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Watch the HyQReal Robot Pull an Airplane

24 May 2019
Watch the HyQReal Robot Pull an Airplane
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The Dynamic Legged Systems Lab at the Italian Institute of Technology (IIT) has been working with hydraulic quadrupedal robots since about 2010— we first met their HyQ research platform at IROS 2011, and they've been using it for some regularly impressive research since then. But nine years is a very, very long time in robotics, and HyQ has been displaying its age relative to the more recent (and more dynamic) generation of quadrupeds like SpotMini, ANYmal, and Cheetah 3.
 
Today, IIT is announcing a brand new and hugely upgraded quadruped called HyQReal. It's developed to be big, powerful, and rugged, and to demonstrate its capabilities, IIT guessed that they might as well see if it could pull a three-ton airplane.
 
HyQReal is 1.33 m long and 90 cm tall, and its weight is 130kg considering hydraulics and batteries onboard. The robot is protected by an aluminum roll cage and a skin made of Kevlar, glass fiber and plastic. The robot has custom-made rubber feet for traction when the going gets harsh. The robot has two computers on board, one for vision, the other for control.
 
The video, while impressive, doesn't give a very clear photo of the overall capabilities of the robot (and neither does that little snippet from the press release, which consists the entirety of the technical info). Fortunately, Claudio Semini gave a workshop talk at ICRA today where he introduced HyQReal in much more detail. Here's a slide showing all the specs:
 
IIT partnered with Moog on the hydraulics, using their Integrated Smart Actuators, each with a 3D-printed titanium body that contains all the sensors, electronics, and fluid routing. There are two independent hydraulic pumps, one powering the front legs, and the other powering the hind legs. The battery (which weighs 15kg) should be ideal for about two hours, although IIT hasn't yet done endurance testing. Since the actuators are generally sealed up, HyQReal is water- and dust-resistant, fit to keep moving while being sprayed with water or having sand dumped all over it.
 
At the ICRA workshop, we saw some brief video of the robot trotting, as well as lying down and standing up again. We're advised that it should be able to autonomously restore after it falls, but IIT hasn't had time to test that either. HyQReal is very, very new, so there's a lot of stuff that the researchers essentially haven't had a chance to figure out yet. They also haven't had a chance to put a beefy electric arm on it, which is part of the long-term plan to make the robot useful:
 
Pulling an airplane isn't likely to be HyQReal's primary job— very broadly, it's been developed to 'support humans in emergency scenarios,' and should be ideal for 'disaster response, agriculture, decommissioning, and inspection.' It's still very much a research robot at the moment, although based on all of the work that IIT has done on the previous version of HyQ, we're hoping to see some rapid progress over the next few months.



This article is originally posted on Tronserve.com

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