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The motion of current industrial manipulators is typically controlled so that tasks are not done in a minimum time optimal manner. The result is substantially lower productivity than that potentially possible. Recently a computationally efficient algorithm has been developed to find the true minimum time optimal motion for a manipulator moving along a specified path in space that uses both the full nonlinear dynamic character of the manipulator and the constraints imposed by its actuators. A Computer Aided Design (CAD) implementation of the algorithm called OPTARM is described which can treat practically general six degree-of-freedom manipulators. Examples are presented which show OPTARM to be a useful design tool for manipulators, their tasks and work places. The algorithm is extended in OPTARM to include the constraints imposed by manipulator payloads and end-effectors.
Shiller et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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