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Robotic Suit Could Create Super Soldier

By MARK JEWELL,
AP
Posted: 2008-05-15 16:52:52
Filed Under: Nation News
(May 15) - Rex Jameson bikes and swims regularly, and plays tennis and skis when time allows. But the 5-foot-11, 180-pound software engineer is lucky if he presses 200 pounds — that is, until he steps into an "exoskeleton" of aluminum and electronics that multiplies his strength and endurance as many as 20 times.

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Douglas C. Pizac, AP

A Real-Life Iron Man?

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Under a two-year contract with the U.S. Army, a Salt Lake City-based robotics firm is testing a 150-pound suit that could create the soldier of the future. The suit can multiply its wearer's strength and endurance as many as 20 times by sensing and almost instantly amplifying every movement the wearer makes. The Army plans initial field tests next year.

With the outfit's claw-like metal hand extensions, he gripped a weight set's bar at a recent demonstration and knocked off hundreds of repetitions. Once, he did 500.

"Everyone gets bored much more quickly than I get tired," Jameson said.

Jameson — who works for robotics firm Sarcos Inc. in Salt Lake City, which is under contract with the U.S. Army — is helping assess the 150-pound suit's viability for the soldiers of tomorrow. The suit works by sensing every movement the wearer makes and almost instantly amplifying it.

The Army believes soldiers may someday wear the suits in combat, but it's focusing for now on applications such as loading cargo or repairing heavy equipment. Sarcos is developing the technology under a two-year contract worth up to $10 million, and the Army plans initial field tests next year.

Before the technology can become practical, the developers must overcome cost barriers and extend the suit's battery life. Jameson was tethered to power cords during his demonstration because the current battery lasts just 30 minutes.

But the technology already offers evidence that robotics can amplify human muscle power in reality — not just in the realm of comic books and movies like the recently debuted "Iron Man," about a wealthy weapons designer who builds a high-tech suit to battle bad guys.

"Everybody likes the idea of being a superhero, and this is all about expanding the capabilities of a human," said Stephen Jacobsen, chief designer of the Sarcos suit.

The Army's exoskeleton research dates to 1995, but has yet to yield practical suits. Sarcos' technology sufficiently impressed Raytheon Co., however, that the Waltham, Mass.-based defense contractor bought Sarcos' robotics business last November. Sarcos also has developed robotic dinosaurs for a Universal Studios' "Jurassic Park" theme park ride.

Jack Obusek, a former colonel now with the Army's Soldier Research Development and Engineering Center in the Boston suburb of Natick, foresees robot-suited soldiers unloading heavy ammunition boxes from helicopters, lugging hundreds of pounds of gear over rough terrain or even relying on the suit's strength-enhancing capabilities to make repairs to tanks that break down in inconvenient locations.

Sarcos' Jacobsen envisions factory workers someday using the technology to perform manual labor more easily, and firefighters more quickly carrying heavy gear up stairwells of burning buildings. Disabled people also may find uses for the technology, he said.

"We see the value being realized when these suits can be built in great numbers for both military and commercial uses, and they start coming down in cost to within the range of the price of a small car," said Jacobsen. He declined to estimate how much the suit might cost in mass production.

But cost isn't the only obstacle. For example, developers eventually hope to lengthen the suit's backpack battery's life and tinker with the suit's design to use less energy. Meanwhile, the suit can draw power from a generator, a tank or helicopter. And there are gas engines that, while noisy, small enough to fit into the suit's backpack.

"The power issue is probably the No. 1 challenge standing in the way of getting this thing in the field," Obusek said.

But he said Sarcos appears to have overcome the key challenge of pairing super-fast microprocessors with sensors that detect movements by the body's joints and transmit data about them to the suit's internal computer.

Much as the brain sends signals to tendons to get muscles to move, the computer sends instructions to hydraulic valves. The valves mimic tendons by driving the suit's mechanical limbs, replicating and amplifying the wearer's movements almost instantly.

