YouTube user and engineer Hacksmith has created a home-made DIY exoskeleton that he has demonstrated lifting a Mini Cooper car with ease. Exoskeletons have already been developed for military and ...
Exoskeleton enthusiast James Hobson recently tested the lower body portion of what he hopes will ultimately become a full exoskeleton suit. As he wrote for the blog Hackaday, "There are a lot of ...
There's going to be no reason to go to the gym once we all have robot suits that can deadlift thousands of pounds. Jason Hobson, who goes by the moniker "the Hacksmith," used a robotic exoskeleton to ...
The Hacksmith YouTube channel has published a new video demonstrating how an exoskeleton can be used to provide additional strength when lifting heavy objects. Check out the exoskeleton designed by ...
Canadian YouTuber the Hacksmith test drove an 8,000-pound exoskeleton in his latest video, living out the ultimate childhood fantasy—being inside of a giant mech. In the video, the mech’s creator, ...
TORONTO, Jan. 26 (UPI) --A Canadian man with Iron Man ambitions demonstrated the latest version of his homemade exoskeleton by lifting a Mini Cooper. James Hobson, aka the Hacksmith, posted a video to ...
Exoskeletons, power suits, and iron suits in science fiction have served as the inspiration for many engineers and engineering projects over the years. This is certainly the case at [Hacksmith ...
The Hacksmith crew, made up of James Hobson and his team of engineers, has delivered numerous other wild prototypes in the past. Lightsabers, a Batman grappling gun, and a Reinhardt Rocket Hammer have ...
We’re not just a bunch of monkeys with typewriters here at Hackaday; we don our hacker hat whenever our schedules allow. Or, in the case of Hackaday’s own [James Hobson]—aka [The Hacksmith]—he dons ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. There's going to be no reason to go to the gym once we all have robot suits that can deadlift thousands of pounds. Jason Hobson, ...