Friday, February 10, 2017

Another creation

I finished this one this week while we were getting hit with this winters first real storm. I had the day off so I spent a portion of it at the bench. This one is about 3 inches tall. I really like it, especially the fact that it has no real front or back, it kinda works both ways.




Wednesday, February 1, 2017

Lots going on

The past week or two have been busy. This is the bench in the Robotorium. Right now I have 6 different robots in varying stages of completion. When I get going like this the bench gets kind of crazy, but it's how I work. I love it when I have a bunch going on. It allows me to jump between projects, so if Im stuck I go to something else, or another idea pops into being and off I go. Not the most efficient way to work, but a lot of fun.


Saturday, January 7, 2017

The Creative Process

With this post I want to give you an idea of how I create a robot. This project took about 3 weeks and is fairly representative of how I go about designing (if you can call it that) and building one of these.
This is a timer from The Industrial Timer Corporation in Parsippany NJ. I bought this on eBay over 3 years ago. Its one of the first things I got when I started thinking about building these, so its been sitting around for quite while. 


 Originally I was going to use this old glass telephone pole insulator as the head. I was going for a Robby the Robot kind of look. I was also thinking about adding an LED inside the insulator for some subtle lighting effect.  Once I decided to get going on this project I started messing around with different heads.

I tried this, an old aircraft whiskey compass. I like the way the numbers and hash marks on the compass work with the numbers on the face of the timer, but something about this wasn't jelling. Next I pulled out an old pair of binoculars I had and a few other bits and came up with this:

I really like what this did. In this photo I have already added a heat sink to the binoculars as a sort of a mouth. There are also a set of neodymium hard drive magnets to the side of the timer. I love the face of the timer but the sides and back were basically blank and needed something to provide a little more visual interest and I like the way the magnets did that. The binoculars are sitting on a bearing and large plastic gear and the head rotates. At this point I was envisioning some sort of arms made of black corrugated plastic, or old rubber hose.


In addition to the magnets I stuck these old handles on the back. Visually they work really well with the timer and they soften the body. Now I'm getting somewhere, but I still hadn't figured out the arms.  I decided to set the whole thing aside and started messing around with some old dental drill parts I had. I ended up making these:
 Now I had a very cool set of arms that I had absolutely no intention of using on my current project. These have a kind of Terminator look that, while I love, did not fit with what I was fiddling together. Often when I am building I drop what I am doing and start messing with something else, its a haphazard way to work but I find it really fun. So now I have a pair of arms that I'm thinking would serve as the basis for an entirely different robot when inspiration struck:
Inspiration!


So my idea was to build off of the hard drive magnets I had stuck to the side as shoulders and see if I could find a way to visually incorporate the arms I just made. This is what I came up with:
I changed the type of hard drive magnet, added a few bearings to it and came up with a shoulder that worked with the new arms. The problem was I still wanted a way to integrate the wires on the arm with the body as well as the skeleton like look with the rest of the robot, so I found this:

I got rid of the gear part of the neck and used this aluminum frame from and old blender motor and added a few bearings to the neck. These parts help to tie the arms to the body both mechanically and visually. I'm really loving how it looks. Now I need legs, but I had no idea what the legs were going to be. I need to think a bit.

While thinking about the legs I did made one slight change to the shoulder. I dumped one of the bigger bearings and added a small aluminum nut in its place. I went back and forth for a while and ultimately liked the way this looked. Now, what about those legs? When I build I try to use what I have on hand. With that I started to rummage around and came upon the parts I used for the legs of "The Five" series. With a little more messing around, and the idea of making this a tripod, I came up with this:

Visually these work. They echo the color and material of the neck the arms and the body. The black feet visually connect to the neck and body, and the gears above the feet play off of the timer faceplate. I just needed to do a little futzing around to figure out how to attach them and "Viola" a new robot joins the crowd:

I love the way this turned out. I think it has a lot of visual interest and a well thought out design. For any given project the process is pretty much the same. I start with a piece, mess around with a few ideas, which knock loose a few more ideas and eventually it all comes together. 
















Friday, December 30, 2016

Not a Robot

So clearly this is not a robot. But it is very cool. It came together pretty quickly in the midst of working on another robot. I love the way it looks and it is in keeping with the machine age asthetic I try to capture. Right now I am working on a series the shows the creative process, look for it soon.


Thursday, December 22, 2016

Humorous Diversions

My memory was jogged last night regarding a great commercial that aired on Saturday Night Live back in the 90's. It was for Old Glory Robot Attack Insurance. I think its hysterical and love the robot they came up with for the piece. Enjoy.




Monday, December 12, 2016

Smaller Creations

The size robots I build seems to fall into a few groups. Large (bigger than 2 feet) Medium (1-2 feet) and small, like these:


These range from about one and a half to a little over six inches. The smaller scale is fun to work with but seems to have little impact on how much time is involved. The quickest one has come together is about 30 minutes, some have taken over a year of pondering and tinkering, most take a couple of weeks of on-and-off work. Either way its rewarding and the end product always makes me smile. 

Friday, December 2, 2016

Cool things I find

So I'm sitting at the bench pulling apart an old voltmeter and find this:


Naturally the next inclination is to search for Burgess Batteries on the interweb and I come up with this:


Clearly the good people at Burgess Battery (bought by Mallory Batteries, now known as Duracell) had the same vision of robots that I do. The cool thing is this battery is still kicking out 1.2 volts! God knows how long it's been in there. The other cool thing is that pulling apart stuff invariably gives me lots of other parts, now I need to think of what to do with an ancient, but still usable dry cell.