A giant-mantis robot with
hydraulic legs has been unveiled by a designer who spent four years creating
it.
Matt Denton, from Hampshire, estimates his
"very expensive toy" has cost him hundreds of thousands of pounds.
He says a mining company and a marine research
organization are now interested in his design and he hopes it might be used at
science fairs.
During its development the machine had one
outing, at a music festival, where Mr Denton says it was well received.
"It's an entertainment vehicle," he
said. "But I hope it will inspire people."
The project was only initially intended to take
12 months, Mr Denton, who usually specializes in small-scale animatronics for
the film industry, said.
"After 18 months we tried the model out. We
had to completely strip out and rebuild the legs. They were too heavy and
complicated.
Animatronics expert Matt Denton says his machine's legs are
inefficient
"I'm a software and electronics engineer so
this was out of my area - I had to learn fast."
The robot, driver-operated by joysticks within a
cockpit, can only travel at 1.5km/h (1mph) and manage a distance of 5km on a
20-litre (4.5-gallon) tank of diesel.
"It's not about miles to the gallon, it's
about gallons to the mile," he said.
"It wasn't built to be efficient and fast.
It was built to look cool and insect-like and fun." Mr Denton said he was inspired by science fiction
to create the "walking" machine. "But legs are very inefficient - the wheel
was invented for a reason," he added.
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