Few robots can travel gracefully through more than one medium; more often than not, they're either strictly airborne or tied to the ground. The Illinois Institute of Technology's HyTAQ quadrotor
doesn't abide by these arbitrary limits. The hybrid machine, designed
by Arash Kalantari and Matthew Spenko, uses the same actuators to drive
both its flight as well as a surrounding cage for rolling along on the
ground, quickly switching between the two methods. It's clearly
adaptable, but using the one system also provides large power advantages
over a traditional quadrotor, Spenko tells us. While HyTAQ's battery
lasts only for 5 minutes and 1,969 feet of pure flight, that jumps to 27
minutes and 7,874 feet when the robot can use a smooth floor instead --
and of course, it can hop over ground obstacles altogether instead of
making a detour. The range of the robot and its pilot are the main
limiting factors, but the patent process is already underway with hopes
of winning commercial deals. We're both excited and worried as a result;
as wonderfully flexible as HyTAQ is, widescale adoption could lead to
especially relentless robots during the inevitable takeover.
0 komentar:
Post a Comment