Abstract
Cable-Driven Parallel Robots (CDPRs) are a special kind of parallel manipulator that uses cables to control the position and orientation of the mobile platform or end effector. The use of cables instead of rigid links offers some advantages over their conventional rigid counterparts. As cables can only pull but not push, the number of cables (n) required to command the end-effector is always n+1. This configuration is known as fully-constrained, and it is the most extended configuration for CDPRs. Although CDPRs have many advantages, such as their ability to cover large working areas, one of their main problems is that their working area (workspace) is limited in comparison to its frame area (planar case) or frame volume (spatial case), due to the minimum and maximum allowed tensions. Depending on these tension values, the workspace can notoriously decrease. In order to tackle this problem, lots of works focus on solving kinematics or dynamics problems for cable sagging, i.e., they take into account sagging when modelling the robot kinematic and include these poses inside the usable robot workspace. Taking into account phenomena such as this increases the mathematical complexity of the problem, and much more complex techniques are required. On the other hand, the lack of workspace problem can be tackled by adding active or passive elements to the robot design. In this sense, this paper proposes two mechanical modifications: to add passive carriages to the robot frame and to use a single cable loop to command the end-effector position and orientation. This work presents the kinematic, static, and dynamic models of the novel design and shows the gain of workspace for a planar case while taking into account different parameters of the robot.
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