myBuddy 280 dual arm robot features Raspberry Pi 4 SBC and ESP32 contr – Elephant Robotics

myBuddy 280 dual arm robot features Raspberry Pi 4 SBC and ESP32 controllers

myBuddy 280 dual arm robot features Raspberry Pi 4 SBC and ESP32 controllers

 

board.

It builds upon the earlier  with a single arm, with the same 280mm working range, but the new robot offers two arms, and a total of 13 degrees of freedom (DoF).  The robot is also equipped with two 2MP HD cameras for computer vision, a standard 3.3V expansion I/O interface, a LEGO expansion interface, and can be fitted with a variety of adapters such as suction pumps, grippers, little hands (see below), etc…

myBuddy 280 dual arm robot

myBuddy 280 specifications:

  • SBC – Raspberry Pi 4 (2GB or 4GB RAM) single board computer to control the display and communicate with the ESP32 modules
  • IoT modules – 3x M5Stack ESP32 basic cores with 4MB flash each
  • Display – 7-inch touchscreen display
  • Video Output – HDMI port
  • Audio – 3.5mm audio jack, digital audio via HDMI
  • Networking – Gigabit Ethernet, dual-band WiFi 5, and Bluetooth 5.0 (via Raspberry Pi)
  • USB – 1x USB port
  • Degree of Freedom – 13
  • 2x Arms each with
    • Working radius – 280 mm
    • Maximum load – 250 grams
    • Repeatability – ± 0.5 mm
    • Life span – 500 hours (CNXSoft: that seems like quite a short life span…)
    • 5×5 LED matrix at the extremity
    • Features – Free to move, Joint movement, Cartesian motion, Track record, Wireless control, Collision detection
  • Motor parameters
    • High-performance servo steering gear
    • Range of joint rotation
      • Left and right arm:
        • J1 -165 ~ +165°
        • J2 -165 ~ +165°
        • J3 -165 ~ +165°
        • J4 -165 ~ +165°
        • J5 -165 ~ +165°
        • J6 -175 ~ +175°
      • Waist – J1 -120 ~+120°
  • Expansion – 3.3V IO header, 2x Grove connectors
  • Power Supply – 24V/9.2A
  • Dimensions / Weight – N/A

myBuddy 280 Raspberry Pi 4 robot robot

The . You’ll find getting started guides for both, as well as more advanced instructions including ROS commands, on the documentation website.

Some of the potential applications (for education) include visual sorting with QR codes, playing the piano with both arms, face recognition, virtual reality control with a VR headset and two controllers emulating each arm, as well as all sort of fun projects you can think with a small dual-arm robot.

       The company has a bunch of resources on the  is for. It runs on Windows, Linux, and mac OS, allows the user to update the firmware, and provides video tutorials on how to use the robot, as well as maintenance and repair information.

myStudio software

, but a company representative told CNX Software they would not be selling for myBuddy 280 there any time soon (not in the next three months). More details may be found on the product page.

 

 

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