd ever guess. 

            Each of LittleDog’s four legs is powered by three electric motors.  At a length of about 12 inches, a width of about 7 inches, and a height of about 5 and a half inches, this small ‘bot can move over obstacles much larger than the length of its legs and body.

LittleDog
            Several separate teams are working at the development of LittleDog’s speed and agility of movement.  All are confident that, if they can make LittleDog do it, the same capacities and abilities can be built into its bigger “field” counterparts.   LittleDog already has such a good “sense of it's surroundings” that it can avoid obstacles that, sometimes, trip-up its comparatively giant “field” counterparts.

            Among other things, LittleDog is trying out new software, which is intended to allow this little ‘bot to read maps and navigate through the corresponding terrain.  Other teams have "taught" this 'bot new walking techniques that allow LittleDog to negotiate obstacles the robot could neither see nor predict.

            While LittleDog may not actually “run with the big dogs,” those bigger dogs can't do anything that LittleDog hasn’t done first.
 
Thursday 5 June 2014
GCLM5444HOxenia

No comments:

Post a Comment