No hay artículos en el carro
No hay artículos en el carroK. Nat
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 5 de marzo de 2025
The instructions were great until mid way through. Seems the company changed the equipment they provide and never updated the instructions. The base plate was not included and the remote does not work. We will be returning it.
Tommy G
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 17 de julio de 2024
This kit comes with all parts and directions are good enough for any one with some experience.Purchased 6 to use in grade school robotics class. Assembled one and think it will be good for kids to put together. Some very small screw will get lost so I have some extras. Some have asked for open source, these are just 6 servo motors so any controller/driver can be used. We will be using the MicroBit with a robotics board that can support 7.5 Volts. Have to be gentle with servos to not stress them in code or when moving with power off.
Jay
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 4 de mayo de 2024
I bought this for my 8yo grandson, who loves robots. Although he is very proficient with lego building, this is not a kit that a child can assemble alone. We got it done in a couple of hours. Instructions are pretty good, mostly pictures. Works great.
david garcia
Comentado en México el 2 de octubre de 2023
BUEN PRODUCTO
blakebart
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 26 de junio de 2018
I'm surprised more people haven't reviewed this robotic arm kit. I found the kit extremely well thought out. The parts machining and anodizing are just beautiful. A very important aspect of this design is the turntable that the arm sits on. It is built using a large diameter industrial quality bearing which provides a very solid base for the arm to operate on and provide servo-controlled rotation. The servos are top quality, very smooth operation and very powerful. The gripper is pre-assembled, a nice touch, and the joint design is quite clever. LewanSoul provides excellent tutorial videos, and an extremely helpful assembly video using 3D modeling to show how things go together in sequence. Another reviewer noted the importance of sorting out all the fastener hardware, that really helped smooth the build for me. The Bluetooth connection to the free iPhone app worked great, another impressive feature of this kit, especially for the money. The PS2 controller worked fine, though I prefer the iPhone app. There is also PC interface software that is provided although I have not tried that. I'm particularly interested in connecting an Arduino to the arm and writing sketches for controlling LeArm, and Aaron at LewanSoul showed me where to find the necessary information for that. LewanSoul has been very responsive answering my questions. Oh, and check out the video for LeHand on the LewanSoul website.
Tom Carroll
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 2 de marzo de 2018
When I received the LeArm kit from Amazon, I was amazed at the quality of the arm, from the heavy metal base, industrial quality ball-bearing, good servos and the very clear assembly instruction videos on the Internet. It assembles easily in a few hours. I would recommend this arm over any other robot arm for robot experimenters as it will last. I intended to write about it in my monthly column in a robotics magazine and was waiting for their version of the 5-DOF hands, another manufacturer's version of which is shown in the photo. I never received those hands from LeWanSoul. I did receive their X-Arm shown to the right in the photo and found it to also be of excellent quality.However, after a year of experimentation and demonstrations for others, I have found both of these robot arms far higher quality than any of the other robot arm kits is have tested. The LeArm uses separate 'standard' servos, each of which must be connected to a controller or Raspberry Pi or Arduino board. Depending on the position of the arm, I could manipulate almost a pound. Programming of the LeArm is fairly simple as you are dealing with standard servos that require basic pulse-width signal inputs.The X-Arm has very similar construction but you can look at both robot arms at the Amazon site and see the physical similarities and differences in the two arms. Both use the same quality ball bearing base, though the metal structure is a bit different and the gripper/claw is identical to the other. This arm uses their LX-15D intelligent serial bus servos that can be 'daisy-chained' and the final end of the three wires of the daisy chain transfers the servo's address (each servo has a number of 1 to 6) and power through the three wires. (You can see the small connector on the end of the white cable in my photo) Your microcontroller addresses each servo independently through that cable, very similar to the Robotis Dynamixel servos. The higher cost is due to the cost of the high-cost intelligent servos.I had a bit of trouble programming the arm with a RaspberryPi but soon got the hang of it. I ended up writing a bit of code to use it with Python, directly.The only issue I might say is using the tiny metric screws that were all in one bag. I found some that were too long so I used washers in mounting them to the small aluminum cylinders between the servos. One of the threaded holes in the long cylinder was a few degrees off 90 degrees so I just left the screw off. The video instructions were fine though I would have preferred a written manual. I found myself 'rewinding' the video to listen again 'what the girl really said.' I also would have liked to test their two hand models as theirs seems so much better made than the other company's hands shown in my photo.I also have their 6, 16, 24 and 32 channel servo controllers that have extensively come into use with my demonstrations. The LSC-6 controller is furnished with the LeArm and is used with the hand controller (they call it a "handle") to control the arm wirelessly. Note the receiver board in the photo of their photo of the arm.I would highly recommend the LewanSoul robotic arms and controllers and servo testers for students from high school to advanced university instruction, as well as home experimenters. Either of their servo models are well made with metal gears and have yet to fail for me. Their web site offers much material on their products, and they have been around long enough for one to find all sorts of articles about uses of the LewanSoul robot arms and controllers.
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