Nature-Inspired C-Turtle Robot Waddles the Desert With Ease

Robots generally work best in controlled environments. While something may work in a lab, in a setting that isn’t too hot, too bright, or…

Hackster Staff
7 years agoRobotics

Robots generally work best in controlled environments. While something may work in a lab, in a setting that isn’t too hot, too bright, or too windy, testing it out in an uncontrolled area, such as a desert, produces a whole new set of challenges.

Researchers at Arizona State University built the “C-Turtle” to tackle just that problem, traversing stone and sand using flippers designed to imitate a sea turtle.

Once unleashed, this artificially intelligent bot used its programming — running on what appears to be a , a RedBear IoT pHAT and some Adafruit hardware — to learn and adapt its crawling technique to navigate different kinds of terrain.

Though quite capable, the C-Turtle was manufactured from cheap cardboard before being folded together origami-style and equipped with the electronics and motors to move the flippers. Total cost to build? $70.

In the future, the researchers believe a swarm of these bots could roam around, monitoring certain types of conditions or performing tasks like searching minefields. You can read more about C-Turtle here, and see it in action below!

[h/t: New Scientist]

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