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HERO (robot)

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HERO
ManufacturerHeathkit
Typerobot
Release date1982 (1982)
Discontinued2012 (2012)

HERO (from Heathkit Educational Robot) is a series of several educational robots sold by Heathkit during the 1980s.

The Heath Company began the HERO 1 project in October 1979, with the first release in 1982.[1] Models include the HERO 1, HERO Jr., and HERO 2000. Heathkit supported the HERO robot line until 1995. The units were either sold as assembly kits or prebuilt by Heathkit for an additional fee. The 1980s models are considered collectors items, due to their rarity.[2]

For the most part, they cannot perform practical tasks, but are more geared toward entertainment and education above all.

HERO 1 (ET-18)

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HERO 1
HERO 1's control panel

HERO 1 is a self-contained mobile robot controlled by an onboard computer with a Motorola 6808 CPU and 4 kB of RAM. The robot features light, sound, and motion detectors as well as a sonar ranging sensor. An optional arm mechanism and speech synthesizer was produced for the kit form and included in the assembled form.[3][4]

To make this power available in a simple way, high-level programming languages were created. For example, the ANDROTEXT language is a HERO 1 editor and compiler developed in 1982 for the IBM PC.[5][6][7][8]

HERO 1 is featured on a few episodes of the children's television program Mr. Wizard's World.[9][10] Byte magazine called HERO 1 "a product of extraordinary flexibility and function ... If you are interested in robotics, Heath will show you the way".[11]

Release date 1982 (1982)
Price Kit US$1500 (equivalent to $4,887.41 in 2024),
Assembled US$2,500 (equivalent to $8,145.69 in 2024)[12]
Discontinued 1995 (1995)
Units sold 14,000 (across 8 years)
Media Assembly manual, user's manual, technical manual, and speech dictionary
Power Batteries: four 6-volt gel cell
Charger: 120/240 VAC, 50/60 Hz charger
CPU Motorola 6808
Memory RAM: 4 kB
Monitor ROM: 2 kB
Storage Compact Cassette
Display six 7-segment LEDs
Sound Votrax SC-01 speech synthesizer[13][14] (Included with Assembled version and $149.95 option for kit)
Input Hex keypad with 17 keys
Dimensions 20 inches high x 18 inches wide (50 cm x 45 cm)
Weight 39 pounds (18 kg)

HERO Jr. (RT-1)

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Hero Jr. (with optional remote control)
HERO Jr. frontal view

A smaller version called HERO Jr. was released later. Heathkit intended it for the home market, and therefore made it less complex, and more self-contained. Like HERO 1, HERO Jr. has a 6808 processor, but only 2 kB of RAM. It has onboard speech synthesis, a Polaroid sonar range sensor, a light sensor, a sound sensor, and an optional infrared sensor. Other optional components include a pair of extra batteries to double the operational time between charges, from an estimated 4 hours to 8 hours. A remote control accessory allows users to drive the robot around. It includes a motion sensor that causes the robot to croak "SOM-THING-MOVE" when it detects a source of motion.

Heathkit released several add-ons to increase the robot's capabilities, including a transmitter to activate a home security system in the event it senses movement while on "guard duty". Also, additional cartridges with programs and games were produced, as well as a components to allow the user to directly program the robot.

The drive mechanism is backward compared to the HERO 1, with the drive and steering wheel in the back of the robot. The head section features an indentation to allow the robot to transport up to 10 pounds (4.5 kg). The robot can speak several phrases from various films that involve robots or computers. It is capable of remembering and repeating back its master's name, singing songs, reciting poems, acting as an alarm clock, and making its own combinations of phonemes to create a robotic gibberish.

Release date 1984 (1984)
Price Kit US$599.95,
Assembled US$1000[12]
Discontinued Before October 1987 (1987-10) (Assembled)[15]
1995 (Kit)
Units sold 4000 (across 8 years)
Power Batteries:6 V 3.8 A·h x2, x4 optional
CPU Motorola 6808 1 MHz
Memory RAM: 2 kB, expandable to 24 kB
Monitor ROM: 32 kB
Display 9 LEDs
Sound Votrax SC-01 speech synthesizer[14]
Input Hex keypad with 17 keys
Dimensions 19 inches (48 cm) high[16]
Weight 21.5 pounds (9.8 kg)[16]

HERO 2000 (ET-19)

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HERO 2000

The much more powerful HERO 2000 includes several onboard microprocessors, onboard speech synthesis, several sensors, and the ability to add expansion cards using a passive backplane.[17]

Release date 1986 (1986)
Price Kit US$3,000
Assembled US$4,500[18]
Discontinued 1995 (1995)
Units sold 3000 (across 8 years)
Power Battery: single 24 amp-hour battery,
Charger: 120 VAC charger included
CPU Intel 8088 (Main)
6 slave Z-80 processors (11 with optional arm)
Memory RAM: 24 kB, expandable to 576 kB,
Monitor ROM: 64 kB with integrated BASIC
Display 16 head-mounted LED status indicators (eight are user definable)
RS-232 serial port
Sound Silicon Systems SSI 263 (analog formant) speech synthesizer[19]
Input hexadecimal keypad
RS-232 serial port
Dimensions Height 32 inches (81 cm)[20]
Weight 78 pounds (35 kg)[20]

