User:Robotics1/sandbox1
DRAFT ST Robotics
[edit]In mainspace at ST Robotics
ST Robotics is a twin company based in Cambridge, England, and Princeton, New Jersey, USA. The company designs and manufactures low–cost bench–top industrial robot arms. The company has no sales force and sells their products purely through the internet as "boxed robots".
History
[edit]In 1982 David Sands formed the company Intelligent Artefacts which was based in Cambridge, England. One of its products was educational robot arms. The arms were programmed in BASIC and would run on any of the popular makes of computers of the time such as Apple (Apple II series), Acorn Electron, Atari, BBC Micro or the Commodore Pet. The robot competed with others in the market-place like the Armdroid.[1] As the programming language Forth became available on these computers Sands wrote the first version of RoboForth which enabled the robots to run and respond much faster. A version of RoboForth was also written for Armdroid.
In 1984 Intelligent Artefacts was closed down and a new company formed, also in Cambridge, called Cyber Robotics who sold a redesigned arm known as the Cyber 310.[2] Hundreds of these were sold around the world between 1981 and 1987. The robot arm was adopted in 1987 by Mike Topping as the basis for the Handy 1,[citation needed] a robotic helper for the severely disabled. Cyber Robotics was bought by the Bibby Corporation in 1982 and it was eventually closed due to lack of sales.
During the period that Intelligent Artifacts was in operation many inquiries were received for more serious and professional uses of robot arms for which the Cyber 310 was not suitable. This alerted Sands to the potential for manufacturing a bench–top robot arm series, of which there were some already in existence, notably the Zymark.
Sands technology was formed in 1985 and in 1986 a shell company was created, Imagecroft Ltd. The company began to manufacture robot arms, such as the R12 Mk1, R15 and R16, which were used in applications from laboratory work in DNA processing[3] to nuclear reactors.[citation needed][4] In 1989 David Sands met Mathew Monforte in New Jersey and the pair decided to expand the company for the American market in 1991 when Sands Technology International was incorporated in New Jersey.[citation needed] The less personal pseudonym of ST Robotics was coined in 1995 under which both companies now trade.[citation needed] [5]
Technology
[edit]ST Robotics’ technology is based on using stepping motors as opposed to the usual DC servo motors. For some years the technology had problems from lack of power and motor resonance. These problems were solved with the advent of rare–earth hybrid motors, high voltage micro-stepping drives and incremental encoder feedback. The robots calibrate themselves by driving each axis slowly to a target sensed by a proximity detector. Incremental optical encoders then track along with the motors to check for errors. This is called closed loop control which differs from servo control in that the stepping motors run essentially an open loop — the loop is only closed at the end of each movement of the arm. ST’s latest arm, the R12 Mk2, has the encoders only as an option.
The ST robot controller uses two processors: one to run the RoboForth programming language and a digital signal processor (DSP) to control the motors. The DSP is able to control all axes collectively with individual axes ramping up or down as necessary for a compound motion. At the same time it reads back the encoders data and passes this information to the CPU which also uses the DSP's timers.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "The Colne Robotics ARMDROID - Construction and operation manual" (PDF). Colne Robotics. 1981. Retrieved 14 August 2010.
- ^ "BeebControl>>Robot arms>>Cyber 310". Nildram - BeebControl. Retrieved 14 August 2010.
- ^ Sullivan, K. (1997). "A Fully Integrated Robotic System for High Sample Throughput Within a DNA Databasing Unit". Promega. Retrieved 14 August 2010.
{{cite web}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ Sands, David (2006). "Cost effective robotics in the nuclear industry". Industrial Robot: An International Journal. 33 (3). Emerald Group Publishing Limited: 170–173. doi:10.1108/01439910610659079. Retrieved 14 August 2010.
- ^ Jeremy Peirce (2002). ""High Throughput Thermocyclers"". TheScientist.com. Retrieved 28 August 2010.