To give some scale to just how large these are, to the right is a quarter.

This blog tracks and displays my R2-D2 building progress! Made almost entirely of aluminum, the goal is to build an autonomous, PC powered robot that will "act" like the R2-D2 we all know from the movies!









I'm still determining what I will need to power the motors. I'll have the batteries wired, in parallel (two 12 volt, 18amp), into a second fuse block. That fuseblock will hold a 30amp blade-style circuit breaker. The motors will then be wired into that.
That's all for now!
My big complaint about Spektrum has been the lack of completeness, information and all out poor customer support on their website. There is no information in the manual on what power leads (2? 3?) that the receiver needs. They do not include the receiver battery pack nor the wiring to s switch. If its not included, fine, say so in the packaging or the manual. But the lack of information has slowed down my planned installation and is a real dragg. Thankfully Warren has some connections so he will call and find out what is needed to get the receiver wired up and powered up.

So much to think about...every part of this little droid has been complicated!
I still need to figure out how to create some locking mechanisms that would lock the leg into position. Something that would "pin" the leg in, maybe a pin mounted on an actuator, so that the shoulder motors could "release" the load onto those devices.
Bah...too much to figure out for now ;-)





The little fella is starting to take shape.
I also did some additional paint coats to the doors and side pieces that covers the gap between skins (right of octoport in last pic). Right now they need another coat or two of satin white to match the rest of the droid.
I am debating how best to get the vent panel piece...the blue piece around the center vents...into place. There's not a lot of surface area for silicone but I may take the skins off and see if it works better that way.
Last on my "how will I pull THIS off" list is the side vents. The way these things are made, they can't be glued to the skins. I have seen where some people mount them into the frame, the slide the skins under the lip of the vent. But that calls for a lot of fancy manuevering. So, I think I am going to look into getting some rare earth magnets and some L-brackets. My thought is after the skins are attached, these could be "popped" into place via magnetic force.
But...we'll see!











So that's how today went. A bit frustrating but one little step forward.




...and below, I put in a lot of Super Glue under the skin area that seperated then clamped it then left it to dry.

While that was drying, I assembled the rear pocket vent now that the blue paint was dry.
Since I was already feeling down, I was hoping that the power couplers would have at least come out nice. Not really. I'm not terribly impressed with the liquid latex at all. I don't have any smooth edges and if you blow up the picture, you'll see my angst.
I've pretty much decided to leave it as it is. R2-D2 is a pretty beat up looking fella in real life, so if a few specks of blue aren't perfect, that's fine. After the issues I am already facing, an imperfect blue paintjob isn't something I'm up to frett over.
And finally, another area I had wanted to get to is my mis-aligned coin slots in the front skins. I was going to file those out but didn't want to cause any more skin damage today. Best left to another day!
However, there was one success story. Rather than overthink how to get the old-style side vents together, I just ran with an idea. I simply mixed up some JB-Qwik and bonded the sides together. I went rather heavy so there's no way those fellas are coming apart. I'm going to review how other have attached them to their skins, or attached them to the sides of the frame.
My other goal was to get the rear skins going.....but after all of this drama, I decided to go mow the lawn. Pick your battles, you know?



So with that part sort of "settled" I found another small issue. But before confronting that, I wanted to be sure the 1/2 inch bolts would be long enough, with a lockwasher and nut. They are. I could upsize to a longer bolt, but I think this works fine.