HE-RObot

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HE-RObot, a badge-engineered version of the 914 PC-Bot (pictured) by White Box Robotics

The HE-RObot is the result of a strategic partnership between Heathkit and White Box Robotics, marketed to the educational market. When available, it cost up to US$8,000. Heathkit sold approximately 50 of these robots before bankruptcy in 2012.[21][22][23]

Developer White Box Robotics[24]
Release date 2007 (2007)
Price up to US$8,000
Discontinued 2012 (2012)
Unitssold approximately 50
OS Windows XP Pro
Power Batteries: 2 x 12V 9Ah Lead Acid Battery
Charger: SONEIL 12V Intelligent Battery Charger (3A)
CPU Intel Core Duo
Memory 1 GB DDR2 RAM
Storage 80 GB 2½ in. SATA Hard drive
Dimensions Height 21 inches (53 cm)
Weight 25 kg (55 lb)
Website www.heathkit.com/herobot.html (Historical) Archive index at the Wayback Machine

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Whatever Happened To Heathkit?, By Lou Frenzel, Electronic Design, Feb 18, 2009
  2. ^ Classic Heathkit Electronic Test Equipment, By Jeff Tranter, 2013, Page 12. ISBN 0992138205
  3. ^ Mark J. Robillard: HERO 1 - Advanced Programming and Interfacing, H.W. Sams 1983. ISBN 0-672-22165-9
  4. ^ Howard Boyet: Hero 1 - Advanced Programming Experiments, Heathkit/Zenith 1984. ISBN 0-87119-036-2
  5. ^ ACM (1982). "ANDROTEXT for HERO 1 Editor and Compiler IBM PC". Online Historical Encyclopaedia of Programming Languages, ACM History of Programming Language Conference (HOPL).
  6. ^ Solem, J. C. (May 1984). "ANDROTEXT-A high-level language for personal robots". Robotics Age Magazine. 6 (5): 16.
  7. ^ Fuller, James (1988). ROBOTICS: Introduction, Programming, and Projects. Prentice-Hall.
  8. ^ Gupta, A. K.; Arora, S. K. (2009). "Industrial Automation and Robotics". (Laxmi Publications): 379. ISBN 9788131805923.
  9. ^ Building A Robot: The Crash Course, By William J. Broad, Published: May 3, 1983, The New York Times
  10. ^ Robots: Best Educational Platform Ever, Apr 25, 2013 by Lou Frenzel, Communiqué
  11. ^ Leininger, Steve. "Heath's HERO-1 Robot". BYTE. p. 86. Retrieved 19 October 2013. volume 8 number, 1 January 1983
  12. ^ a b Tech Watch, By Cynthia McClean, Page 78, Black Enterprise, Jun 1985, Hero 1 - Kit US$1150 / Assembled US$2149; Hero Jr - Kit US$599.95 / Assembled US$1000
  13. ^ [https://books.google.com/books?id=FzAEAAAAMBAJ&dq=HEath+educational+robot&pg=PA1
  14. ^ a b Hero Robot Frequently Asked Questions, Donnie V. Savage Site
  15. ^ HERO Jr, DAMARK International Advert, Page 136, Popular Mechanics, Oct 1987 - Public notice: Heath no longer make factory assembled model. They decided to produce the kit version. So we brought the remaining inventory..., Manufactures recommended price US$1078.85 DAMARK PRICE: US$298
  16. ^ a b Robot helps at home, Page 25, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Oct 9, 1984
  17. ^ John D. Hubbard, Lawrence P. Larsen: Hero 2000 - Programming and Interfacing, Heathkit/Zenith 1986. ISBN 0-87119-153-9
  18. ^ Electronics Newsfront, By William J. Hawkins, Page 28, Popular Science, Feb 1986
  19. ^ I believe you are referring to the SSI 263 from Silicon Systems. Steve Ciarcia had a Circuit Cellar article based on it and the Hero 2000 used it for speech. .., Subject:speech chips, Post by Alan Matthew, 23 Nov 1996 04:00:00
  20. ^ a b Professor Robot, Page 13, The Rotarian, Jun 1986
  21. ^ HE-RObot: The Next Generation of Heathkit HERO Robots Posted by james on December 26, 2007 at 03:16 PM in Do-It-Yourself, Robots - Retro Thing
  22. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on January 26, 2013. Retrieved March 6, 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  23. ^ 914 PC Bots Community Archived 2015-04-02 at the Wayback Machine, Forum
  24. ^ [https://web.archive.org/web/20080103050600/http://www.whiteboxrobotics.com/NEWS/index.htm December 12, 2007, News & Events, White Box Robotics

Bibliography

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  • Howard Boyet: Heath's robot "HERO": 68 experiments : fundamentals and applications, Microprocessor Training 1983. ISBN 9994699709
  • Mark J. Robillard: HERO 1 - Advanced Programming and Interfacing, H.W. Sams 1983. ISBN 0-672-22165-9
  • Howard Boyet: Hero 1 - Advanced Programming Experiments, Heathkit/Zenith 1984. ISBN 0-87119-036-2
  • John D. Hubbard, Lawrence P. Larsen: Hero 2000 - Programming and Interfacing, Heathkit/Zenith 1986. ISBN 0-87119-153-9
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