Mesicopter Meso-Scale Surveillance Bot

Writing by Evan Ackerman on Tuesday, 3 of February , 2009 at 12:42 am

Mesicopter

When size is a factor, surveillance robots generally seem to fall into one of two categories: small enough to perform relevant tasks but still be portable, or absolutely as small as possible. Meso-scale is one step above the as small as possible MAVs, but significantly smaller than most conventional robots. The compromise is designed to allow for favorable scaling and low costs, and back in 1999 Stanford took a crack at developing a centimeter scale rotary surveillance platform called the Mesicopter.

Although part of Stanford’s funding came from DARPA, their conception for the Mesicopter was more for environmental surveillance than tactical surveillance. For example, swarms of these low cost and low weight robots would be ideal for collecting atmospheric data, or exploring Mars. The Mesicopter was designed to use a lithium ion battery with an energy density of 130 mWh/g, which would have given the prototype a flight time of 30 minutes. However, the propellers didn’t end up being quite efficient enough, and although the Mesicopter was able to lift itself using off-board power, it ultimately wasn’t strong enough to lift its own batteries.

Keep in mind, though, that this was ten years ago… I imagine that if someone were to try to make this work again they’d have a much easier time of it, due to increased power to weight ratios of motors as well as energy density increases of batteries. Of course, I also imagine that someone has done this already, they just can’t tell anyone about it or guys in black suits will come and take them away.

[ Stanford Mesicopter ] VIA [ Neatorama ]

Comments (1)

Category: Nano, Research

1 Comment

Comment by deana

Made Monday, 9 of February , 2009 at 12:26 am

i want one!!c’mon somebody get on it!

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