Kurzinterview mit Carsten Busch von DENSO

Sebastian Trella von Robots-Blog konnte ein kurzes Interview mit Carsten Busch von DENSO führen. Im Interview erfahrt ihr mehr über den DENSO COBOTTA.

Robots-Blog: Wer bist du und was ist deine Aufgabe bei DENSO?

Carsten: Mein Name ist Carsten Busch und ich bin der Product & Business Development Manager für Cobots (kollaborative Roboter)

Robots-Blog: Was macht DENSO?

Carsten: DENSO ist zum einen der weltweit zweitgrößte Automobilzulieferer (Tier1). Neben weiteren Geschäftsbereichen, wie Wärmepumpen, zentralen Klimaanlagen etc. ist DENSO auch Entwickler und Hersteller von Industrierobotern – und hierin marktführend in dem Bereich der kompakten Roboter.

Robots-Blog: Hast du viel mit Robotern zu tun im Beruf/im Alltag?

Carsten: Als Product & Business Development Manger habe ich quasi non-stopp mit der Robotertechnik zu tun – und es macht mir noch immer jeden Tag Spaß.

Robots-Blog: Welcher Roboter aus Wissenschaft, Film oder Fernsehen ist dein Lieblingsroboter und warum?

Carsten: Verschiedene Kinofilme wie Star Wars‘ R2D2 oder Nr. 5 lebt haben mich begeistert. Der Film „I, Robot“ von Regisseurs Alex Proyas nach dem Buch von Isaak Assimov hat mich sehr bewegt, da hier die Grenzen der Robotics deutlich aufgezeigt wurden.

Robots-Blog: Und welcher ist dein Lieblingsroboter aus eurem Produktsortiment?

Carsten: Das ist unser kollaborativer Roboter „COBOTTA“. Er ist ein sehr kompakter, leichter Cobot, der durch seine intuitiven Apps und seine im Arm integrierte Steuerung, integrierten Greifer und Kamera, extrem vielseitig einsetzbar ist (zudem Gewinner des German Design Award 2019)

Robots-Blog: Was macht den COBOTTA so besonders und für wen ist er gedacht?

Carsten: Mit einem Eigengewicht (inklusive integrierter Steuerung) von nur 4kg ist COBOTTA extrem portable und auch auf mobilen Plattformen (AGV/ARM) perfekt einsetzbar. Durch die intuitiven Apps können Applikationen auch ohne Programmierkenntnisse in wenigen Minuten erstellt werden – inklusive Greifen and Kameraintegration. Außerdem kann COBOTTA durch die offene Plattform auch mittels diverser Hochsprachen programmiert werden oder auch von ROS basierten Systemen direkt gesteuert werden. Durch sein sicheres Design und die TÜV geprüfte funktionale Sicherheit ist COBOTTA perfekt für die Mensch-Roboter-Kollaboration geeignet.

Robots-Blog: Welche Automatisierungsaufgaben hast du schon mit dem Cobotta gelöst?

Carsten: Wie schon erwähnt ist COBOTTA sehr vielseitig einsetzbar:  Montage- und Handhabungsaufgaben in der Elektronikindustrie z.B. Teileprüfung, Labeln, Be-/Entladevorgänge, Klebeapplikationen, etc. Laborassistent in der Life Science Industrie z.B. Mikrotiterplatten und Proben-Handhabung, Zentrifugen Be-/Endladung, Pipettieren, etc. oder in der Ausbildung sowohl in der Schule/Berufsschule und an Universitäten. Sogar ein bekannter Magier hat COBOTTA in seine Zaubershow mit eingebunden!  

Robots-Blog: Was kostet mich so eine Unterstützung durch einen Roboter?

Carsten: Ein COBOTTA startet schon ab weniger als 15.000 Euro.

Robots-Blog: Muss ich dafür Programmieren können?

Carsten: Für einfachere Pick&Place Anwendungen inkl. Kameraeinbindung zur Teileerkennung kann mit der COBOTTA World App eine Applikation intuitiv und ohne Roboterkenntnisse in wenigen Minuten erstellt werden – Kinderleicht!

Robots-Blog: Was würdest du gerne in Zukunft automatisieren?

Carsten: Unterstützung von pflegebedürftigen Menschen durch Roboter z.B. Hilfe beim Aufstehen, Anreichen etc.

