Frame Assignment For Robotic Manipulators - Direct Kinematics I

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  • Опубликовано: 3 дек 2024

Комментарии • 54

  • @cerenbirben9096
    @cerenbirben9096 Год назад +8

    Your way of explaining is so effective that I notice details that I never understood before. Thanks a lot for your effort.

  • @ooiziyu358
    @ooiziyu358 2 года назад +5

    this is a lot better than my lecturer omg. Thanks, you saved my final exam

  • @lekhrajdewangan8491
    @lekhrajdewangan8491 Год назад +1

    You explained in a very simple way than books thank you sir!

  • @andriiboryshkevych6124
    @andriiboryshkevych6124 4 года назад +6

    God bless you for making this video!

  • @taherpatrawala3427
    @taherpatrawala3427 3 года назад +6

    Thank you brother, it was clear as crystal.

  • @Shivshankar-xd3br
    @Shivshankar-xd3br 3 года назад +5

    you simplified it in a very good way super cool

  • @AirAdventurer194
    @AirAdventurer194 4 года назад +4

    This is priceless; thank you!

  • @TatharNuar
    @TatharNuar Год назад +2

    @2:45 Shouldn't this be N+1 links, including the ground link and the open link on the opposite end? Grubler's formula wouldn't work otherwise.

  • @brokenEngineerMathAndPhysics
    @brokenEngineerMathAndPhysics Год назад

    Very simple explanation. Thank you

  • @Weminan
    @Weminan 5 месяцев назад

    Thanks lot. Your explanation made it make sense

  • @sleephourofmotivatwakeupas6512
    @sleephourofmotivatwakeupas6512 4 года назад +2

    The best video s9 far

  • @Chekuthan0101
    @Chekuthan0101 Месяц назад

    Great explanation

  • @humayonnaseer7225
    @humayonnaseer7225 Год назад +1

    brother you nailed it thankyou💝

  • @Gotenham
    @Gotenham 2 года назад +2

    very well explained thank you!

  • @king_gomer
    @king_gomer 10 месяцев назад

    Very good explanation. Thanks

  • @ibrahimawad-k3k
    @ibrahimawad-k3k 8 месяцев назад +1

    such a savior

  • @Talha80777
    @Talha80777 4 года назад +2

    good explanation

  • @NYXSriLanka
    @NYXSriLanka Год назад

    Thank you soo much❤🎉 very clear and helpful

  • @NilofarSaleem-u6k
    @NilofarSaleem-u6k Год назад +2

    Point 5. why are you applying left hand rule, while its written right hand rule should be applied. ?

  • @abdulmanankhalid8994
    @abdulmanankhalid8994 4 года назад +8

    Sir make videos on inverse kinematics please

  • @p09notankumar42
    @p09notankumar42 Год назад

    good bro , that is engineering

  • @seasnek7024
    @seasnek7024 8 месяцев назад +2

    2:45 Should be n+1 links
    13:24 You shouldn't be using the Left Hand Rule. That is for Flemming's Rule when doing magnetism and force vectors along a current-carrying wire.

  • @TR7H
    @TR7H 4 года назад +5

    I'm sorry but assigning the x-axes with the planes make no sense to me.. How can you ever have an unambiguous plane if you'r only requirement is that the z axel is contained in it? And more over, even if that is solved by requiring the two planes of adjacent axes to be on the same plane, the normal still has two possible directions. Am I missing something?

    • @Andrew-kg2es
      @Andrew-kg2es 2 года назад +1

      Came to the comments for this!

    • @dhruvshah8762
      @dhruvshah8762 3 месяца назад +1

      I viewed this page to understand what is going on: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Right-hand_rule. I hope this helps

  • @RESC_Eng
    @RESC_Eng 3 года назад +4

    Why did you use LHR not RHR for frame {0} , does it make sense ?

    • @Saisankeerth760
      @Saisankeerth760 2 года назад +1

      Its easier for us to imagine

    • @seasnek7024
      @seasnek7024 8 месяцев назад

      @@Saisankeerth760 that's only for magnetism along a wire

  • @HariRA-jn5wd
    @HariRA-jn5wd 4 года назад +13

    if two lines are intersecting it is obvious the lie in same plane so there's no 2 planes ....its only one and you take the normal to that plane.

