DJ Sures named this robot Master Blaster. Don't ask us why, he still doesn't know. But he's pretty simple and is remote controlled. He has no sensors for object detection, so you can consider this robot animatronic.
Description:
I purchased this plastic robot in china town. It is meant to resemble a 1980's retro robot.
I modified the shell to support two standard servos for arms, one standard servo for head and two modified servos for wheels.
The shell wasn't too hard to work with. The hardest part was mounting the legs. The legs had originally attached to the motor mechanism, that would move the legs forward and back. A one-directional wheel on the bottom of each foot allowed the robot to move forward when the leg was pushed back. So, in order to attach the legs I used one of the metal rods and some screws. The legs are static and do not move anymore. Which is fine, because the wheels do all of the mobility work.
The arms were the easiest part. I simply cut the holes large enough to fit the servos. Secured them with screws and attached the arms. I used a servo gear in the arm with a bead of hot glue gun.
Even the head was easy, it was attached the same way as the arms.
The software controlling the robot is ARC.
Video:
Peripherals:
1 x Robot Shell
1 x EZ-Robot Complete Kit
Tools:
Dremel
Screw Driver
Small Side Cutters
Hot Glue Gun
Zip Ties
By DJ Sures
Discover more robots
Johnnybib's Ezrobot Myo Wii Remote Controlled Robot Arm
Motion-controlled robotic arm built in 20 hours using scrap metal, plastic, a Myo, Wii Remote and Synthiam ARC-hackathon...
Jdvann's My Dog
Dog (Droid On Guard): low-cost Dagu 4WD DIY robot to ward off boredom and help stave off Alzheimer's by keeping the mind...
Billderwent's Boris V2
Boris V2 Dagu Rover 5 upgraded from EzB/Mecanno with 4 motors and encoders, separated channels and secured encoder...
