Validation of robotics theory on real-world hardware platforms is important to prove the practical feasibility of algorithms. This paper discusses some of the lessons learned while adapting the EvoBot, a low-cost robotics platform that we designed and prototyped, for research in diverse areas in robotics. The EvoBot platform was designed to be a low cost, open source, general purpose robotics platform intended to enable testing and validation of algorithms from a wide variety of sub-fields of robotics. Throughout the paper, we outline and discuss some common failures, practical limitations and inconsistencies between theory and practice that one may encounter while adapting such low-cost platforms for robotics research. We demonstrate these aspects through four representative common robotics tasks- localization, real-time control, swarm consensus and path planning applications, performed using the EvoBots. We also propose some potential solutions to the encountered problems and try to generalize them.
@article{arxiv.1705.07231,
title = {Adapting Low-Cost Platforms for Robotics Research},
author = {Thommen George Karimpanal and Mohammadreza Chamanbaz and Wenzheng Li and Timothy Jeruzalski and Abhishek Gupta and Erik Wilhelm},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1705.07231},
year = {2017}
}