A hefty robot designed by student teams at the Worcester Polytechnic Institute will face off next month along with more than a dozen other entrants in the debut Vecna Robot Sprint Challenge outside Boston.
Designed for search-and-rescue and a spindly four-legged rival that bounds along on hydraulic limbs, the robots will be racing a lineup ranging from commercial available machines weighing hundreds of pounds to remote control cars jerry-rigged by teenage hobbyists. The 100-meter out-and-back course, where the robots will accept a cup full of confetti at the turnaround, has no ambitions of attracting competitors on par with those in the U.S. Defense Department-funded Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency Robotics Challenge, where some of the world’s top minds in the field will show off creations that cost tens of millions of dollars.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology associate professor Russ Tedrake said, “It’s a fantastic trend; I’m all for it.” Races like Vecna’s, which he is not involved in organizing, they seem to be drawing people in to the field, he added. Competitions also help spin off new ideas that can grow into practical inventions, experts said. The fleet of self-driving cars that Google Inc has been testing relies on ideas generated at an earlier DARPA race, for instance.