A six-axis robot arm sitting on your desk used to mean five figures and a service contract. Chris Annin's AR4 quietly tore that idea up — and with the brand-new Mark 5 revision, he's calling the hardware officially finished. The AR4 is an open-source, six-degrees-of-freedom robot arm you build yourself from CNC-cut aluminum, 3D-printed parts, and off-the-shelf motors and electronics. It's the latest in a lineage that started with the AR2 and has been refined release after release. The Mark 5 isn't a dramatic redesign so much as a final polish: Annin says it's the last item on his hardware to-do list, with future effort going into software and tutorials instead. What changed in the Mark 5 The headline tweak is sensing. Joints one, two, and three now use Hall effect sensors for their calibration limit switches instead of mechanical microswitches, which meant reworking a few mounting points on the aluminum parts. Joints four, five, and six keep the small microswitches. Annin has also shipped a fresh build manual and published the arm's modified Denavit-Hartenberg parameters — the math that describes how each joint moves — as fully worked-out spreadsheets, so the kinematics aren't a mystery you have to reverse-engineer. Under the hood, the AR4 runs on a Teensy 4.1 with motors that have integrated encoders for closed-loop control, a setup carried over and tightened across earlier revisions. The control electronics live inside the base of the arm, and a larger base enclosure makes room for the terminal board and the gripper control board. Build it yourself This is a genuine DIY kit, not a toy. You'll want a 3D printer for the printed components, the CNC metal parts and motors (kits and downloads are on the Annin Robotics site), and a Teensy 4.1 to act as the brain. The new build manual and DH parameter spreadsheets make it one of the more approachable paths into real industrial-style robotics — and there's even a course aimed at schools, shaped by feedback from professors already using the AR4 in their classrooms. If you've got a Mark 4 already, there are upgrade instructions to bring it up to Mark 5 spec. Originally published on blog.circuit.rocks . robotics #robots #engineering #stem #circuitrocks
← WSZYSTKIE NEWSY
AR4 Mark 5: This Open-Source 6-Axis Robot Arm Is Finally Done
AUTHOR · circuitrocks
A six-axis robot arm sitting on your desk used to mean five figures and a service contract. Chris Annin's AR4 quietly tore that idea up — and with the brand-new Mark 5 revision, he's calling the hardware officially finished. The AR4 is an open-source, six-degrees-of-freedom robot arm you build yourself from CNC-cut aluminum, 3D-printed parts, and off-the-shelf motors and electronics. It's the latest in a lineage that started with the AR2 and has been refined release after release. The Mark 5 isn't a dramatic redesign so much as a final polish: Annin says it's the last item on his hardware to-d