3D printing company LSC brings 3D printing robot inmoov into school

From now until May, the Free Science Center in Jersey City, New Jersey, will have a special guest to play "SIMON SAYS" with visitors. After successfully hosting the fourth-grade design exhibition in the spring of 2015, LSC recently used a 3D printed exhibition robot to enter the school. At the same time, they create a 3D printer is the beginning of man, inmoov robot created by the French designer and sculptor Gael Langevin, all parts of the upper body of the robot are made using 3D printing.

To prepare the printed robot, the Stevens team created the model using SolidWorks software and converted it to the STL format. About 100 parts of the entire robot, including limbs, joints and bones, are printed on a 3D printer.

"This is probably the world's robot that uses 3D printers to print parts," Pochiraju said.

Each part of the robot is 3D printed, and Peter Bruinooge splicing each part of the robot piece by piece. Prior to this project, Peter Bruinoogev used 3D printing technology to make baby products, and also helped the Department of Defense design a helmet suit. Peter Bruinooge worked with Gebre and a group of students studying electrical engineering to power the robot, write the servo system and the Arduino control module, and let the 3D printing robot move the body, swing the fingers and take a selfie. You can even tell you how it was built.

Langevin's inmoov robot design has been used in many applications. For example, the inmoov design has been put into many good projects to help hospitalized children. Last year, robot inmoov visited patients from the Great Ormond Street Children's Hospital to the London Zoo in a virtual way. The design of the inmoov robot has also been promoted by Wevolver, the leading platform for open source hardware projects.

The Robotics Show will begin on April 19th and the Free Science Center will showcase the results of four student teams from Stevens, including mobile robots, model-sized trains, body armor suits, and an electric guitar. Although Stevens Institute of Technology's inmoov robot was not designed for social purposes, it is still the majority of reasons why middle school students visit the Free Science Center. Bryan Blaney, Manager of the Visitors Management Office at the Science Museum, said: “The exhibition of interesting 3D printing robots is the most exciting prospect. Our guests are always interested in cutting-edge technology, which is shaping our advanced technology. Pursuit. Stevens works with our guests, and most of our guests are high school students who do great work beyond their age."

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