This page (revision-11) was last changed on 2019-12-29 05:56 by Murray Altheim

This page was created on 2019-12-29 05:16 by Murray Altheim

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At line 3 changed one line
Well, the answer depends on the robot. If your robot comes as a kit, you might not need any additional tools at all, or only those supplied with the kit (such as an Allen wrench or a Phillips head screwdriver). If you're building your own bespoke robot you may need to construct your own chassis or hardware components, or ask someone with tools and experience to help you. It's important to learn how to use both hand and power tools properly — they can be quite dangerous if you don't know what you're doing or if you don't use sensible practices such as clamping your materials properly before drilling or cutting (I have a few scars to prove it).
Well, the answer depends on the robot. If your robot comes as a kit, you might not need any additional tools at all, or only those supplied with the kit (such as an Allen wrench or a Phillips head screwdriver). If you're building your own bespoke robot you may need to construct your own chassis or hardware components, or ask someone with tools and experience to help you.
At line 7 added 2 lines
It's important to learn how to use both hand and power tools properly — they can be quite dangerous if you don't know what you're doing or if you don't use sensible practices such as clamping your materials properly before drilling or cutting (I have a few scars to prove it). Here's some safety tips:
At line 16 changed one line
As an illustration of that last point, a few years' back I was hand-sanding some metal and had a tiny piece flew into my eye (I was wearing eyeglasses but not protective eyewear), and after about an hour of desperately trying to flush it out with water in the bathroom sink (I was starting to really panic) ended up having a very nice doctor at the local hospital's emergency ward fish it out in a couple of seconds. Really nice young guy. ''I don't want to see him again.''
As an illustration of that last point, a few years' back I was hand-sanding some metal part and a tiny piece flew into my eye (I was wearing eyeglasses but not protective eyewear), and after about an hour of desperately trying to flush it out with water in the bathroom sink (I was starting to really panic as it seemed pretty stuck) ended up having a doctor at the local hospital's emergency ward fish it out in a couple of seconds. Really nice young guy. ''I don't want to see him again.''
At line 33 added one line
* __hand clamps__ or a __bench clamp__, to hold things while you're working on them. I find the blue and yellow ''Irwin Quick-Grips'' pretty handy and come in many sizes
At line 46 changed one line
* a soldering iron (good quality, ask for help at the store where you buy it). [Murray] has a __Goot PX-335__ 85-120 Watt automatic temperature control, but that's kinda expensive unless you plan to do a lot of soldering
* a soldering iron (good quality, ask for help at the store where you buy it). [Murray] has a __Goot PX-335__ 85-120 Watt with automatic temperature control, but that's kinda expensive unless you plan to do a lot of soldering