The Robot book : build & control 20 electric gizmos, moving machines, and hacked toys

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Where to find it

Information & Library Science Library

Call Number
TJ211.2 .M47 2014
Status
Available

Authors, etc.

Names:

Summary

Drones, RC cars, artificial limbs, Roombas--the robots have arrived! Don't you want your own? Author and physics teacher Bobby Mercer will show you how to turn common household objects and repurposed materials into 20 easy-to-build robots for little or no cost. Turn a toothbrush, an old cell phone or pager, and scrap wire into a Brush Bot, or hack a toy car to hotwire a Not-So-Remote Bot. A small electric fan, several craft sticks, and rubber bands make a Fan-Tastic Dancing Machine, and drinking straws, string, tape, and glue can be used to construct a working model of the human hand.

Every hands-on project contains a materials list and detailed step-by-step instructions with photos for easy assembly. Mercer also explains the science and technology behind each robot, including concepts such as friction, weight and mass, center of gravity, kinetic and potential energy, electric circuitry, DC vs. AC current, and more. These projects are also perfect for science fairs or design competitions.

Contents

Getting started. What is a robot? ; Safety ; Soldering ; Where to get parts ; Parts of a robot -- Vibration bots. Brush bot ; Wind-up brush bot ; Brust bot extreme ; Nail bot ; Scrub bot ; Tri-color bot ; Quad-color bot ; Superhero waddler ; Cancan dancer -- Hacked toy bots. Bath bot ; Not-so-remote bot ; U2-D2 ; Mini wobble bot ; Transform-a-bot ; Truck battle bot ; LED light show -- Everything else bots. Jack-in-the-bot ; Fan-tastic dancing machine ; Arm bot ; Handy Andy ; Vibrot maze -- What is next? Robotics websites ; Robotics books ; Robotics kits and more.

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