DocumentCode
2063820
Title
Design and initial testing of a highly maneuverable remotely operated vehicle with dual articulating thrusters
Author
Walker, Daniel G.
Author_Institution
Massachusetts Inst. of Technol., Cambridge, MA, USA
fYear
2005
fDate
2005
Firstpage
2292
Abstract
This research involves the design, manufacture, and testing of a small, <1 m3, <10 kg, low cost, unmanned submersible. High maneuverability in the ROV as achieved through a high thrust-to-mass ratio in all directions. One identified solution is moving the primary thrusters in both the pitch and yaw directions. The robot is propelled by a pair of 2 DOF thrusters, and is directly controlled in heave, surge, sway, yaw, and roll. Pitch is controlled through passive buoyancy and active manipulation of added mass and gyroscopic effects. This system is compared against a traditional fixed-thruster system in terms of cost, size, weight, and high/low speed performance. Preliminary results indicate that the actuated system can provide an improved thrust-to-mass metric at the expense of increased system complexity. The system has applications in high accuracy positioning areas such as ship hull inspection, recovery, and exploration.
Keywords
mobile robots; navigation; propellers; remotely operated vehicles; underwater vehicles; DOF thrusters; ROV maneuverability; dual articulating thrusters; low cost unmanned submersible; maneuverable remotely operated vehicle; passive buoyancy; pitch direction; robot propelling; ship hull inspection; system complexity; thrust-to-mass metric; vehicle design; vehicle testing; yaw direction; Costs; Manufacturing; Marine vehicles; Propulsion; Remotely operated vehicles; Robots; Surges; Testing; Underwater vehicles; Weight control;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
OCEANS, 2005. Proceedings of MTS/IEEE
Print_ISBN
0-933957-34-3
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/OCEANS.2005.1640107
Filename
1640107
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