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Building Small Robots: Making One Cubic Inch Micro-Sumo Robots and Smaller

Building Small Robots: Making One Cubic Inch Micro-Sumo Robots and Smaller
Here are some details on building tiny robots and circuits. This instructable will also cover some basic tips and techniques that are useful in building robots of any size.

For me, one of the great challenges in electronics is to see just how small a robot I can make. The beautiful thing about electronics is that the components just keep getting smaller and cheaper and more efficient at an incredibly fast pace. Imagine if automobile technology were like that. Unfortunately, mechanical systems at this time, are not advancing nearly as fast as electronics.

This leads to one of the main difficulties in building very small robots: trying to fit in a small space, the mechanical system that moves the robot. The mechanical system and batteries tend to take up most of the volume of a really small robot.

pic1 shows Mr. Cube R-16, a one cubic inch micro-sumo robot that is capable of reacting to its environment with music wire whiskers (bumper switch). It can move and explore the perimeter of a small box. It can be remote controlled using a universal TV infrared remote control that is set up for a Sony TV. It can also have its Picaxe microcontroller pre-programmed with reaction patterns. Details begin on step 1.
 
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Step 1Components of a One Cubic Inch Robot

Components of a One Cubic Inch Robot

Mr cube R-16, is the sixteenth robot that I have built. It is a one cubic inch robot that measures 1"x1"x1". It is capable of autonomous programmable behavior or it can be remote controlled. It is not meant to be anything that is very practical or particularly useful. It is merely a prototype and proof of concept. It is, however, useful in the sense that building a tiny robot allows you to hone your miniaturization skills for robots and other small circuits.

Building Small Robots and Circuits
Keep in mind that building as small as possible means that it may take twice as long as it would normally take to build the same circuit in a larger space. All kinds of clamps are needed to hold the small components and wires in place while soldering or gluing. A bright work light and a good magnifying headset or a fixed magnifying glass are a must.

Small Motors
It turns out that one of the biggest obstacles to making really tiny robots is the gear motor that is required. The control electronics (microcontrollers) just keep getting smaller. However, finding low rpm gear motors that are small enough is not so easy.

Mr. Cube uses tiny pager gear motors that are geared at a 25:1 ratio. At that gearing, the robot is faster than I would like and a little twitchy. To fit the space, the motors had to be offset with one wheel more forward than the other. Even with that, it moves forward, backward, and turns fine. The motors were wired on to the perfboard with 24 gauge wire that was soldered and then glued with contact cement. At the rear of the robot a 4-40 sized nylon bolt was screwed into a tapped hole underneath the bottom circuit board. This smooth plastic bolt head acts as a caster to balance the robot. You can see it in the lower right of pic 4. This gives a wheel clearance at the bottom of the robot of about 1/32".

To mount the wheels, the 3/16" plastic pulleys mounted on the motors were powered up and then, while spinning, were sanded to the right diameter. They were then inserted into a hole in a metal washer that fit inside of a nylon washer and everything was epoxied together. The wheel was then coated with two coats of Liquid Tape rubber to give it traction.

Small Batteries
Another problem with the smallest robots is finding small batteries that will last. The gear motors used require fairly high currents (90-115ma) to operate. This results in a small robot that eats batteries for breakfast. The best I could find at the time, were 3-LM44 lithium button cell batteries. The battery life in very small robots of this type, is so short, (a few minutes) that they usually cannot do anything close to practical.

There was only room for three 1.5v batteries, so they ended up powering both the motors and the Picaxe controller. Because of electrical noise which small DC motors can create, one power supply for everything, is usually not a good idea. But so far it is working fine.

The space in this one inch robot was so tight that the thickness of the 28 gauge wire insulation (from ribbon cable) turned out to be a problem. I could barely put the two halves of the robot together. I estimate that about 85% of the volume of the robot is filled with components.

The robot was so small that even an on-off switch was problematic. Eventually, I might replace the crude whiskers with infrared sensors. I have literally run out of easy to use space, so fitting anything more, without resorting to surface mount technology, would be an interesting challenge.

I like to use clamshell construction for really small robots. See Pic 2. This consists of two halves that hook together with .1" strip headers and sockets. This gives easy access to all the components, making it easier to debug the circuits or make changes.

Pic 3 shows the location of some of the major components.

