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Article
Publication date: 1 August 2005

Stephen Mulligan, Geoff Melton, Ari Lylynoja and Keith Herman

Development and demonstration of an autonomous, mobile welding robot capable of fabricating large‐scale customised structures.

Abstract

Purpose

Development and demonstration of an autonomous, mobile welding robot capable of fabricating large‐scale customised structures.

Design/methodology/approach

An autonomous welding robot has been developed under the EC Framework V Growth program. The system comprises a global vision system for part location and orientation, and a robot transport vehicle (RTV) which carries a 6‐axis robot, robot controller, welding equipment, and local sensors at the welding torch. The RTV path, robot arm motion and weld process programming are performed automatically using sensors and specially customised simulation software.

Findings

The technology developed within the project was demonstrated, in November 2004, to be capable of identifying and welding large scale customised structures as found in the earth moving equipment and bridge fabrication industries.

Research limitations/implications

The project demonstrated that current sensor technology is capable of being applied successfully to autonomous robots, but further developments in sensor technology are required to improve accuracy and joint access.

Practical implications

The NOMAD concept of autonomous mobile robots provides an alternative solution to welding mass customised structures.

Originality/value

This project demonstrated, for the first time, the capability of autonomous robots to weld large scale customised structures.

Details

Industrial Robot: An International Journal, vol. 32 no. 4
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 0143-991X

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