I. Mechanical Structure Components
Base Platform: The fixed, stationary mounting frame.
Moving Platform (End-Effector Platform): The platform that moves in space and carries the tooling.
Drive Arms (Active Arms): Typically 3 or 4 arms, each directly driven by a servo motor.
Forearm Links (Passive Arms): Lightweight links (e.g., carbon fiber) connected by spherical joints to transmit motion from the drive arms to the moving platform.
II. Drive & Transmission Components
Servo Motors & Drives: Each drive arm is powered by a high-dynamic servo motor. Matching servo drives provide precise control.
Reducers/Gearboxes: Low-backlash precision reducers are often used to increase torque and improve rigidity/accuracy.
III. End-Effector
Tool Mounting Flange: Located at the center of the moving platform for attaching tools.
Tooling: Application-specific, such as pneumatic suction cups, electric grippers, vacuum generators, custom fixtures.
IV. Sensing & Control System
Motion Controller: The robot’s “brain”. Runs inverse kinematics algorithms to coordinate all axes.
Encoders: Built into the servo motors, providing real-time position/speed feedback for closed-loop control.
Vision System (Optional but common): Guides the robot by identifying and locating parts.
V. Auxiliary & Electrical Components
Electrical Control Cabinet: Houses the controller, drives, power supplies, and often a PLC.
Pneumatic System: Supplies clean, regulated air for pneumatic end-effectors.
Cabling & Hose Management: Includes motor power cables, encoder feedback lines, and air hoses, often routed through a cable carrier.
Summary: A spider robot is a highly synergistic system of precision mechanics, high-performance servo drives, advanced control algorithms, and application tooling, all designed to maximize speed and accuracy.