4ocean and Poralu Marine Debut First of Its Kind Robot for Beach Cleanups

BOCA RATON, FL (August 18, 2021) — 4ocean, a purpose-driven B Corp with a mission to end the ocean plastic crisis, is pleased to announce their partnership with Poralu Marine, a global leader in marine- grade technologies, on the launch of the BeBot in the United States, an impressive beach cleaning robot designed to recover coastal plastic debris.

The electric-powered BeBot can clean up to 3,000 sqm of beach per hour, 20-30x more effective than collecting trash by hand. The machine is agile and easy to maneuver, a clear differentiator from existing options, and it specifically excels at removing small pieces of plastic and other trash that are notoriously difficult to clean by hand, using small 1 cm x 1 cm sifting grids to separate these items from the sand.

Traditional machines are typically very large, powered by gas, and often repurposed from other agricultural purposes, making them poorly suited for more delicate beach cleanup work. In contrast, the BeBot’s smaller footprint and more shallow cleaning depth of 10 cm, effectively removes common beach trash while avoiding disruptions to any nearby habitats or animals, providing a more effective and sustainable approach to cleanups.

„We are always searching for innovative technology to improve our cleanup capabilities and are thrilled to partner with Poralu Marine on introducing such an impactful piece of technology,“ said Alex Schulze, 4ocean’s co-founder and CEO. „With the launch of the BeBot, we are able to work smarter and sustainably while recovering plastic that has already seen the ocean and preventing new plastic from ever getting there in the first place.“

Meant to be used daily, the BeBot is remote operated and can be controlled by an operator up to approximately 950 feet away. The robot makes minimal noise while cleaning and requires a much smaller footprint for storage, making it the ideal cleaning method for beaches in populated areas. This design approach was intentionally created with cleaning trash in mind, which is a first of its kind. 4ocean is on track to remove 20 million pounds of trash by year’s end and the BeBot will be essential in helping the brand reach this important milestone.

Claire Touvier, member of the Environmental Solutions team from Poralu Marine noted „It is a real honor to present BeBot. We are very proud to be able to launch this new robot in the US with the help of 4ocean. This cutting edge technology was developed in Italy by a team of experts dedicated to robotics. While traditional machines equipped with wheels were degrading the shoreline, BeBot has groundbreaking and unpreceedented environmental assets. With a unique track system distributing equal and minimum pressure on the sand, BeBot reduces erosion. This innovative design also helps the preservation of biodiversity as it prevents the compression of turtles‘ eggs and any vegetal ecosystem in the sand.“

This impressive beach cleaning robot represents important innovation in the ocean reclamation space, thinking creatively about the more effective, efficient and eco-friendly way to remove the small plastics that currently litter our beaches. 4ocean and Poralu Marine are thrilled collaborating as leaders in this space, preventing further pollution of our oceans.

To learn more about the BeBot and all of 4ocean’s ocean cleanup initiatives, please visit 4ocean.com.

About 4ocean

4ocean is a purpose-driven business with a mission to help end the ocean plastic crisis by cleaning the ocean and coastlines while stopping the inflow of plastic. With the goal of creating an economy around cleaning the ocean, 4ocean has built a sustainable business model that allows the company to fund cleanups, utilize the latest technology and make a monthly $50,000 donation to marine conservation organizations. Ocean cleanups are funded entirely through product purchases, removing one pound of trash for every item sold, for a total of over 15 million pounds to date. 4ocean prioritizes engaging coastal communities, which creates jobs and adds revenue to local economies while changing the demand from catching fish to catching plastic. The solution to ending ocean plastic pollution lies in stopping it on land before it enters the ocean, which is why 4ocean is educating consumers about ways to reduce their single-use plastic consumption.

About Poralu Marine

Developing unique leisure marina solutions and equipment is the core activity of Poralu Marine, which has designed, built and installed more than 8,000 projects worldwide making it the global industry leader in the design and construction of aluminium structures. From this expertise in durable installations, Poralu Marine is constantly innovating with the launch of footbridges, environmentally friendly anchoring solutions, and floating waste collectors (Seabin), to name just a few. The activities of the group’s brands – Poralu Marine, Nautiscaphe, Poralu Bridge, Rotax, WPS, EDDS – are a testimony to the constant renewal of our product range which is particularly respectful of the natural environment and of those who fight to preserve it.

