Exoskeletons Will Make Work Weightless
Released on 04/30/2015
This is the EksoWorks industrial exoskeleton
and the point of it is to let somebody who looks like me
take something that looks like this,
which is a Milwaukee grinder, and hold it over their head
for a long time as though it didn't weigh anything.
EksoBionics grew out of a defense funded project
to make a load carrying suit for military applications.
But the company is best known for a spin-off,
a powered, therapeutic exoskeleton that people
who are paralyzed or suffered strokes can use.
Now the company is going back to its roots in a way
with an exoskeleton built to make
difficult human jobs a lot easier.
Ekso isn't the only company getting into exo suits
but they are one of the first to build one
aimed more at construction workers than special forces.
[Blue Sleeve Guy] Put a large metal bit in the front.
Sure.
And then work it actually for more than five minutes.
Now we see why I went into journalism.
That's right.
I got to try out the suit at Ekso's
Richmond, California factory.
It's adjustable, for people from five foot four
to six foot four, it weighs about 16 pounds
and it feels a bit odd at first.
You could not twerk in this.
It just would not...
You may not be able to twerk without it so...
I wouldn't recommend it, let's say.
The Ekso industrial suit is made for heavy industry
and construction, it's less Tony Stark's Iron Man armor
and more the Power Loader from Aliens.
Back then they had the idea of exoskeletons
for industrial applications and the interesting thing
about that is Aliens was scheduled in the year 2020
so in our minds we got five years to get to that.
[Adam] But the Ekso suit is still pretty far
from Ripley's Alien Slayer.
This thing is actually completely analogue.
Our industrial exoskeletons are,
our first round of products, are actually passive,
so there's no electronics, there's no battery,
so there's nothing to be plugged in
which makes it pretty exciting.
[Adam] But then how do they fly and shoot laser beams?
There's no laser beams, there's no, we don't have
the Arc Reactor yet like Tony Stark.
No, so...
[Adam] It seems like a missed opportunity,
I just have to say.
Well we keep asking for it,
but no one has developed it yet.
Totally different, up is now completely easy,
like I would stay like that for hours, right now.
I could even heft a 40 pound grinder like a sword.
And the whole premise is that we provide
a parallel load path so we have the tool,
there's a gravity balancing arm that mounts to the chassis
and that chassis has a load pass
that goes all the way to the ground
so the user inside doesn't feel any of the weight,
the pay load goes down through the structure to the ground,
and they're just there to maneuver and move the tool around.
But there might be competition soon.
Salt Lake City's Sarcos is developing a powered
full-body suit but what I want to know is,
will it have a fencing function?
I can fence for hours.
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