ihavesomethingtosay23
Ihavesomethingtosay23
ihavesomethingtosay23

Maybe I'm attracted to you.

You're the one asking all the fucking stupid questions so kindly go fuck yourself. You come across as someone that knows jack shit about servo systems.

1. A vehicle has nothing to do with this demo other than the author mentioned regenerative braking in the article so I'm not sure why you asked that.

That is really impressive - I had no idea they were doing that multiple tasks in a single packet. I don't do much multi-axis motion control beyond 3 motors but I'd love to have an actual need to use something that sophisticated :)

This really has nothing to do with gears. It's only to demonstrate precision synchronizing of multiple motion axes.

Thee prop thing is certainly impressive for that time.

I like that more industrial technology is being shown here. Normally you don't see these types of demos or equipment unless you work in the industry. Regarding the motors, this is fairly common capability for any high performance servo system. The amps need a high bandwidth update loop (depending on the position error

I don't have a published data cap. Last month I pulled 211GB through Giganews alone. My latest speed is 30Mb/s which I can still saturate through their service.

It's certainly a fun demo - the main game of any of these industrial shows is all about the best demo.

Just about any modern industrial robot can do this. This application is actually fairly simple.

I recently did this too and as a bonus found a number of interesting species living in the electrical access area :)

My favorite 3D printing applications :)

Those bumps are more likely standoffs to prevent lids from locking into each other.

That sounds like my neighbor - his basement is a course lower than mine and fills up rather easily. His sump failed while on a two day absence and he came back to about a foot of water. He's got a water pressure powered backup now just in case he main sump fails or he loses power.

Do you need to supplement your sump pump?

"Need a spare part? No need to send off for it, you can just scan it and then print it on your machine. You don't need any kind of CAD or design experience."

I sense 'a made for TV' special :)

Another case 'just because you can build it, doesn't mean you should'. There's a reason a drill press is made out of metal. You'd be better off collecting soda cans and buying any cheap piece of crap Chinese press than building this fancy Dremel holding stand.

As soon as he landed, he was apprehended under some obscure terrorism act. He now longs for the window from glass and cassette player he had in the old country.

Show me where it says treat your workers like scum and steal others designs!