From what i can gather from the video is that exoskeleton is not powered (we have no audio from the skeleton) so it means that the skeleton lifts everything of your body you will notice this by his body armor the exoskeleton is wearing it not him
The weight of the bulletproof vest and the additional load carried falls on the frame, not on the person. Thus, in statics, the weight is not felt at all. And in dynamics, there is no vertical load, and only horizontal, due to the upwardly shifted center of gravity (I am now describing carrying a person on the back). In any case, such a frame will take on the shock loads from jumping ammunition when walking and running and will protect the spine, hip, knee and ankle joints from compression injuries.
@@Xone83 Interesting! And how does this translate for the wearer? Is he able to comfortably walk while carrying heavier equipment? Or would it still be felt in the knees since it’s unpowered? I’ve considered building something like this for my Superhero Armor (see my videos), but i wasn’t sure it would be effective.
@@SuperheroArmorychannel The point is to not feel the weight of heavy equipment. This weight is not felt. This is a vertical load (like gravity - directed from top to bottom), which is taken by the exoskeleton frame. Therefore, if you do not move, then you can hang a ton on yourself (as long as the frame can withstand it), the weight will not be felt. Difficulties will appear when you need to walk with a load. A person's center of gravity is in the lower back. Due to a heavy load, for example a person, the center of gravity shifts upward. That is, the body becomes heavier than the legs, just by the added weight. And when you walk, the body sways. And the higher the center of gravity, and the heavier the load - the greater the load on the muscles of the foot, with which you keep yourself from falling. And they are used to your weight, and not to an additional +100 kg. Which is a very big difference. Also add the lever effect, which occurs due to the difference in the length of the body and legs in relation to the length of the foot. In general, to walk comfortably, it is not recommended to exceed the tolerable weight as a percentage of your body weight, which is 50%. That is, half of your weight is easy. If more, there will be increased stress on the foot.
@@Xone83 Excellent explanation! Thank you. The concept is very simple then and it seems like it would be fairly easy to replicate. Do you know if this particular Russian exoskeleton is a commercially available product or just a demo unit? Another RUclipsr named Mr Teslonian built something very similar to this but more primitive and he incorporated a 12v electric winch as an actuator.
@@SuperheroArmorychannel In the video I’m walking around in this exoskeleton :-) It’s just that now I’m writing not from the account of an English-language channel, but from my personal one. No, this model is not for sale and is a prototype. More precisely, several modifications of the Mark-8 model are presented here. If you look closely, you can see that they are structurally different.
At the moment, filming the sequel to the series has been complicated by the fact that the buildings of the "mercenary base" location have been demolished. We decided to make them graphic, got a little carried away, and as a result, we will soon finish developing a game in the "shooter" genre "Area 66" instead of filming the next episode. In this way, viewers will be able to feel like the series' george. Ideally, 3 parts are planned, where you can play for 3 different heroes in different locations of the Zone. Part 1 is almost ready.
Most new recruitments today lack bone density! So harder to recruit viable candidates. Seems more reasonable to improve the quality and price of food! 😊
Hi there. Nice to see You guys still developing the exoskeleton. But how about any specs? the weight of the exo itself? how much it reduse the load? what is the final mechanism? (i could only see the frame in here?)
And we are glad that our subscribers are still with us:-) This is only the first video about the modifications of the Mark-8. The following ones will show other modifications. They are all made of different materials, there is a steel model, aluminum and titanium, so they weigh differently. But on average 5 kg. The carried weight depends on the operator and is determined by his physical indicators, since the recommended carried weight is 50% of the operator's weight. More is possible, but there will be difficulties in maintaining balance, due to the lever ratio of body length to foot length
@@RalfBergmann-y7oIt’s to prevent impact stress injuries (microfractures from carrying too much weight) and fatigue from weight while standing still. The exoskeleton offloads weight from the user.
You don't feel the weight of a bulletproof vest, for example. It doesn't put pressure on your shoulders. That doesn't cause those same herniated discs.
The weight of the bulletproof vest and the additional load carried falls on the frame, not on the person. Thus, in statics, the weight is not felt at all. And in dynamics, there is no vertical load, and only horizontal, due to the upwardly shifted center of gravity (I am now describing carrying a person on the back). In any case, such a frame will take on the shock loads from jumping ammunition when walking and running and will protect the spine, hip, knee and ankle joints from compression injuries.
I think it helps to reduce fatigue when carrying heavy things or moving around the battlefield especially if you're in the ground for a long period of time.
imagine trying to crouch down to avoid incoming rounds, but the joints just lock.
There is no joint locking in this design
@@Xone83 bro its a joke. But they can still lock up due to a malfunction
@@phipsy6941 Anything can break. It's true. But human joints are not immune to this either :-)
Manufactured by :
(Afton)ov Robotics
Imagine being shot at
From what i can gather from the video is that exoskeleton is not powered (we have no audio from the skeleton) so it means that the skeleton lifts everything of your body you will notice this by his body armor the exoskeleton is wearing it not him
You are right
So it’s just an unpowered exoskeleton frame? If so, what’s the point?
