T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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394.1 | It wont be long now... | OPUS::LUBART | | Thu Oct 02 1986 17:24 | 19 |
| First of all, there was a series called 'The Expendables' by Richard
Avery, that mentioned exo-skeletons that mimicked the humans actions
but with a tremdous amount more strength and speed.
Now, onto the the subject. There is no reason such a thing could
not be built today. Although in a crude fashion, we have prosthetics
that respond to the nerve impulses of amputees to control motion
in the same manner as a real limb. Exo-skeletons (or loaders) seem
even easier to implement. The stimulus is the motion of the person,
sensed by position and/or motion sensors, and translated to powerful
servos that operate the machine. I would think that the major
challenge to building a 'loader' would be maintaining balance.
The controller would need to override any motion that would set
the unit off balance. I've already seen demonstrations of a robot
with six legs that can walk up and down stairs and lift one end
of a car. (Bet it changes tires fast!). If also seen a one-legged
robot that hops like a pogo stick. Im ready to accept 'powerloaders'.
/Dan
|
394.2 | EXCUSE ME... | EDEN::KLAES | I enjoy working with people. | Thu Oct 02 1986 18:05 | 7 |
| You will find the ALIENS note - which does a lot of discussion
about the powerloaders - in SF note 357.
There is also discussion about those machines in SF Myths, 362.
Larry
|
394.3 | | GRAMPS::ANGELONE | Ghostwriter | Fri Oct 03 1986 07:49 | 13 |
|
I remember something a long time ago (like grade school) about a
"space suit" for astronauts to wear in "lighter than earth"
gravtities. It was not controlled by the persons mind. It merely
strenghtened or augmented the persons physical abilities. I guess
if you started a movement, say upwards to lift a object, the
SUIT would take over till you start an oppsing motion to stop it
or reverse the action. There was no real detail. Remember, this
was, oh say, late 1950s early 60s.
Rick A
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394.4 | Dick Tracy maybe?? | CLT::BENNISON | | Sat Oct 04 1986 21:49 | 7 |
| Wasn't that from the Dick Tracy comic strip when he was doing all
that far out stuff about the moon-maidens? He had little individual
flying platforms in which Dick would fly above the surface of the
moon. There was some excuse why he didn't have to use space suits
as I recall. This is all very fuzzy, but I remember the space suits
you are talking about, though they may not have been from Dick Tracy.
|
394.5 | Why bother? | SEAMOS::REDFORD | DREADCO staff researcher | Tue Oct 07 1986 20:00 | 18 |
| We could probably build powerloaders today, but what for? Compared
to forklifts, they're
unstable, slow, and difficult to operate. Unstable, because they
only have two points of support, the feet. Pick up something heavy
and you fall on your face. Slow, because they have legs instead of wheels.
Their max speed is determined by how fast you can move your legs,
which is not very. Difficult to operate, because you have to bend
over to get underneath something, again risking a fall.
Now, several books have used powered exo-skeletons for soldiers, eg
"Starship Troopers" and "The Forever War". Soldiers have to operate
in a much wider range of environments than loading crews, so it makes
sense to have a more versatile form of mechanical aid.
Loading crews work on nice smooth floors, whereas soldiers work in swamps,
jungles, deserts, etc.. They need an adaptable form of transport,
but the guys on the dock don't.
/jlr
|
394.6 | Exoskeletal Muppet Control | BACH::WELLS | | Wed Oct 08 1986 18:56 | 9 |
| I never saw the movie, but I saw a show on TV (PBS?) about Jim Henson
and the making of `Labyrinth'. There is a *large* monster (~15
feet tall) that is actually a muppet that size. The controls are
an exoskeleton worn by someone off to the side of the set, and all
body movements, including arm, hand and head (though not facial,
if I recall correctly) were translated directly from the controller's
actions to the muppet. Quite impressive.
Richard
|
394.7 | reaserch done back in late 60's | STONED::MAYNARD | Rich Maynard 296-6751 | Fri Oct 24 1986 13:13 | 8 |
| Back in the 1965-1967 time frame there was some research done on power
exoskeletons and they were originally planned to be less bulky
than the one seen in _Aliens_ I remember seeing an artical in Machanics
Illustrated (sometime around that period) describing research on
them. I also saw a comment in the SF lovers Digest stating that
GE or GTE or one of those guys build and use such machines now.