In 2021, Poralu Marine strengthened its leadership in the matter of environmental protection by launching „The Searial Cleaners“ the first ever range of littoral waste collectors.

Revenues from Robotics Deployed in Warehouses to Cross US$51 Billion by 2030

Evolving e-commerce fulfillment operations and technical improvements in robotics tech and AI are rapidly growing the commercial robotics market

New York, New York – 18 Aug 2021, The warehousing industry has ramped up its automation efforts considering the increased order volume and labor shortages fueled by the pandemic. In addition to technology solutions such as Augmented Reality (AR) powered smart glasses and handheld devices with enhanced capabilities, autonomous, collaborative, and mobile robots are proving to be the most popular and fastest-growing productivity-enhancing solution in the warehouse workspace. According to ABI Research, a global tech market advisory firm, worldwide commercial robot revenue in warehouses will have a Compounded Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of over 23% from 2021 to 2030 and exceed US$51 billion by 2030.

“Mobile robots are at the heart of the warehouse robotics market and account for most shipments and revenue. These robots, made up of Autonomous Guided Vehicles (AGVs) and Autonomous Mobile Robots (AMRs), are being used to move goods within the warehouse and being integrated within wider automated or manual workflows,” states Adhish Luitel, Industry Analyst, Supply Chain Management and Logistics at ABI Research.

Commercially speaking in the warehouse sector, robotics has moved from the early exploration phase to a more mature market in which early adopters are benefitting from live implementations of fully capable technical solutions. As a sign of the growing maturity of the market, a wide number of vendors such as Advantech, Brochesia, Kontakt.io, and RightHand Robotics now offer compelling products and solutions. The surrounding ecosystem of software vendors and systems integrators is also maturing, as software and integration capabilities become increasingly important factors for commercial differentiation. ABI Research has assessed fulfillment and warehousing processes of dominant operators such as Penske, A. Duie Pyle, Amazon, and JD.com to evaluate the efficacy of deploying solutions and friction points that might arise. These companies have been reaping the benefits of enhanced key performance metrics such as shorter dock-to-stock cycles and improved inventory accuracy thanks to successful deployment of various automation and vision-based solutions in their day-to-day operations.

“In addition to robots, warehouse operators should be seeking to combine the value of multiple solutions across the fulfillment workflow to achieve desired results. There is also a need for operators to look beyond productivity and assess how technologies affect worker satisfaction and safety, worker comfort, energy consumption, distance traveled, and error rates,” Luitel explains.

For example, “Pick-by-vision” solutions from augmented reality vendors such as Picavi demand a mere 15-minute training time and can boast up to 30% efficiency gains and up to 60% in time savings for training. In addition, order storage and automated order dispenser solutions from Alert Innovation help grocery retailers enhance their Return on Investment (ROI) by over 50% versus traditional automated picking systems.

“We can also expect intelligent automation solutions to influence processes across the supply chain. In the future, operators will be venturing further into solutions like Robotic Process Automation (RPA) and mobile warehousing,” Luitel concludes.

These findings are from ABI Research’s Modern Fulfillment Trends: Warehouse Robotics, Handheld Devices and Wearables technology analysis report. This report is part of the company’s Supply Chain Management & Logistics research service, which includes research, data, and ABI Insights. Based on extensive primary interviews, Application Analysis reports present in-depth analysis on key market trends and factors for a specific technology.

About ABI Research

ABI Research provides actionable research and strategic guidance to technology leaders, innovators, and decision makers around the world. Our research focuses on the transformative technologies that are dramatically reshaping industries, economies, and workforces today. ABI Research’s global team of analysts publish groundbreaking studies often years ahead of other technology advisory firms, empowering our clients to stay ahead of their markets and their competitors.

