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  2. Tendon-driven robot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tendon-driven_robot

    Myorobotics is a toolkit comprising muscles, tendons, joints, and bones to build diverse tendon-driven musculoskeletal robots, e.g. anthropomimetic arms [3] with complex shoulder joints, quadrupeds, [4] and hopping robots. [5]

  3. Articulated soft robotics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Articulated_soft_robotics

    The term “soft robots” designs a broad class of robotic systems whose architecture includes soft elements, with much higher elasticity than traditional rigid robots. Articulated Soft Robots are robots with both soft and rigid parts, inspired to the muscloloskeletal system of vertebrate animals – from reptiles to birds to mammalians to humans.

  4. Articulated robot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Articulated_robot

    A six-axis articulated welding robot reaching into a fixture to weld. An articulated robot is a robot with rotary joints [citation needed] that has 6 or more Degrees of Freedom. This is one of the most commonly used robots in industry today (many examples can be found from legged robots or industrial robots). Articulated robots can range from ...

  5. Robot hand with bones, ligaments and tendons 3D printed in ...

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  6. Robotic arm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robotic_arm

    This robot features two parallel rotary joints to provide compliance in a plane. Articulated robot: Used for assembly operations, diecasting, fettling machines, gas welding, arc welding and spray-painting. It is a robot whose arm has at least three rotary joints. Parallel robot: One use is a mobile platform handling cockpit flight simulators ...

  7. 321 kinematic structure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/321_kinematic_structure

    An arm design that does not follow these design rules typically requires an iterative algorithm to solve the inverse kinematics problem. The 321 design is an example of a 6R wrist-partitioned manipulator: the three wrist joints intersect, the two shoulder and elbow joints are parallel, the first joint intersects the first shoulder joint ...

  8. SCARA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SCARA

    The SCARA is a type of industrial robot. The acronym stands for selective compliance assembly robot arm [1] or selective compliance articulated robot arm. [2] By virtue of the SCARA's parallel-axis joint layout, the arm is slightly compliant in the X-Y direction but rigid in the Z direction, hence the term selective compliance. This is ...

  9. 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.

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