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Analyzed from 153 words in the discussion.

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#gripper#tool#flange#https#degrees#freedom#lerobot#axis#base#elbow

Discussion (5 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews

utopiahβ€’17 minutes ago
How does it compare to LeRobot SO101 https://huggingface.co/docs/lerobot/so101 ?
rkagererβ€’25 minutes ago
What's the precision/rigidity/strength/repeatability like?
numpad0β€’about 3 hours ago
Wouldn't you need the axis 4 to be in line with axis 6 for it to have 6DoF?
serfβ€’about 2 hours ago
base, hip, elbow, wrist , wrist rotation, gripper.

so, six variables that produce a posture. 6DoF.

but explaining this makes me feel like i'm missing some deeper meaning in your comment?

michaeltβ€’22 minutes ago
They actually describe it as "6+1 degrees of freedom" [1] with the gripper being the "+1" - so it's got base, shoulder, elbow, wrist1, wrist2, wrist3, and gripper.

This is a conventional way of describing things. Traditionally robot arms come with a "tool flange" where you attach your own "end effector" (which might be a gripper, or a suction cup, or a welding gun, or a paint sprayer, or whatever) and we count the degrees of freedom before the tool flange separately from those after the tool flange.

Occasionally robots come with 7 degrees of freedom [2] which gives you more options for reaching the same tool flange position. This can be useful in certain applications, like working around obstacles in the environment. It's uncommon though.

[1] https://www.seeedstudio.com/reBot-Arm-B601-DM-Bundle.html [2] https://explicit-robotics.github.io/exp_robot/kuka_LBR_iiwa7...