homehome Home chatchat Notifications


K-glove grants astronauts and workers extra muscle

General Motors has always invested in technology which goes beyond the automotive applications for which the company is primarily known, a philosophy which I find most praise worthy, and teaming up with NASA is sure to always output performance. The latest to result from their partnership is the K-glove, a robotic glove designed to aid […]

Tibi Puiu
March 14, 2012 @ 3:36 pm

share Share

K-glove NASA General Motors

General Motors has always invested in technology which goes beyond the automotive applications for which the company is primarily known, a philosophy which I find most praise worthy, and teaming up with NASA is sure to always output performance. The latest to result from their partnership is the K-glove, a robotic glove designed to aid astronauts, as well as workers back on Earth, with streneous, repetitive tasks by granting a significant boost in force. Basically, the K-glove will offer its wearer an extra set of muscles.

“An astronaut working in a pressurized suit outside the space station or an assembly operator in a factory might need to use 15-20 pounds of force to hold a tool during an operation” the teams say, “but with the robotic glove only five-to-10 pounds of force might need to be applied.”

Based on the Robonaut 2, a project where GM and NASA collaborated together as well, the K-glove is equipped with sensors, actuators, micro-controllers and tensors that mimic the nerves, muscles and tendons of a human hand. Sensors tell whenever the wearer is flexing his grip, like when grasping a tool, and triggers actuators placed on the upper section, which in turn activate synthetic tendons clamping down until the sensors are released. GM hopes to introduce the K-glove to workers on the assembly line.

“When fully developed, the Robo-Glove has the potential to reduce the amount of force that an auto worker would need to exert when operating a tool for an extended time or with repetitive motions,” said Dana Komin, a G.M. manufacturing engineering director.

The K-glove, though still a prototype, weighs around two pounds and is powered by a standard lithium-ion power-tool battery, mounted on a belt-clip. A third-gen prototype is already in the works, which GM claims will be lighter, smaller and consume less power when ready.

via Slash Gear

share Share

To Fight Invasive Pythons in the Everglades Scientists Turned to Robot Rabbits

Scientists are unleashing robo-rabbits to trick and trap giant invasive snakes

A New AI Can Spot You by How Your Body Bends a Wi-Fi Signal

You don’t need a phone or camera to be tracked anymore: just wi-fi.

This Bionic Knee Plugs Into Your Bones and Nerves, and Feels Just Like A Real Body Part

No straps, no sockets: MIT team created a true bionic knee and successfully tested it on humans.

Elephant Trunk-Like Arm Turns Ordinary Drones Into Powerful, All-Purpose Flying Robots

Drones equipped with this robotic trunk get a massive dexterity upgrade.

Elon Musk says he wants to "fix" Grok after the AI disagrees with him

Grok exposed inconvenient facts. Now Musk says he’s “fixing” his AI to obey him.

Stanford's New Rice-Sized Device Destroys Clots Where Other Treatments Fail

Forget brute force—Stanford engineers are using finesse to tackle deadly clots.

Big Tech Said It Was Impossible to Create an AI Based on Ethically Sourced Data. These Researchers Proved Them Wrong

A massive AI breakthrough built entirely on public domain and open-licensed data

Lawyers are already citing fake, AI-generated cases and it's becoming a problem

Just in case you're wondering how society is dealing with AI.

Leading AI models sometimes refuse to shut down when ordered

Models trained to solve problems are now learning to survive—even if we tell them not to.

AI slop is way more common than you think. Here's what we know

The odds are you've seen it too.