Path: utzoo!attcan!uunet!aplcen!uakari.primate.wisc.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!wuarchive!udel!princeton!idunno!siemens!demon!jrv From: jrv@demon.siemens.com (James R Vallino) Newsgroups: comp.robotics Subject: Re: CM Ambler Rover Message-ID: <33361@siemens.siemens.com> Date: 2 Jul 90 14:24:54 GMT References: <95816@philabs.Philips.Com> <8485@jpl-devvax.JPL.NASA.GOV> <73@tucson.sie.arizona.edu> Sender: news@siemens.siemens.com Reply-To: jrv@demon.siemens.com Organization: Siemens Corporate Research, Inc. Lines: 17 In article <73@tucson.sie.arizona.edu> bill@tucson.sie.arizona.edu (Bill Ganoe) writes: >Size is not well defined here, and I suspect that it may stay >sort of flexible for a while yet. I would consider "6 feet long and 3 feet >high" to be "not very small" either. Brooks has mentioned things like >"3-kilogram Mars rovers", but I don't remember exact linear dimensions >for the rovers that his group at MIT is currently working with. (It's >definitely less than 6' x 3' though.) The first walker that Brooks and his people built is about 13" long with a leg span of 10". The next generation which is currently being developed will be 14" long by 12" wide. -- Jim Vallino Siemens Corporate Research, Inc., Princeton, NJ jrv@demon.siemens.com princeton!siemens!demon!jrv (609) 734-3331