Sleepy Robot wants just 5 more minutes

When it’s too early in the morning and your robot refuses to work because it wants to snooze some more…

#igus #robolink #robot #robots #automation #lowcostautomation #snooze #morning #video #fun #sleep #just5moreminutes #tired #wakeup #robotsblog. Find the latest News on robots drones AI robotic toys and gadgets at robots-blog.com. Follow us on our Blog Instagram Facebook Twitter or our other sites. Share your robotics ideas and products with us. #robots #robot #omgrobots #roboter #robotic #mycollection #collector #robotsblog #collection #botsofinstagram #bot #robotics #robotik #gadget #gadgets

SoftGripping expands its product line

SoftGripping, the internal robotic SoftGripper department of the logistic company Wegard GmbH has reached its market capitalization goal of 8 million Euro in the year 2020 and is now moving from the initial intent of establishing SoftGripping leadership in the cobot area towards the high-speed automation market. The internal project’s CTO and co-founder Alexey Stepanyuk is eager to tackle new areas with the industrial and hygienic line. “We focus on the needs of our customers and every development is custom to the application on hand” he emphasized in an interview, “our engineers know that solutions in food automation are as custom as the plants growing on the fields. There is a new evolutionary stage coming and we can’t wait to highlight it, although today’s robotics technology is far from perfect.” Let’s wait and see what the future brings!

Information about hygienic line grippers: https://soft-gripping.com/hygienic-softgripper/
Information about industrial line grippers: https://soft-gripping.com/industrial-softgripper/

Igus Robolink RL-DP-5 Installation

Today I installed my new igus low cost Automation robotarm. This still counts as common computer peripheral, right? …Right?

Find the latest News on robots, drones, AI, robotic toys and gadgets at robots-blog.com. Follow us on our Blog, Instagram, Facebook, Twitter or our other sites. Share your robotics ideas and products with us. #robots #robot #omgrobots #roboter #robotic #mycollection #collector #robotsblog #collection #botsofinstagram #bot #robotics #robotik #gadget #gadgets #drone #robotsofinstagram #instabots #photooftheday #picoftheday #followforfollow #instadaily #werbung #igus #rbtx #lowcostautomation #robotarm #robolink #automation #showyourdesk

MYBOTSHOP nimmt mit leistungsstarkem Kettenfahrzeug Fahrt auf

Autonomes Fahren ist schon lange keine Zukunftstechnologie mehr. Doch nicht nur im PKW auf der Straße soll alsbald auf den Fahrer verzichtet werden. So hat auch MYBOTSHOP, der deutsche Vertriebspartner für Robotik, Sensorik und Automatisierungstechnologie, ein neues Gefährt im Programm. Mit dem weiterentwickelten MBS ROVO 2 führt das Unternehmen aus Nordrhein-Westfalen ein Kettenfahrzeug auf dem Robotermarkt ein, das den meisten Umwelteinflüssen standhält und die Kosteneffizienz in Unternehmen steigern soll.

Neben der Basis-Version im bald erhältlichen MYBOTSHOP-grün, gibt es das Kettenfahrzeug auch als voll konfigurierbare und auf Kundenwünsche zugeschnittene Premium-Version. Dabei profitiert der Endkunde von der jahrelangen Erfahrung und Spezialisierung im Bereich der Anwendungsentwicklung und Forschung, die hausintern bei MYBOTSHOP umgesetzt wird. Das bedeutet, dass Zusatzelemente komplett konfigurierbar und bei MYBOTSHOP auf Anfrage erhältlich sind. Somit bekommt der Endkunde dann ein komplett mit Software aufgespieltes und in Haus getestetes Produkt ausgeliefert. Und auch während der Nutzung steht MYBOTSHOP mit seinem Support und zur Wartung beratend zur Seite. Für die ROS-basierte Programmierung wird eine vollständige Dokumentation als Support auf der Website zur Verfügung gestellt.

Das geländegängige und wassergeschützte Fahrzeug (IP 65) überwindet souverän verschiedene Untergründe wie Schlamm, Schnee und Eis, Kies, Schotter und Sand. Ermöglicht wird dies durch den niedrigen Anpressdruck, der auf der Kettenlänge basiert. Die Akkulaufzeit liegt derzeit bei ca. 8 h (abhängig von Geschwindigkeit und Belastung) und die maximale Geschwindigkeit des Fahrzeugs bei knapp 20 km/h. Optional kann ein Modul für die Schnellladefunktion erworben werden. Mit einer Traglast von bis zu 500 kg bietet sich das Fahrzeug besonders als Transportplattform an. Die Zugkraft liegt bei knapp 2 t und via optionaler Anhängerkupplung lassen sich Anhänger und Fahrzeuge problemlos ziehen.

