GLaDOS, anyone?
|
|
BTW bot and dolly looks like they use base platform of some welding robots from automotive industry. Guess it quite logical - guys from Detroit :)
Sugareffect is currently in the market actually. We will let you know what we find....
AIR PUNCH! !! Yeah!
Years ago I had a fight with a motion control rig... it won.
Tom you already can buy old industrial robots for few thousand bucks
http://www.ebay.com/sch/universalrob...&_trksid=p3686
This artist is using old industrial robot fro printing chairs.
http://inhabitat.com/dirk-vander-koo...ycled-e-waste/
https://vimeo.com/33026239
some more robot dancing
https://vimeo.com/43083157
Awesome!
So you see it is not really a rocket science :) ANY kind of industrial robotics arm outperform in accuracy (it is usually INSANELY accurate), payload, and any other requirements for handling a film camera. It is just a matter of right programming for software. Maybe I can be more optimistic for the price estimation.
Something to note though with industrial robots is some of them have limitations in their movement ranges, or singularity points where it is hard to precisely control velocity and acceleration. I think this might be a controller issue though.
there certainly is room for optimism on the price front. Control is really where the difficulty lies. Robot OS would be a good place to start with an industrial PC based control system.
Really cringed when it was flying the camera at the floor.... So cool. I wonder if you could pull off some of those moves with a film camera just due to the force at fast moves.
Thanks for sharing .
| « Previous Thread | Next Thread » |