Fin Gripper (Robotic/Prosthetic Hybrid) - Mark VI

Prints (0)

Description

The Mark VI Fin Gripper - Black Ram Hand. This hand was designed to use the The Fin Ray Effect giving the wearer the ability to pick up soft or odd shaped items not able to be grasped by rigid claws or fingers. 

Watch the hand in action: 

Each Fin Grip finger must be printed with a flexible material (I have used Ninja Flex for this one). I am not able to print flexible filaments on my printer so I used 3D Hubs to order the parts. The filament should be between 60-80 Shore A hardness (85 Duro shown which was still a bit stiff).

The hand is mechanically wrist powered and requires that the wearer have enough palm to push against the device. It converts the rotation of the wrist into a linear sliding motion to activate the end gripper. When the wrist is bent down the slider pulls back, closing the hand. When the wrist is straightened the slider pushes forward and the hand opens.

Assembly is the same as the Mark V, full instructions can be found here:

https://www.instructables.com/...

As can be seen the fingers flex around the object and then hold the part. There is a 2 finger "pincer" version and a 3 finger "Tri-claw" version.

Print:

14 x Bolts

10 x Nuts

3 x Fingrips - Print in Flexible filament or resin (60-80 Duro - Shore A)

3 x Hinges

1 each of the remaining parts.

If the fit of the parts is tight, lightly sand back the parts with a file.

The Black Ram Hand was designed not to be a replacement for current prosthetic hands, but to be an assistive technology tool/platform for allowing someone to design and use their own specific manipulators for individual tasks specific to that person. This is in the same way that Robotic grippers and end-effectors are designed for a specific goal. The Black Ram Hand is designed to help those with missing fingers or conditions such as Dupuytren's Contracture. 

Design Files

File Size

brh-fg-hand.stl
3.41 MB
brh-fg-fingrip.stl
24.9 KB
brh-fg-claw-slider.stl
852 KB
brh-fg-hinge.stl
143 KB
brh-fg-gauntlet-lite.stl
5.06 MB
brh-fg-nut.stl
643 KB
brh-fg-bolt.stl
1.23 MB
brh-fg-pincer-claw.stl
1.78 MB
Tool.stl
2.13 MB
brh-fg-pincer-slider.stl
455 KB
brh-fg-tendon.stl
1.11 MB
brh-fg-tri-claw.stl
1.95 MB

Comments

jakejake
Also, this is a really cool project! Really well thought out hinge mechanism and novel use of 3d printing for the gripper fingers. Will need to try it out when I get some time.
Reply8 years ago
Black_Ram_Industries
Thanks Jakejake. I would love to see your print if you get the chance.
Reply8 years ago
jakejake
Congrats on the win! well deserved
Reply8 years ago
Black_Ram_Industries
Thanks Jakejake. Congrats to you too.
Reply8 years ago
jpzugas
Amazing design! Congrats!
Reply8 years ago
Pierre Freyssinet
Great design indeed, and I am to print it. Few words of explanation: I have designed an assistive robotic arm for people suffering from Duchenne's Muscuar Distrophy (my nephew does, unfortunately). The arm is fine, strong and with a good reach, but I am not happy with the gripper. Need your help though: you say there is a two fingers version. Could you point me which stl I should use? I am getting a bit lost in all these parts. Pierre
Reply5 years ago
Black_Ram_Industries
Hi Pierre, The two fingered version is called the 'Pincer". so you will need to print the Pincer-claw and Pincer-slider. Just to add, the grippers require a flexible material like TPE to operate correctly. If you do not have a flexible material you should use the Mark V version for grippers.
Reply5 years ago
Pierre Freyssinet
Thank you for your prompt answer, I appreciate. And my old Makerbot II is confortable printing Ninjaflex or similar filaments, thanks to the Teflon-stuffed extruder I did install some years ago. Waiting for Amazon to deliver today a shinny yellow new roll and printing will start. FYI, I will try to adapt a motor to your great design. Stepper or DC+gearings, have not yet decided.
Reply5 years ago
Paul Spencer
Hi Pierre, My Son has Duchenne Muscular Distrophy. Do You by any chance have a link to the assitive arm you have designed? Paul
Reply5 years ago
Your browser is out-of-date!

Update your browser to view this website correctly. Update my browser now

×