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This video describes a small project by Brian Chan and Theresa Guo at the Hatsopoulos Microfluids Laboratory (Building 3, 2nd floor). It is a machine that flaps its wings and indicates the amount of lift generated. The data will be useful to determine how the force varies with a changing wing stroke angle, and thus help us design better flying machines.
Music by Seth Friedman
Advisor: Anette Hosoi
Animator, Director, Writer, Brian Chan
Engineers/Researchers: Brian Chan, Theresa Guo
The Hoverbot designed by Brian Chan,
built by Theresa Guo and Brian Chan.
To learn more about fluid dynamics research at MIT, please visit:
http://web.mit.edu/fluids/www/
http://scripts.mit.edu/~pekowiki/blaise/index.php?title=Main_Page
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Added 1 year ago | 00:05:16 | 1519 views
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It would fly if it had two or three sets of wings.
Posted 1 year by Anonymous User
wow. so cool =D
Posted 1 year by Anonymous User
Smooth.
Posted 1 year by Anonymous User
very cool bot. Does the pitch variations created by the tilt of the “see-saw” moving up and down affect how effective your bot is as it tries to hover? Did you find a true optimum angle or one that works as the body’s pitch fluctuates?
I know this video is more than a year old, but I was just curious. I really like your mechanism for changing the wing angle for each stroke.
Posted 7 months by sti33w