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Book ChapterDOI

Machine Vision Guidance System for a Modular Climbing Robot used in Shipbuilding

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TLDR
A versatile lightweight climbing robot that is capable of moving on the hull and a compact machine vision guidance system that allows it to follow grooves on the surface of the hull is described.
Abstract
During naval construction, vessels are divided into various blocks or subunits that are manufactured in different workshops and then carried to a building dock or shipway where they are welded together. This paper describes a versatile lightweight climbing robot that is capable of moving on the hull and a compact machine vision guidance system that allows it to follow grooves on the surface of the hull. This capability is useful for tasks such as inspecting welding seams, reducing the need for scaffolds. The robot is designed as a three wheeled Synchro-Drive vehicle. That allows it to perform movements in any direction without changing its orientation. The force of attraction necessary to stick the robot to the ship’s hull is provided by three permanent magnets that are placed at the bottom of the robot. To guide this robot when it operates in automatic mode, a real time machine vision system has been developed. This system is prepared to detect and track the groove that is formed between two blocks of a ship when they are joined for welding. This groove is detected by the vision system using a multiline laser beam and a camera with an appropriate filter. The camera used for this application is a compact vision system that includes image capturing, image processing and communications capacities in a single unit.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Climbing robots for maintenance and inspections of vertical structures-A survey of design aspects and technologies

TL;DR: Based on a given set of requirements these principles are examined and in terms of a comprehensive state-of-the-art more than hundred climbing robots are presented and this schematics is applied to design aspects of a wall-climbing robot which should be able to inspect large concrete buildings.
Journal ArticleDOI

A survey of climbing robots: Locomotion and adhesion

TL;DR: A classification of climbing robots and proper examples with a brief outline are presented with considerations of the locomotive and adhesion mechanisms.
Journal ArticleDOI

MultiTrack: A multi-linked track robot with suction adhesion for climbing and transition

TL;DR: A new robotic platform, called the “MultiTrack”, that satisfies wall-to-wall transitions, attachment to various materials, and high payload capacity for high-rise building cleaning using robots that employs a multi-linked track mechanism and pneumatic adhesion technology.
Journal ArticleDOI

A magnetic climbing robot to perform autonomous welding in the shipbuilding industry

TL;DR: The mechanical and control design of a magnetic tracked mobile robot designed to move on vertical steel ship hulls and to be able to carry 100 kg payload, including its own weight is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Survey on Glass And Façade-Cleaning Robots: Climbing Mechanisms, Cleaning Methods, and Applications

TL;DR: This survey investigates and analyzes robots used for cleaning building façades and glass, classified by types of climbing and attaching mechanisms, and their cleaning methods, mobility, and obstacle-overcoming performances are analyzed.
References
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

A six-legged climbing robot for high payloads

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe the design and control concepts of a wall-climbing robot with an hexapod configuration and it is able to maneuver on vertical surfaces carrying high payloads.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Disk Rover: A Wall-climbing Robot Using Permanent

S. Hirose, +1 more
TL;DR: A new wall climbing vehicle using permanent magnet disks for wheels is proposed which is capable of steady and smooth omni- directional locomotion on the surface of a flat or curved iron wall.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Robust laser-stripe sensor for automated weld-seam-tracking in the shipbuilding industry

TL;DR: In this paper, a new laser stripe sensor system for the automation of welding processes in heavy industries is presented, which uses only one highly integrated logic IC (FPGA) to cope with the high data rate of 14 Mbyte/s delivered by the sensor's CCD-camera.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Semi-Autonomous Robot for Stripping Paint from Large Vessels

TL;DR: The M2000 robot removes paint from ships using ultrahigh pressure water jets and recovers the water and debris in an environmentally sound way and the addition of simple, easy-to-use, cruise control features to the robot has permitted significant increases in productivity, safety, and stripping quality.
Proceedings Article

Disk Rover: A Wall-Climbing Robot Using Permanent Magnet Disks

Shigeo Hirose
TL;DR: In this paper, a wall climbing vehicle using permanent magnet disks for wheels is proposed which is capable of steady and smooth omni- directional locomotion on the surface of a flat or curved iron wall.
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