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  2. SCARA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SCARA

    Sankyo Seiki, Pentel and NEC presented the SCARA robot as a completely new concept for assembly robots in 1981. The robot was developed under the guidance of Hiroshi Makino, [4] a professor at the University of Yamanashi. [2] Its arm was rigid in the Z-axis and pliable in the XY-axes, which allowed it to adapt to holes in the XY-axes. [5] [6]

  3. Robotic arm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robotic_arm

    A robotic arm is a type of mechanical arm, usually programmable, with similar functions to a human arm; the arm may be the sum total of the mechanism or may be part of a more complex robot. The links of such a manipulator are connected by joints allowing either rotational motion (such as in an articulated robot ) or translational (linear ...

  4. Cartesian coordinate robot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cartesian_coordinate_robot

    Kinematic diagram of Cartesian (coordinate) robot A plotter is a type of Cartesian coordinate robot.. A Cartesian coordinate robot (also called linear robot) is an industrial robot whose three principal axes of control are linear (i.e. they move in a straight line rather than rotate) and are at right angles to each other. [1]

  5. X-Y table - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X-Y_Table

    Robotic arms and other automated machinery have only a limited range of motion while their bases remain stationary; X-Y tables allow this basis to move horizontally along X and Y axis. Also known as XY stages, XY tables are motorized linear slides with linear motion based in bearings which are driven by a drive mechanism, typically a linear ...

  6. Common normal (robotics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_normal_(robotics)

    A model of a robotic arm with joints. In robotics the common normal of two non-intersecting joint axes is a line perpendicular to both axes. [1]The common normal can be used to characterize robot arm links, by using the "common normal distance" and the angle between the link axes in a plane perpendicular to the common normal. [2]

  7. Serial manipulator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serial_manipulator

    Serial robots usually have six joints, because it requires at least six degrees of freedom to place a manipulated object in an arbitrary position and orientation in the workspace of the robot. A popular application for serial robots in today's industry is the pick-and-place assembly robot, called a SCARA robot, which has four degrees of freedom.

  8. Delta robot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delta_robot

    Delta robot kinematics (green arms are fixed length, at 90° to their blue axis that they rotate about) Over-actuated planar delta robot. The delta robot is a parallel robot, i.e. it consists of multiple kinematic chains connecting the base with the end-effector. The robot can also be seen as a spatial generalisation of a four-bar linkage. [9]

  9. Denavit–Hartenberg parameters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denavit–Hartenberg...

    The system of six joint axes S i and five common normal lines A i,i+1 form the kinematic skeleton of the typical six degree-of-freedom serial robot. Denavit and Hartenberg introduced the convention that z-coordinate axes are assigned to the joint axes S i and x-coordinate axes are assigned to the common normals A i,i+1.