Runaway to the Stars: Page 164

In drawing this I experienced a small fraction of the hell it would be to actually try building one.

Here's your last reminder to ask the characters a question via the Google form before the AMA comics start rolling.

Transcript

LOG 5.2: Electrician Worms

Image: A segmented worm-like robot with a soft plastic exterior, thin retractable ribbon-like legs, and a cone shaped face made of a ring of flooded thin metallic tool arms. It has two camera arms that it holds up like eye stalks.

Electrician worms are soft-bodied robots that contain sophisticated, flexible pneumatic interiors. Much like modular frontloaders, they can either be remote controlled, or given a program to complete with their simple onboard AI. They are often used to repair or delicately dismantle electronic parts hidden in tight spaces on spacecraft, and come in a variety of sizes (although the smallest ones have much more limited equipment and self-governance). The exact set of tools found in their manipulator set can vary, and some worms are specialized for tasks including light welding, metal cutting, and drilling.

  • Cameras

  • wire stripper

  • heavy manipulator

  • soldering iron

  • soldering paste printhead

  • wire cutter

  • fine manipulator

  • drill

  • soldering paste storage

  • CPU

  • batteries

  • retractable legs

  • pneumatic segments

  • retroflective polymer skin

  • refueling ports

Leg Components:

Image: A cross section of one of the ribbon-like legs shows it contains thin cables attached to the inside of its flexible flat plastic casing.

  • electrostatic adhesive pad

  • cable tendons

Cables pull on the inside of the thin leg casing, flexing it to grip surfaces without adding bulk.

Segment Locomotion:

  • Turning

  • Twisting

  • Extension

The pneumatic segments push against each other, while intersegmental servos twist and push segments to produce a wide range of motion for navigating tight spaces.

Runaway to the Stars: Page 164

In drawing this I experienced a small fraction of the hell it would be to actually try building one.

Here's your last reminder to ask the characters a question via the Google form before the AMA comics start rolling.

Transcript

LOG 5.2: Electrician Worms

Image: A segmented worm-like robot with a soft plastic exterior, thin retractable ribbon-like legs, and a cone shaped face made of a ring of flooded thin metallic tool arms. It has two camera arms that it holds up like eye stalks.

Electrician worms are soft-bodied robots that contain sophisticated, flexible pneumatic interiors. Much like modular frontloaders, they can either be remote controlled, or given a program to complete with their simple onboard AI. They are often used to repair or delicately dismantle electronic parts hidden in tight spaces on spacecraft, and come in a variety of sizes (although the smallest ones have much more limited equipment and self-governance). The exact set of tools found in their manipulator set can vary, and some worms are specialized for tasks including light welding, metal cutting, and drilling.

  • Cameras

  • wire stripper

  • heavy manipulator

  • soldering iron

  • soldering paste printhead

  • wire cutter

  • fine manipulator

  • drill

  • soldering paste storage

  • CPU

  • batteries

  • retractable legs

  • pneumatic segments

  • retroflective polymer skin

  • refueling ports

Leg Components:

Image: A cross section of one of the ribbon-like legs shows it contains thin cables attached to the inside of its flexible flat plastic casing.

  • electrostatic adhesive pad

  • cable tendons

Cables pull on the inside of the thin leg casing, flexing it to grip surfaces without adding bulk.

Segment Locomotion:

  • Turning

  • Twisting

  • Extension

The pneumatic segments push against each other, while intersegmental servos twist and push segments to produce a wide range of motion for navigating tight spaces.

11 thoughts on “Runaway to the Stars: Page 164

  1. Me, in 2333 listening to the electrician worms scuttle through the ducts: ‘Welp! Time to weld my cabin door shut and etch the ninefold wards to hide me from the sight of God’.

  2. I’d still love you if you was a woim, boss.

  3. “In drawing this I experienced a small fraction of the hell it would be to actually try building one”
    Yeah I can’t say I envy what you must have went through. Sure looks great all finished though!

  4. These are amazing

  5. I am FASCINATED by the structure of these worms, thank you for taking the time to show a cross section despite the horrors of drawing them :0

  6. super super cool, glad we’re getting a closer look at one of these

  7. WORM!

    I wonder if the heads can disconnect to perform maintenance and repair of the CPU and refill the solder paste. Maybe the paste reserves is refilled by a little straw/syringe. Fascinating little guys!

  8. Very cool! I imagine they can be quite creepy in person, especially inside a dark ship

    1. Things you would not want to encounter if this were a horror comic, thankfully it’s not

      or at least not yet, and I don’t think Jay as plans for that

    2. nah these guys are adorable, i want 20. what if not person. what if 200 worms in a trenchcoat.

      1. yes yes, they’re very cute
        but given the right tone (think darkened passages in some rickety space station where things are going very wrong), and some cutting implements, guided by something deeply unfriendly (SHODAN, HAL, or the like), that cuteness could be turned to some very unkind ends

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