MATERIALS

2 GM15 Gear Motors- 25:1 6mm Planetary Gear Pager Motor: http://www.solarbotics.com/motors_accessories/4/

18x Picaxe microcontroller available from: http://www.hvwtech.com/products_list.asp?CatID=90&SubCatID=249&SubSubCatID=250

L293 motor controller DIP IC: http://www.mouser.com

Panasonic PNA4602M infrared detector: http://www.mouser.com

30 AWG Beldsol heat strippable (solderable) magnet wire: http://www.mouser.com

3 LM44 1.5V. Lithium button cell batteries: http://www.mouser.com

Small blue on-off switch: http://www.jameco.com

Thin solder- .015" rosin core solder: http://www.mouser.com

Resistors and a 150 uf tantalum capacitor

.1" fiberglass copper traced perfboard from: http://www.allelectronics.com/cgi-bin/item/ECS-4/455/SOLDERABLE_PERF_BOARD,_LINE_PATTERN_.html

Performix (tm) liquid tape, black-Available at Wal-Mart or http://www.thetapeworks.com/liquid-tape.htm

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163 comments
1-40 of 163next »
Mar 4, 2012. 3:06 PMKobusswart says:
Where can I find all the information for all the componets?
Nov 9, 2009. 6:08 AMshawntherobot says:
where did you get the l293 i canty find that at didgikey i only found aton of others like l293nd
Nov 27, 2011. 7:42 PMPaulMakesThings says:
You can find them on ebay for under $2 shipped. But it can take about 3 weeks because those are from china.
Jul 8, 2008. 10:15 AMMACKattacksnipe says:
and the micro size solar cells are perfect Harness the power of light.
For use on power models and science projects, this fuel cell runs on sunlight using silicon as its semiconductor.

  • Efficient, 0.8x1.6" (2.4cm) cell
  • Delivers about 0.3-amps at 0.55VDC in full sunlight
What's in the box