The weight of the bulletproof vest and the additional load carried falls on the frame, not on the person. Thus, in statics, the weight is not felt at all. And in dynamics, there is no vertical load, and only horizontal, due to the upwardly shifted center of gravity (I am now describing carrying a person on the back). In any case, such a frame will take on the shock loads from jumping ammunition when walking and running and will protect the spine, hip, knee and ankle joints from compression injuries.
@@Xone83 Interesting! And how does this translate for the wearer? Is he able to comfortably walk while carrying heavier equipment? Or would it still be felt in the knees since it’s unpowered? I’ve considered building something like this for my Superhero Armor (see my videos), but i wasn’t sure it would be effective.
@@SuperheroArmorychannel The point is to not feel the weight of heavy equipment. This weight is not felt. This is a vertical load (like gravity - directed from top to bottom), which is taken by the exoskeleton frame. Therefore, if you do not move, then you can hang a ton on yourself (as long as the frame can withstand it), the weight will not be felt. Difficulties will appear when you need to walk with a load. A person's center of gravity is in the lower back. Due to a heavy load, for example a person, the center of gravity shifts upward. That is, the body becomes heavier than the legs, just by the added weight. And when you walk, the body sways. And the higher the center of gravity, and the heavier the load - the greater the load on the muscles of the foot, with which you keep yourself from falling. And they are used to your weight, and not to an additional +100 kg. Which is a very big difference. Also add the lever effect, which occurs due to the difference in the length of the body and legs in relation to the length of the foot. In general, to walk comfortably, it is not recommended to exceed the tolerable weight as a percentage of your body weight, which is 50%. That is, half of your weight is easy. If more, there will be increased stress on the foot.
@@Xone83 Excellent explanation! Thank you. The concept is very simple then and it seems like it would be fairly easy to replicate. Do you know if this particular Russian exoskeleton is a commercially available product or just a demo unit? Another RUclipsr named Mr Teslonian built something very similar to this but more primitive and he incorporated a 12v electric winch as an actuator.
@@SuperheroArmorychannel In the video I’m walking around in this exoskeleton :-) It’s just that now I’m writing not from the account of an English-language channel, but from my personal one. No, this model is not for sale and is a prototype. More precisely, several modifications of the Mark-8 model are presented here. If you look closely, you can see that they are structurally different.
Btw. How about the stalker video series? is it in the postproduction? or still the video capturing ongoing?
At the moment, filming the sequel to the series has been complicated by the fact that the buildings of the "mercenary base" location have been demolished. We decided to make them graphic, got a little carried away, and as a result, we will soon finish developing a game in the "shooter" genre "Area 66" instead of filming the next episode. In this way, viewers will be able to feel like the series' george. Ideally, 3 parts are planned, where you can play for 3 different heroes in different locations of the Zone. Part 1 is almost ready.
Most new recruitments today lack bone density! So harder to recruit viable candidates. Seems more reasonable to improve the quality and price of food! 😊
Russian cyborg soldier!
Good for 30 kg amo ?
The optimal load value is up to 50% of the operator’s body weight.
Hi there. Nice to see You guys still developing the exoskeleton. But how about any specs? the weight of the exo itself? how much it reduse the load? what is the final mechanism? (i could only see the frame in here?)
And we are glad that our subscribers are still with us:-) This is only the first video about the modifications of the Mark-8. The following ones will show other modifications. They are all made of different materials, there is a steel model, aluminum and titanium, so they weigh differently. But on average 5 kg. The carried weight depends on the operator and is determined by his physical indicators, since the recommended carried weight is 50% of the operator's weight. More is possible, but there will be difficulties in maintaining balance, due to the lever ratio of body length to foot length
Of curse the Russians See that in Call of Duty i dont See Any advantage In this one . Expept the Lader thing 🤣
@@RalfBergmann-y7oIt’s to prevent impact stress injuries (microfractures from carrying too much weight) and fatigue from weight while standing still. The exoskeleton offloads weight from the user.
Everthing is probably classified
The future is here
Stalker 2 looks mad
I bet wearing something like this will cause chafing and blisters, but maybe it's worth it?
Why is good? For what
You don't feel the weight of a bulletproof vest, for example. It doesn't put pressure on your shoulders. That doesn't cause those same herniated discs.
I am Lain
Fully support Russia, but there seems no point in this equipment, maybe uploader can explain !!
The weight of the bulletproof vest and the additional load carried falls on the frame, not on the person. Thus, in statics, the weight is not felt at all. And in dynamics, there is no vertical load, and only horizontal, due to the upwardly shifted center of gravity (I am now describing carrying a person on the back). In any case, such a frame will take on the shock loads from jumping ammunition when walking and running and will protect the spine, hip, knee and ankle joints from compression injuries.
Crap-o-matic😂
Looks useless
not useless if it can help the soldier carry an 80lbs load over say 10 miles. It could increase the overall efficiency of ground forces
@@robertbradbury7921 yea if maintainable you would be right I'd say
dude thats all what modern exosuits atm. Its not powerarmour
I think it helps to reduce fatigue when carrying heavy things or moving around the battlefield especially if you're in the ground for a long period of time.
Now Russia no how to fight NATO they got experience
😂😂😂😂 its not even April fools
@00-Dima pretty good joke my boy! They said 3 days with ukraine look how that went we almost in year 3 😁
@@JohnBrown-l5s Russia fight alone with all NATO power still there boot inside Ukrainian
@@00-Dima west joker