"With all the previous attempts at this technology, there has been a slight lag time between the intent of the human, and the actual movement of the machine," Obusek said.

In the demonstration, the bulky suit slowed Jameson a bit, but he could move almost normally. When a soccer ball was thrown at him, he bounced it back off his helmeted head. He repeatedly struck a punching bag and, slowly but surely, he climbed stairs in the suit's clunky aluminum boots, which made him look like a Frankenstein monster.

"It feels less agile than it is," Jameson said. "Because of the way the control laws work, it's ever so slightly slower than I am. And because we are so in tune with our bodies' responses, this tiny delay initially made me tense."

Now, he's used to it.

"I can regain my balance naturally after stumbling — something I discovered completely by accident."

Learning was easy, he said.

"It takes no special training, beyond learning to relax and trust the robot," he said.

AP Photographer Douglas C. Pizac contributed to this report from Salt Lake City.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
2008-05-15 14:58:13
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Recent Comments

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395 comments

justinmanz 10:50:22 PM May 19 2008

Plain, and simple, if europe would destroy there nucealr weapons, and disaseamble there armies, then it would only be the United States left, and we would have no one to fight so there would be peace!

epicf4ilguy 12:13:14 PM May 18 2008

TONY STARK BUILT IT IN A CAVE

frejack 11:44:14 AM May 18 2008

relax and trust the robot

adamkwyhmed 10:24:38 AM May 18 2008

Instead of Construction Cranes, Robotic Construction platforms manned by men/women. Instead of trained Lawyers, Robotic Legal platforms manned by men/women. Instead of trained Doctors, Robotic Medical platforms manned by men/women. I see a whole lot of potential for this new technology. A man/woman could have/man a Robotic platform, Program a new setting, and be up and running whether in the field of Medecine, Legal Counceling, Construction..., Etc... It would almost be like living a scene of Matrix, except for real; Just download what you need to do your job, the Robotic Platform does the Rest.

palexes 06:21:06 PM May 16 2008

Look Ma no strings!!!

rabcomlink 05:34:46 PM May 16 2008

10 years from now everyone will be wearing these suits just to go to work or to do their shopping, at the rate this country is being taken over by gangs, drugs, and illegal aliens.

abstar91 05:27:44 PM May 16 2008

It scares me that in fifty years, if America's foreign policy keeps rolling farther and farther downhill into suicide, that we will have these robot people all over the world enforcing the will of the state. The future is looking more and more like a sci fi movie

topgunas 04:52:34 PM May 16 2008

DOODIE!!!! lol this is retarded and they shld jus make a better gun

pookiemang169 03:18:48 PM May 16 2008

brycebrytm 12:16:00 PM May 16 2008

Report This! A suit to make a soldier stronger,will not protect him, with the comeing of the rifle, wars have been fought in the open, with one side shilded with cover, and they were the ones killing most of the other side, and the stupididity of fighting without cover is killing our soldiers,instead of these suits a shield would protect a soldier a 100 times better,not just his torso, but his head, legs ,and arms,and it can have wheels so the soldier does not have to hold it all the time,and in close hand to hand combat,the soldier would let go of the sheild and be light and agile to fight.

Stupid they make these traveling sheild your talking about there called tanks. LOL

dmoore2144 02:52:04 PM May 16 2008

Would all of you retarded Liberals please go back to bed. Isnt it your bed time. This is designed to help repair tanks, and to help the Military carry heavier cargo etc. Not to fight with. Read the article before you make your pathetic remarks.

Rememeber if it were not for the stupid liberal Democrats, we would not be in the predicament we are in with oil. If we could drill off of our coasts like Russia and China are doing, or drill her in Alaska and the US we would not be dependant on Foreign oil. Thank PETA and all of the rest of the stupid liberals dont blame Bush, like you idiots have blamed everything else. And to think thay you morons think Hussein Obama is the answer. Pleasssssse.

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