Rich
|
394.8 | A POSSIBLE REALITY PARALLEL | EDEN::KLAES | Pining for the fjords. | Fri Oct 24 1986 18:03 | 11 |
| In the SF anthology, BODY ARMOR: 2000, edited by Joe Haldeman,
there is a ficticious (though seemingly fact-based) "study" of
artificial exoskeletons.
Though this book concentrates primarily on their uses as futuristic
armor for tomorrow's "knights", it does show numerous diagrams of
one possible mechanical evolution of these exoskeletons (beginning
in 1995).
Larry
|
394.9 | GE did it | ENUF::DAWSON | If you're looking for me, I just left | Mon Nov 24 1986 15:27 | 8 |
| I talked to a salesman from Detroit who worked for GE for 20 some
odd years. This salesman said that GE did indeed design and build
the powerloaders similiar to those used in ALIENS. However, for
whatever reason, they didn't sell.
He said that the movie reminded him of the GE project.
Name and node address of the salesman furnished upon request.
|
394.10 | < We've got pictures! > | NUHAVN::ROSSMEISL | | Tue Dec 30 1986 10:50 | 11 |
|
Note: This is really from NRADM::WILBUR using a friends account.
A picture of a 'Power Loader' that GE built can be found in
a book called "ROBOTS" published I believe in 1979.
After seeing the movie I raced home and dragged the book out
of storage to show a friend.
|
394.11 | Let's Be serious ! | LDP::HAFEZ | Amr A. Hafez 'On the EVE of Destruction' | Wed Feb 18 1987 00:18 | 14 |
| There was a project in the 60's called the "Man Amplifier Project",
and I believe it was at MIT. I saw it an a Time/Life science series
book. Exoskeletons were made there.
Now about the powerloaders in the context of ALIENS was a little
superflous. If they could make an anderoid that can play Russian
Roulette with an knife, ad handle a computer keyboard, why the heck
would they need powerloaders that need a human driver ? Just stick
an anderoid brain in there and you can tell it what to do, it may
even talk back. Of course the android probably would not want to
wrestle with Big Ugly in the airlock either. :^)
Amr
|
394.12 | economics | CACHE::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Wed Feb 18 1987 09:46 | 12 |
| re .11:
>...why the heck would they need powerloaders that need a human driver ?
Because Androids are @#$%&* expensive.
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
394.13 | Expensive 'droids | NY1MM::BOWERS | Dave Bowers | Wed Feb 18 1987 10:34 | 13 |
| re .11, .12;
Not only are 'droids expensive, but, unless you are running a freight
depot, you don't tie up an expensive brain in a powerloader which
will be idle most of the time.
It seems to me that there are only 2 sensible ways to build a 'droid.
- make it as much like a human as possible so that it can operate any
tool or device designed for human operators.
- make it a mobile sensor/brain that can plug itself into a variety
of devices - this is how you put a brain in a powerloader.
|
394.14 | The Volkswagen "Powerloader" Beetle | RIVEST::KENDALL | | Thu May 07 1987 13:15 | 13 |
| <<< NAC::WORK$01:[NOTES$LIBRARY]SF.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Arcana Caelestia >-
================================================================================
Note 471.0 The Volkswagen "Powerloader" Beetle 1 reply
RIVEST::KENDALL 6 lines 6-MAY-1987 12:39
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I finally rented the movie and thought on the whole it was a fairly
good sequel as sequels go. One thing about the Powerloader though
that seemed rather odd to me. Wouldn't you think that after 57
years, the thing would have gone through some design changes?
-Les
|
394.15 | 2 cents | ICEMAN::RUDMAN | Biologically loyal. | Thu May 07 1987 14:12 | 4 |
| Like forklifts?
Don (who bets he could run the latest model with
minimum instruction)
|
394.16 | | SPMFG1::CHARBONND | | Mon May 18 1987 07:21 | 3 |
| Agreed. Form follows function. If you know the function
you can deal with the form. Has the auto really changed
much in 57 years ?
|
394.17 | Coming back to reality, briefly | SMURF::REEVES | Jon Reeves | Mon May 18 1987 21:28 | 10 |
| For those interested in how the Powerloaders in the movie actually
worked, a recent issue of Cinefex went into all the details. FF
follows for those who don't like tricks revealed...
