On the Use of Force Feedback for Cost Efficient Robotic Drilling

2007-01-3909

09/17/2007

Event
Aerospace Technology Conference and Exposition
Authors Abstract
Content
Drilling is one of the most costly and labour-intensive operations in aircraft assembly. Rather than automating with expensive fixtures and precise machinery, our approach is to make use of standard low-cost robot equipment in combination with sensor feedback. The focus is to eliminate the sliding movement of the end-effector during the clamp-up, called the skating effect, and to keep the end-effector orthogonal to the surface, thus avoiding holes that are not perpendicular. To that end, force feedback is used for building up pressure to clamp up an end-effector to the work-piece surface prior to drilling. The system, including the planning of force parameters for each hole to be drilled, was programmed in DELMIA. The drilling was accomplished with the aid of an extension to the ABB Rapid language called ExtRapid, which is an XML-like code that is interpreted by the force feedback controller downstream in the process. Although experimental results are from drilling, the conceptual idea is believed to be useful in many other applications requiring external sensor feedback control of industrial robots.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2007-01-3909
Pages
12
Citation
Kihlman, H., Brogårdh, T., Haage, M., Nilsson, K. et al., "On the Use of Force Feedback for Cost Efficient Robotic Drilling," SAE Technical Paper 2007-01-3909, 2007, https://doi.org/10.4271/2007-01-3909.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Sep 17, 2007
Product Code
2007-01-3909
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English