The first knitted robotic hands
The first knitted robotic hands


There is a problem that has slowed the evolution of robots for decades. Building the body of these machines, creating robotic hands with human-like dexterity, for example, can require hundreds of small mechanical parts, tiny screws, cables, bearings, delicate joints, all assembled manually in a slow, expensive and extremely complex process.
The system called 3D weaving braiding works similarly to a high-tech industrial loom. First, a basic skeletal structure is placed in the machine, then high-strength fibers, elastics, artificial tendons, even sensor cables are automatically braided around this structure. The result is a virtually complete robotic component, a single, flexible and structurally resistant piece.
