DARPA may be the Big Dog of robotic cargo transport for now, but that doesn't mean it's the only game in town. A new design from the Italian Institute of Technology may look like the Army's pack-bot but it runs like a Ferarri—or, at least, a skittering, mechanical Ibex.
Led by Professor Darwin Caldwell, a team from the IIT's department of Advanced Robotics has spent nearly half a decade designing, building, and testing the meter-long, 70 kilogram hydraulically-driven quadraped—Hydraulically-driven Quadraped, HyQ. Being hydraulically activated and constructed from lightweight aluminum, the HyQ is one of a handful of robots capable of the instantaneous corrections needed for off-road deployment. It employs 12 active joints—eight hydraulically-powered, four electrically-powered—to generate the necessary torque for moving nimbly over rough terrain. And boy can it move. As you can see in the test video above, the HyQ is not only capable of bounding up inclines, trotting along at 2m/s, and actively avoiding obstacles but also leaping vertically, clamoring over and around debris, even rearing up on its hind legs (just needs a simian Lone Ranger riding and the effect will be complete).
To accomplish these feats, the HyQ relies on a force-feedback system that monitors the pressure on each foot and adjusts each leg's stiffness in response by rapidly pumping hydraulic fluid in or out of the actuators. These actively compliant legs are a key feature on the HyQ—as is its open source design. "BigDog is a black box — nobody knows exactly what designs, materials, controllers they are using," Claudio Semini, a researcher responsible for HyQ's hardware and a founding member of the project, told IEEE "We want to make our design as open as possible." And, apparently, as attractive. [Forbes - Engadget - Spectrum IEEE - IIT]