How can a single electrical motor control a robot? or even a mechanical arm?

AI Thread Summary
An electrical motor converts electrical energy into mechanical energy but typically produces a single motion. To achieve diverse movements in a robot or mechanical arm, multiple motors, linear actuators, servos, and sensors must work in unison. Control systems play a crucial role in orchestrating these components through complex signals. While it's possible to design a robot with a single motor using clever gears and mechanisms, such systems often lack sophisticated control. Hydraulics can also provide an alternative for single-motor designs, and resources like "Ingenious Mechanisms for Designers and Inventors" can inspire innovative solutions.
Femme_physics
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So an electrical motor converts electrical energy to mechanical one. But an electric motor can just produce a single motion in of itself. How come connecting a mechanical arm to it allows a diversity of movements like rotation, verticial and horizontal motions to both directions!?
 
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Becuase it's not a single motor that creates the movement. You'll have many motors, linear actuators, servos and sensors all working together.

It also involves the mucky, horrible world of control systems.
Controls engineers use computer jargon and witchcraft to magically create a set of signals which creates a well choreographed movement of all the actuators.
 
I'm guessing that with a clever enough set of gears and mechanisms you can make a robot that can preform mechanical movement which can consist of movements in a few directions and speeds using a single motor. Like those toy robots that walk and stuff, of course they have no control system and there movements have to be predetermined.
 
That is a very interesting concept.
 
*smacks forehead* I realized the answer an hour after making this thread after I saw really tiny motors were possible. :) Thanks.
 
berko1 said:
I'm guessing that with a clever enough set of gears and mechanisms...
Yep. Hydraulics offer another option for a single-electric-motor design.

I've seen some truly amazing all-mechanical systems. A good source for inspiration is the book, "Ingenious Mechanisms for Designers and Inventors".
 
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