The principle problem that they ran into was counterbalancing. Since
the loader didn't move on its own, it was very front-heavy. There
were two approaches used: an overhead crane, if it wouldn't show
in the shot, or a burly stagehand behind the loader acting as a
sort of puppeteer. The exterior was plastic, but some of the
hydraulics were real.
|
394.18 | Late entry/early loader | JULIET::SAUNDERS_MI | | Mon Jan 25 1988 20:08 | 10 |
| Power loaders were first used on film (to my knowledge) in one of
those tacky Matt Helm films with Dean Martin in the late 60's.
I don't remember the name of the film but it was set partially in
the Dos Equis (who could forget that) brewery in Mexico.
The power loaders were used to shuffle kegs of beer around.
Mike S.
|
394.19 | People flight simulator! | ARTMIS::MILLSH | Is there any Tea on this spaceship? | Wed Aug 02 1989 14:04 | 16 |
|
Powered exoskeletons have been built, and can be used. The control
system mentioned with the muppet in Labyrinth was, for a time,
considered as an alternative to an EVA by NASA (I think). The idea
was that your astronaut wears a 'control suit', inside the spacecraft,
and the 'power suit' is outside, taking all the risks.
Another idea is that the 'control suit' is linked to an interactive
3D graphics computer, which feeds its output into a stereoscopic
viewer in the helmet. This enables the person wearing the suit to
interact with an entirely fictitious environment. The current problem
is finding some way of inducing sensation into the suit- e.g. if
you pick up a ball in the environment, you need servos stopping
the movements of the suit as your hand closes on the 'ball'
HRM
|
394.20 | it's a production problem, not a technical one | USMRM7::SPOPKES | | Tue Aug 15 1989 12:31 | 16 |
| RE:.19
Various companies have simulation systems for aircraft pilots. Most
military pilots check out in such a simulation. I "flew" one at
Singer-Link once, and the body sensations were so close to the original
that with a gram of imagination, you believed you were flying. Also,
the simulations occurred in real-time. If you put the "f4" into
a power dive, the stick became just as hard to move as in real life.
I think this sort of technology is applicable to powered exoskeletons,
but the problem becomes more delivery and logistics. The F4 simulators
are huge, fully utilize several very powerful real-time cpu's, and
weigh several tons. A suit/simulator system, such as the NASA proposal,
would only be practical if the inside simulator would be no bigger
than an outside suit.
s popkes
|
394.21 | More stories | CURRNT::PREECE | Are You Now, Or Have you Ever ? | Tue Sep 26 1989 08:52 | 13 |
|
See also "A Spectre is Haunting Texas", I forget the author, for
exo-skeleton ideas. A very old story (I read it when I was a kid,
it's that old !), concerning somebody who normally lives on an orbiting
platform, in low-g, who has to visit Earth on some life-or-death
mission. So he wears a powered exoskeleton, and terrifies the locals,
who all think he's a demon, from local legend.
I think that's right, but it was a long time ago !!
Ian
|
394.22 | | VESTA::BAILEY | focus? _what_ focus | Tue Sep 26 1989 09:16 | 13 |
| > See also "A Spectre is Haunting Texas", I forget the author, for
Fritz Leiber (SP?)
> platform, in low-g, who has to visit Earth on some life-or-death
--------------------^
nit picking I know)... (actualy Zero G
|
394.23 | he who lives by the nit, dies by the nit... | REGENT::POWERS | | Tue Sep 26 1989 11:07 | 14 |
| >> platform, in low-g, who has to visit Earth on some life-or-death
>
>--------------------^
>
>nit picking I know)... (actualy Zero G
Well, to pick on the nit on the nit, the only place where you really
have "zero-G" (which is more properly called "free fall," by the way)
is at the center of mass of what's in orbit. Everywhere else in the
satellite is in a state of "microgravity." It's possible to have
substantial TIDAL gravity if the satellite is large enough.
See Niven's "Neutron Star" and "Descent of Anansi."
- tom]
|