  • Silicon solar cell 0.3-amps at 0.55VDC in full sunlight.
Jul 3, 2009. 8:23 PMReCreate says:
30 miliamps at half a volt? We would need 4 to just power the chip, and the motors, Oh man, We would need more than would ever fit on a tiny robot...
Aug 25, 2011. 12:54 PMhastroff says:
.3 A is 300mA not 30
Jun 4, 2011. 1:12 PMMatrix-technician says:
A great power source for this would be a tiny lithium ion rechargable battery pack. I pulled one out of an air hogs moto frenzy and it is truly tiny, about 1/8ths" thick and 3/8ths" long.
Apr 5, 2011. 1:40 PMmacman808 says:
could you please send me the schmatic through a private message?
Oct 18, 2010. 1:43 AMkazmi44 says:
can some one send me this robot pdf manual for free.plzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
no money this month.
Oct 15, 2010. 12:29 PMCombineOverwatch says:
http://www.siliconsolar.com/admin/modules/graphs/display_product_image.php?id=1549
Sep 8, 2010. 1:17 AMwareneutron says:
reject.robot
Aug 5, 2010. 12:19 PMTim Temple says:
Or you can glue on some razor blade chips and let it cut its own way in. A cheaper form of battery would be a couple of cells from a little 9V battery.
Jul 6, 2010. 5:36 AMsourcer says:
is it able to avoid obstacles? can you leave your source code for your robot on this instructable? and also, can you draw a diagram with only one power supply version for us? thanks alot
Jul 20, 2010. 6:04 AMraykholo says:
That schematic only has one power source (alll grounds go to the same place). On top of that, the author specifically mentioned that using one power supply was a bad idea (step 3)
Jul 20, 2010. 6:02 AMraykholo says:
Can you talk about sparky's tank treads - Do they work well? I'm looking to build a similar bot but I am having trouble finding small enough tracks. The cheaper the better. Thanks in advance
Jun 27, 2010. 11:35 AMchickens.do.have.lips says:
Really nice project! I just have a few questions, though; would you happen to know if the PICAXE 18X can use two L293 Motor Drivers, since it has 8 output pins? I've been wondering if I could use two extra motors for this kind of project. Speaking of capacitors, would I be able to use a 100uf capacitor for this project, or is there a recommended range for the capacitor used in this project? I looked at the project board for this microcontroller, and there is a capacitor, as well as a few resistors; did you use the same resistor values as the ones from the project board on your project? I've been thinking about just buying the resistors, caps, and ICs from the board instead of buying the board. Please reply, and Thanks!
Apr 26, 2010. 4:14 PMafw11 says:
For the one inch cubic robot, how did you program the picaxe? Don't you you use a cable?
Jan 9, 2010. 7:06 PMcamo888 says:
in picture #7 where did you get the tracks for that robot
are they custom made or did u buy them ( if so where)
Nov 2, 2009. 2:12 PMshawntherobot says:
instread of using the wire  bumper switch you could get one from a computer mouse they usually have three switches that arent very big either so they dont take up much space
Nov 23, 2008. 12:09 PMWinterz117 says:
ok do u really need to use the magned wire over normal wire? its really expensive...
Nov 2, 2009. 11:49 AMshawntherobot says:
if you take apart an electric motor youll find maybe about 10 feeet iof wire from the average size
Apr 21, 2009. 6:05 AMdagenius says:
The only problem with thin wires like magnet wire is that it is very thin. The thinner the wire, the more resistance and more inductance. this makes it harder to carry sufficient current through the wire, and creates more rf noise.
Nov 26, 2008. 6:13 PMWinterz117 says:
oh ok gotcha. Yeah I was looking for it on digitec and it was like 50$ a spool, so the spools must have held alot of wire. Ok thanks for the reply if inget a mini robot built I'll send u some pics!
Oct 4, 2009. 9:54 PMyonray says:
what kind of programming board (what's the name) did u use to programme the microcontroller!
Sep 17, 2009. 8:43 PMjaxxster1 says:
do you sell/give these away?
Sep 17, 2009. 8:44 PMjaxxster1 says:
i think they are awsome but i dont have the parts do you mebe have a kit i could get?
Sep 12, 2009. 9:54 PMraveeeee says:
wht different task can i do wid dis bot ??/,cud u plz send me da programming for dis?
Aug 12, 2009. 1:38 PMAndyGadget says:
Lots of great ideas here. A microbot is on my list of projects, but so many ideas, so little free time! What are the sleeves you use on the motor shafts on Mr Cube Two?
Jul 4, 2009. 8:29 AMElliot says says:
how much did it cost you for this robot. Or how much would it of costed you if you didnt have any of the parts already?
Jun 13, 2008. 10:15 AMKopolis777 says:
Wait, if they made solar panels small enough could you use those instead of batteries?
Jul 3, 2009. 7:41 PMraykholo says:
ok everyone... new idea: inductive charging, check out the 2 instructables about this the idea is to have the coil wound around the perimeter of the robot and i commented about this before, so look for it towards the top of the comment section and please reply there, just bringing the idea to this discussion...
Apr 29, 2009. 5:25 PMdagenius says:
They have 8th inch square solar cells on solarbotics, but they only generate a .6 volts at peak, so you would need a few of them, and that would bring you back to haveing alot of space taken up by the power suppy, and if there was no sun, then there would be no power. also, the power coming out of the solar cells fluctuate, and this could damage the chip without using a regulator, and that would make matters eve worse...
Feb 23, 2009. 9:29 PMvandejake says:
i was an electronics engineer in our current technology state a small multi tracked robot could do internal surgery, however it would be far more worth it to the world if we continued workin on the davinci robot it has the ability to do surgery with no insisions and also the Dr operating the machine only needs the controls so a north american Dr can do a surgery in Inda (for example) but the problem now is if somethin goes wrong who do you blame...as for the Solar cell internal robot yes i do believe solar could work however our organs shouldnt normally see daylight so the process would be pointless great instructable currently i am workin on a micro arduino for a similar project keep ur eyes open for it soon
Jun 13, 2008. 6:00 PMraykholo says:
just look at the input-output ratio the output should be 4.5 volts
Jun 13, 2008. 9:44 PMdarkmuskrat says:
To Kopolis777, solar panels may be enough to power it, but any size small enough to fit on the mini-robot wouldn't (most likely) be enough to power it... (Maybe it could recharge the batteries however....)
Jul 3, 2008. 3:49 AMpyreoutof says:
nah...that prob wouldnt work. 1-there are no rechargable batteries that small and 2-if u use regular batteries, they might ezplode. Now maybe someone could customly create a rechargeable battery that small...i would like to see that as an ible though...an electrical transformer could be used, but that problably wouldnt work
Jul 3, 2009. 8:19 PMReCreate says:
Normal batteries can be charged, It is simply not recommended...But you can charge them and they keep their juice ;)
Jul 4, 2009. 6:15 AMraykholo says:
i think trickle charging can be applied here, and ive seen dead 9v batteries become full again using this method
Jul 4, 2009. 8:09 AMReCreate says:
Ah....Yeah what i said O_o
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Author:mikey77
I believe that the purpose of life is to learn how to do our best and not give in to the weaker way.