It's also costly to order custom-made handlers for special parts. To solve these problems, engineers at Barrett Technology Inc., Cambridge, Mass. (barrett.com), developed the Barrett Hand, a three-fingered gripper that can securely hold a wide variety of shapes and parts.
The device has three articulated fingers. The center finger is fixed, and the other two rotate up to 180˚ around the outside of the hand's palm. This gives the hand a wide variety of grips and configurations. Each finger has two sections which act in concert to grab objects. When the first section touches an object, the second section continues retracting until it is also in contact. With all the fingers in play, and including the palm, the hand can have a seven-point grip on the object. This lets it deal with objects of unknown or inconsistent shapes. The hand can lift about 1.2 kg.
The hand's eight joints are controlled by four brushless-dc motors, all in the wrist section. A torque switch lets four motors control eight axes of motion. The gripper's communications, five microprocessors, sensors, and signal processor are packed inside the palm body. A small umbilical cable connects the hand to an array of robotic arms from different manufacturers.