Mittels der externen Spannungsversorgung lassen sich Zusatzverbraucher wie Roboterarme, Kameras, 3D-LiDAR und weitere Komponenten anschließen. Gerade der Ouster 3D-LiDAR bietet sich für das Mapping an, das beim autonomen Fahren unausweichlich ist. Die via Ouster 3D-LiDAR detailgetreue erstellte 3D-Punktwolke basiert auf bis zu 128 Lagen bei einer Winkelauflösung von nur 0,18° und erfüllt dabei alle relevanten Datenschutz-Vorschriften.
Ein Roboterarm, wie der 6-achsige Universal Robots UR-3, ermöglicht unter anderem als Allrounder-Arm die mobile Manipulation.
Empfehlenswert ist die Nutzung eines HOKUYO UAM-05LP – einem sogenannten Safety LiDAR. Dies bedeutet, dass er durch seine TÜV-Süd-Zertifizierung, bzw. seinem redundanten Aufbau, unter anderem in Roboter-Mensch Applikationen eingesetzt werden darf. Dabei arbeitet das System nach dem so genannten ToF-Prinzip (Time of Flight) wobei die Zeit des emittierten Lichts gemessen wird. Infolge dessen sind maximale Messzeiten von 60 ms möglich.
Die verwendete Stereolabs ZED ist eine performante 3D-Kamera für einen breiten Anwendungsbereich. So verfügt diese Kamera über zwei 4 MP Kameras, wodurch 2 K-Aufnahmen (4416 x 1242 px) mit einer Framerate von bis zu 100 Hz ermöglicht werden.

Mit dem MBS ROVO 2 kann MYBOTSHOP ein Produkt anbieten, das durch geringen Wartungsaufwand und eine lange Lebensdauer überzeugt – Preis und Leistung stimmen hier überein. Aufgrund jahrelanger Erfahrung, erprobter Technik, permanenter Weiterentwicklung und Verwendung qualitativ hochwertiger Komponenten im Fahrzeug rentieren sich die Anschaffungskosten in Höhe von 40.000 EUR (UVP). MYBOTSHOP Firmengründer Daniel Kottlarz schöpft aus der autonomen Zukunft und künstlichen Intelligenz das Potenzial, Arbeitsschritte und Prozessabläufe zu vereinfachen und die Kosten-Nutzen-Effizienz zu steigern. Ebenso können Mitarbeiter im gefährlichen Arbeitsumgebungen reduziert und deren Sicherheit unterstützt werden.

https://www.mybotshop.de/

Better gripping with intelligent picking robots

Researchers from Germany and Canada work on new AI methods for picking robots.

 ISLANDIA, NY, July 7, 2021 — Production, warehouse, shipping – where goods are produced, stored, sorted or packed, picking also takes place. This means that several individual goods are removed from storage units such as boxes or cartons and reassembled. With the FLAIROP (Federated Learning for Robot Picking) project Festo and researchers from the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), together with partners from Canada, want to make picking robots smarter using distributed AI methods. To do this, they are investigating how to use training data from multiple stations, from multiple plants, or even companies without requiring participants to hand over sensitive company data. 

“We are investigating how the most versatile training data possible from multiple locations can be used to develop more robust and efficient solutions using artificial intelligence algorithms than with data from just one robot,“ says Jonathan Auberle from the Institute of Material Handling and Logistics (IFL) at KIT. In the process, items are further processed by autonomous robots at several picking stations by means of gripping and transferring. At the various stations, the robots are trained with very different articles. At the end, they should be able to grasp articles from other stations that they have not yet learned about. „Through the approach of federated learning, we balance data diversity and data security in an industrial environment,“ says the expert.

Powerful algorithms for industry and logistics 4.0

Until now, federated learning has been used predominantly in the medical sector for image analysis, where the protection of patient data is a particularly high priority. Consequently, there is no exchange of training data such as images or grasp points for training the artificial neural network. Only pieces of stored knowledge – the local weights of the neural network that tell how strongly one neuron is connected to another – are transferred to a central server. There, the weights from all stations are collected and optimized using various criteria. Then the improved version is played back to the local stations and the process repeats. The goal is to develop new, more powerful algorithms for the robust use of artificial intelligence for industry and Logistics 4.0 while complying with data protection guidelines.

