A few modifications to the screenshot I posted, but here's the initial fish cranial kinesis model's movement.
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A few modifications to the screenshot I posted, but here's the initial fish cranial kinesis model's movement.
Fish people: I'm having a hard time getting the premaxilla to "slide" forward. How important is that? (I will keep trying tho.)
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F myrmepropagandist shared this topic
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A few modifications to the screenshot I posted, but here's the initial fish cranial kinesis model's movement.
Fish people: I'm having a hard time getting the premaxilla to "slide" forward. How important is that? (I will keep trying tho.)
This is magnificent.
I'm thinking about how one would do this for ants... but so many parts of the ant are flexible and this is integral to their locomotion and mandible action (even their wings)
I kind of suspect this is why attempts at "robot bugs" feel so much more clumsy than the OGs: They aren't a jointed system of hard parts, but a jointed system of hard and flexible parts.