This 7-axis robot arm was assembled on a mobile crawler platform and is used in lorries in the production industry. Thanks to a sophisticated gripper, vision system and artificial intelligence developed by the Michelin study and research centre in Ladoux, the robot arm identifies and grips the products and places them on a conveyor belt under the robot, which transports the products to their processing area.
In manual mode (radio-controlled), the platform can travel with the robot in all directions, with the destination being the loading/unloading dock. Once on the dock, it switches to autonomous mode. However, when working in the narrow trailer of a lorry, the robot can only move forwards and backwards to a limited extent and can only turn slightly to re-centre. This posed a space problem, especially for guiding the numerous power, control and pneumatic cables from outside into the trailer where the robot works. Alternatives such as a battery for the energy supply or a motor were out of the question due to the robot's size and weight restrictions.
Instead, an energy chain system was chosen, which is pulled horizontally behind the robot over concrete and the wooden or plastic formwork of the lorry trailer with a minimum travel of 14m, a speed of 12m/min and acceleration of 1m/s². The small height difference between the dock and trailer also posed a challenge and required a cable guide that was as wear-free as possible. As the chain would be slightly off-centre from the track of the mobile platform, it had to be in a position to accept twisting/deformation.