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Comment by ajb

7 months ago

Pretty cool. Once suggestion: any bot for home use (and many industrial uses) needs to be able to wash itself. No-one wants a bot that cleans the toilet and then gets dirt all round the house. This will be hard to retrofit (just covering it with silicone will give you massive thermal issues) so have a think about it early.

When I see a video of one of these things taking a shower, I'll think about buying it :-)

What about having the frame be relatively open, ship the robot with a sort of temporary shelter and have some disinfectant spray? Basically to "shower" the robot, you cover it in the shelter, press a button, remove shelter. Like fumigating a house, but on a smaller scale.

Would that still be too manual? I guess you could have another robot do it for you/it :)

  • I think that only works for rather specific cases, like if your robot is contaminated but not physically dirty. Usually people care about the mess of dirt as well. Also if the frame is open I suspect it will get grit etc inside.

    Perhaps a more general way to put this is, think about having this bot in a house with a small child. It would need to clean itself after the kid gets it dirty, and it shouldn't stop working if the kid sticks a Lego brick in some gap.

    These open framed robots are fine for development purposes, but for general use they don't seem practical.