“In the FLAIROP research project, we are developing new ways for robots to learn from each other without sharing sensitive data and company secrets. This brings two major benefits: we protect our customers‘ data, and we gain speed because the robots can take over many tasks more quickly. In this way, the collaborative robots can, for example, support production workers with repetitive, heavy, and tiring tasks”, explains Jan Seyler, Head of Advanced Develop. Analytics and Control at Festo SE & Co. KG During the project, a total of four autonomous picking stations will be set up for training the robots: Two at the KIT Institute for Material Handling and Logistics (IFL) and two at the Festo SE company based in Esslingen am Neckar.

Start-up DarwinAI and University of Waterloo from Canada are further partners

“DarwinAI is thrilled to provide our Explainable (XAI) platform to the FLAIROP project and pleased to work with such esteemed Canadian and German academic organizations and our industry partner, Festo. We hope that our XAI technology will enable high-value human-in-the-loop processes for this exciting project, which represents an important facet of our offering alongside our novel approach to Federated Learning.  Having our roots in academic research, we are enthusiastic about this collaboration and the industrial benefits of our new approach for a range of manufacturing customers”, says Sheldon Fernandez, CEO, DarwinAI.

“The University of Waterloo is ecstatic to be working with Karlsruhe Institute of Technology and a global industrial automation leader like Festo to bring the next generation of trustworthy artificial intelligence to manufacturing.  By harnessing DarwinAI’s Explainable AI (XAI) and Federated Learning, we can enable AI solutions to help support factory workers in their daily production tasks to maximize efficiency, productivity, and safety”, says Dr. Alexander Wong, Co-director of the Vision and Image Processing Research Group, University of Waterloo, and Chief Scientist at DarwinAI.

About FLAIROP

The FLAIROP (Federated Learning for Robot Picking) project is a partnership between Canadian and German organizations. The Canadian project partners focus on object recognition through Deep Learning, Explainable AI, and optimization, while the German partners contribute their expertise in robotics, autonomous grasping through Deep Learning, and data security.

  • KIT-IFL: consortium leadership, development grasp determination, development automatic learning data generation.
  • KIT-AIFB: Development of Federated Learning Framework
  • Festo SE & Co. KG: development of picking stations, piloting in real warehouse logistics
  • University of Waterloo (Canada): Development object recognition
  • Darwin AI (Canada): Local and Global Network Optimization, Automated Generation of Network Structures

Visit www.festo.com/us for more information on Festo products and services.

About Festo

Festo is a leading manufacturer of pneumatic and electromechanical systems, components, and controls for process and industrial automation. For more than 40 years, Festo Corporation has continuously elevated the state of manufacturing with innovations and optimized motion control solutions that deliver higher performing, more profitable automated manufacturing and processing equipment.

Connect with Festo: Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter and YouTube

SourceRabbit released a commercial GCode Sender for GRBL CNC Machines

GRBL is quite popular with the CNC hobby community, open source firmware that turns an Arduino into a CNC controller. It was released in 2015 and in recent years has gained many friends, among them SourceRabbit, a Greek CNC machine tool manufacturer, which aspires to transform GRBL from a hobby tool to an industry standard by offering the first commercial CNC control software for GRBL-compatible CNC machines.

Their new commercial software, GCode Sender 4-Axis, released in April 2021, replaced their old 3-axis software which has been available since 2015. It is compatible with the classic 3-Axis GRBL for AVR processors and the new multi axis Grbl for the Esp32.

We managed to obtain a statement from Nikos Siatras, CEO of SourceRabbit, who told us “From 2015 until the beginning of 2021, many GCode Sender applications were developed to control GRBL CNC machine tools. All of them were open source, free of charge, without any support and often with several bugs that tire even the most patient user. While GRBL is an incredibly good and flexible CNC control firmware, the GCode Senders that existed until today gave the impression that GRBL is purely for hobbyists. Through the development of our own software we are going to change that and we will try to make GRBL a CNC industry standard.”

SourceRabbit plans to implement many new tools and features to the GCode Sender 4-Axis. The software retails for €50.00 + VAT and with the purchase of each license you have free access to all subsequent versions of the software.

Introducing the VEX V5 Workcell

VEX Robotics is revolutionizing workforce development education with VEX V5 Workcell

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JFkX1KaMA1Y

https://www.vexrobotics.com/v5/products/workcell