  • @iamyouu
    @iamyouu 10 месяцев назад

    how did you choose frame of the tool? and how to incorporate spherical joints?

  • @Thilina_sanjaya
    @Thilina_sanjaya 2 года назад +1

    Thanks👍

  • @arafatasghar372
    @arafatasghar372 9 месяцев назад

    Isn't Right Hand Rule followed for assigning the y-axis?

  • @cook9256
    @cook9256 3 года назад +2

    The 5th step is the right-hand rule but the picture is for LHR?

    • @thatsengineering5235
      @thatsengineering5235  3 года назад +1

      The 5th step is to assign the Y axis. As the X and Z axes are already known the Y axis is assigned mutually perpendicular to them. The rule used is Flemings left hand rule and the picture shows that. Practically, three mutually perpendicular directions. Hope that clarified any doubts.

    • @Power_DC_Official
      @Power_DC_Official 3 года назад +5

      @@thatsengineering5235 It does not clarify doubts. Your explanation in steps 5 and 6 is super confusing. Up until that point you are talking about RHR and suddenly you use LHR and also mention you can shuffle axes around with no explanation whatsoever. "As the X and Z axes are already known the Y axis is assigned mutually perpendicular to them." - this can be applied with both RHR and LHR, the latter pointing Y-axis in negative direction. Step 5 clearly states "satisfy RHR" yet frame {0} satisfies LHR. Again, super confusing.

    • @ct96
      @ct96 3 года назад +2

      @@Power_DC_Official You should use the RHR for coordinate frames, Flemings' left hand rule is to do with current and force in a wire nothing to do with coordinate frames. The directions of the axes come from the vector cross products i x j = k, j x k = i, k x i = j where i,j and k are unit vectors in the x,y and z directions.

    • @seasnek7024
      @seasnek7024 8 месяцев назад

      @@thatsengineering5235 Flemming's Left Hand Rule is to do with the force along a current-carrying wire when subjected to a magnetic field...this is not correct!

  • @opiritetariah
    @opiritetariah 3 года назад

    Thank you

  • @Groveish
    @Groveish Год назад

    Don't screw joints also have one DOF?

  • @anupks3303
    @anupks3303 4 года назад +14

    Y-axis assigned based on the right-hand rule, not the left-hand rule. Please don't mislead viewers

    • @thatsengineering5235
      @thatsengineering5235  4 года назад +3

      As per the convention used, the Z-axis is assigned based on the RHR. This may differ based on a different convention.

    • @sweg5989
      @sweg5989 3 месяца назад

      @@thatsengineering5235 in the video: "5. Assign the Yi axis to complete a right hand coordinate system." But then you use left hand rules?

  • @coral-m
    @coral-m 2 года назад

    thsnks

  • @abdulrehmanraja9311
    @abdulrehmanraja9311 3 года назад

    have you explained inverse kinematics?
    I have exam in 36 hours and I need to understand that too...

    • @zainashraf6474
      @zainashraf6474 3 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/f9kxhj5bR6w/видео.html
      hope it helps

  • @pvmilk
    @pvmilk 3 года назад

    left-hand rule?

  • @adimalik7028
    @adimalik7028 3 года назад

    Aren't the links n+1?

  • @vimalbolozubankesri8996
    @vimalbolozubankesri8996 2 года назад

    n joints means n+1 links correct that ig thats mistake

  • @Alireza-kw6fj
    @Alireza-kw6fj Год назад

    I really didn't understand how to find x axis

  • @Power_DC_Official
    @Power_DC_Official 3 года назад +3

    Great course with a really bad example. The robot in example should also have perpendicular axis of movement not only parallel axes.

  • @abdulmanankhalid8994
    @abdulmanankhalid8994 4 года назад

    Manipulator Dinamics

  • @mshirazbaig6055
    @mshirazbaig6055 2 года назад

    I wonder why do you use left hand rule. When everyone else use right hand rule. The best videos are those of angla sodeman. I wonder why every one tries to invent the wheel his own way.

  • @LearningOdysse
    @LearningOdysse 8 месяцев назад

    your videos 🥵