OpenRoACH: A Durable Open-Source Hexapedal Platform with Onboard Robot Operating System (ROS)
This provides an accessible, open-source platform for robotics research and education, though it is incremental in combining existing components into a compact design.
The researchers developed OpenRoACH, a small, low-cost hexapedal robot that runs ROS onboard, costing under $150 and assembling in two hours, and demonstrated capabilities like multi-surface walking, carrying payloads up to 800 grams, and ROS-based control.
OpenRoACH is a 15-cm 200-gram self-contained hexapedal robot with an onboard single-board computer. To our knowledge, it is the smallest legged robot with the capability of running the Robot Operating System (ROS) onboard. The robot is fully open sourced, uses accessible materials and off-the-shelf electronic components, can be fabricated with benchtop fast-prototyping machines such as a laser cutter and a 3D printer, and can be assembled by one person within two hours. Its sensory capacity has been tested with gyroscopes, accelerometers, Beacon sensors, color vision sensors, linescan sensors and cameras. It is low-cost within \$150 including structure materials, motors, electronics, and a battery. The capabilities of OpenRoACH are demonstrated with multi-surface walking and running, 24-hour continuous walking burn-ins, carrying 200-gram dynamic payloads and 800-gram static payloads, and ROS control of steering based on camera feedback. Information and files related to mechanical design, fabrication, assembly, electronics, and control algorithms are all publicly available on https://wiki.eecs.berkeley.edu/biomimetics/Main/OpenRoACH.