Robotics - Need for minor axes?

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the distinction between major and minor axes in industrial robotics, highlighting the necessity of both for precise movement and orientation. Major axes are responsible for positioning the end-effector, while minor axes are crucial for its orientation, requiring six parameters in total: three for location and three for angles. The importance of understanding these axes becomes clearer once one recognizes the end-effector as an object with orientation rather than just a point. This understanding is essential for effective robotic manipulation in 3D space. The conversation emphasizes the foundational knowledge required for grasping robotic movement dynamics.
phiby
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I am just reading an introductory text on Industrial Robotics.
It talks about 3 Major Axes and 3 Minor Axes and Yaw, Pitch and Roll.

I am still confused as to the need for the minor axes. You locate the gripper at any point in spaces, 3 axes should be enough right? So what's the need for the 3 minor axes?
 
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phiby said:
I am just reading an introductory text on Industrial Robotics.
It talks about 3 Major Axes and 3 Minor Axes and Yaw, Pitch and Roll.

I am still confused as to the need for the minor axes. You locate the gripper at any point in spaces, 3 axes should be enough right? So what's the need for the 3 minor axes?

Can you give more detail on these major/minor axes?

You need 6 pieces of information to describe an object's exact orientation and location in 3D space: 3 distances for location and 3 angles for orientation.

For robotics, a rotation is usually described by the order of rotation: x - y - z. So Roll about x_0 by thetaA, pitch about y_0 by thetaB, roll about z_0 by thetaC. This is for the first rotation. Successive rotations are also WRT to the fixed frame.
 
adpr02 said:
Can you give more detail on these major/minor axes?

Most textbooks on industrial robotics (schilling etc) call the 1st 3 joint axes which position the end-effector/gripper as major axis & the next 3rd joint axes which orient it as minor axes.

adpr02 said:
You need 6 pieces of information to describe an object's exact orientation and location in 3D space: 3 distances for location and 3 angles for orientation.

Yes, this is clear now. I was asked the question when I had just started reading the book. Once I reached the orientation part, it became clear.

Till then, I was thinking of the end effector as a point rather than an object and hence the orientation part wasn't obvious to me.
 
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