Sixi is an open source industrial robot arm. It is designed with six degrees of freedom and can hold 2kg at 50cm.
3D printers can print parts for themselves, but they cannot self-assemble. The long goal of the Sixi is to build a machine that can assemble copies of itself.
When 3D printers were closed source, they started at $10k. Makerbot and Prusa changed the game by bringing high quality open source 3D printers down to $2k. Marginally Clever Robots, Ltd. aims to be the Prusa of robot arms.
The Sixi has no epoxy because we like operations that can be undone. The Sixi has no timing belts because they are annoying to keep tensioned.
All the 3D printable parts were produced on a Prusa MK2s at default settings (20% infill, 200um layer height). Parts are carefully designed to have a minimum of support material cleaning.
Sixi was designed in Fusion 360. The design is publicly shared...
...as the last stable version: https://a360.co/2s9NEJI ...as the development version: http://a360.co/2pgpNaG
Marginally Clever uses our home made Robot Overlord app to simulate, drive, and test the Sixi robot arm.
https://github.com/MarginallyClever/Robot-Overlord-App
Marginally Clever uses Makelangelo Firmware in the Arduino compatible brain of the robot.
https://github.com/MarginallyClever/Makelangelo-firmware
This repository contains:
- The STL files from the stable version
- Data sheet descriptions of the milled aluminum parts
- The bill of materials (BOM)
- A list of our commercial sources (In the BOM)
- Assembly instructions and animations in progress
- Usage instructions soon
- Wiring schematic in progress
- Issue tickets specifically related to the hardware
We love collaborating! Let's make great things happen together.
You can reach us online at http://marginallyclever.com/