Have you ever been to the grocery store and found yourself just incensedĀ that your shopping cart was in near-constant contact with the ground, wasn’t annoyingly loud, and had no ability to run out of battery power? Sure you have, we allĀ have. But what can you do, other than passive-aggressively shoving your cart so hard into the cart return corral that it flops over on its side?
Until very recently, I’d have said that’s the best modern cart technology can do. But now, thanks to a group of researchers from Seoul National University of Science and Technology in Korea, there’s hope! Geonwoo Park, Hyungeun Park, Wooyong Park, Dongjae Lee, Murim Kim, and Seung Jae Lee have collaborated on a paper called āThe Palletrone Cart: Human-Robot Interaction-Based Aerial Cargo Transportation, and based on their findings, I think there may be a better way.
The researchers have developed something that is essentially a hovering grocery cart, called, somewhat oddly, the Palletrone (a portmanteau ofĀ palletĀ andĀ drone). The Palletrone is very much just a hovering cart, in that it does not guide itself on its own, rather requiring input from the human to steer it and get it moving.
Here’s the abstract from their paper:
This letter presents a new cargo transportation solution based on physical human-robot interaction utilizing a novel fully-actuated multirotor platform called Palletrone.The platform is designed with a spacious upper flat surface for easy cargo loading, complemented by a rear-mounted handle reminiscent of a shopping cart. Flight trajectory control is achieved by a human operator gripping the handle and applying three-dimensional forces and torques while maintaining a stable cargo transport with zero roll and pitch attitude throughout the flight.To facilitate physical human-robot interaction, we employ an admittance control technique. Instead of relying on complex force estimation methods, like in most admittance control implementations, we introduce a simple yet effective estimation technique based on a disturbance observer robust control algorithm.We conducted an analysis of the flight stability and performance in response to changes in system mass resulting from arbitrary cargo loading. Ultimately, we demonstrate that individuals can effectively control the system trajectory by applying appropriate interactive forces and torques. Furthermore, we showcase the performance of the system through various experimental scenarios.
What’s especially interesting about this is the control system, which reads the various torques and pressures exerted on the guiding handleĀ by the human guiding the hovering platform, while at the same time differentiating those forces from the forces applied by the cargo on the platform itself, which is designed to remain steady and level no matter what, even if the cargo atop it is unbalanced.
And, speaking of cargo on top, the researchers claim that even if the entire Palletrone is covered in objects, airflow to the rotors only decreases by 5%, thanks to the intakes all along the sides, which, in a happy accident of skeuomorphism, make it look a bit like the shopping carts we’re all familiar with.
This is all quite impressive, and you can see the thing in action ā admittedly slow and careful action ā here, all narrated by one of those synthesized voices:
As you can see from the video, which helpfully shoves a conventional shopping cart down some stairs, satisfyingly, at about 12 seconds in, the big advantage of the Palletrone is that stairs don’t phase it, rough terrain doesn’t bother it, and you’ll never send your groceries skittering out across the parking lot because you didn’t see a curb in one of these.
The tests shown in the video seem to have payloads of about 6.6 pounds of cargo, which is not a whole lot, but it’s a start. No mention is made of how long the batteries last, though the team did develop a system where anotherĀ drone could fly over to the cart and swap in a new battery:
That seems like a lot of activity to happen in a grocery store aisle, but perhaps it makes sense in those warehouses that are full of staircases.
I’m sort of conflicted about whether or not I think these are a good idea, or if they’re ridiculous. These kinds of hover-carts have been showing up in sci-fi movies and other media for decades, and I always thought they were sort of silly; for all the tech required to make something that just floats, using anti-gravity or some other exotic tech, you’d think that it would be trivial to make it self-propelled or something, but usually they’re not, they’re just floating carts.
Are they that much better than wheeled carts that take no energy? I guess it all depends on the terrain? I guess as soon as you introduce stairs or some other sort of uneven ground into the equation, these start to make sense.
Will these be as easy to steal from grocery stores, though, or will they just cut power when they hit some sort of geofence? Will they be able to slide into the sides of cars as well? Or if lost, will they just keep rising up and up and eventually ding the doors of a 737?
I’m curious to see how this progresses; the capabilities of self-stabilizing propeller-driven drones are already far more impressive than I’d ever have guessed, so who knows, maybe these things will finally free us from the tyranny of squeaky wheels and not being able to barrel down an escalator full-speed with a shopping cart filled to the top with snacks.
Terrible idea. People do stupid shit with wheeled carts as it is.
Don’t forget, when you deliver the pillows to the high-gravity planet, move just one at a time otherwise you’ll break the hoverdolly, in which case you can give up and go home.
Or use the backup hoverdolly. Assuming the boss doesn’t make you carry the pillows by hand as punishment…
Mutiny!
Whoever put Beckett Mariner in here gets a gold star for the day, and a coupon for a free Blood Wine at Ma’aH’s House of Gagh.
Iām betting no one on this project is a wheelchair user.
Everywhere that uses trolleys should also be wheelchair accessible. Smooth floors and ramps, so wheeled trolleys will work just fine.
I imagine that this might actually be a bit easier. By removing the friction of the wheels, and the tendency for them to lock up on small bits of debris, it may be easier to maneuver this with a reasonable load on it. Mass and inertia will still be issues if it gets too big, but for some basic shopping this might actually be an improvement in that situation.
I imagine they could be programmed to recognize what the user is doing and assist in the motion. So that could negate the inertia issue. Imagine moving a loaded cart in Home Depot with just your fingers. Last time I tried to push 1000lbs on a flat cart I almost gave myself a hernia.
They will use hover wheelchairs.
“Finally, Science Has Given Us A Hovering Shopping Cart”
Hovering shopping cart indeed. Here I am, still waiting for my taco delivery by drone:
https://tacocopter.com
Sigh. Not a single taco yet. Not even from the value menu! I’m starting to think this is just another monkey phone call:
https://www.monkeyphonecall.com
No tacos, no monkey on the phone either.
0:05 – Could the guy be walking any slower?
0:13 – The cart going down the stairs is so late-night infomercial. Too bad it isn’t in b&w and slomo
0:19 – Odd choice to leave the sound of the fans in after not having it in the first clip.
3:07 – in a hover, it’s moving quite a bit. Controller needs tuning.
I was hoping for mag-lev, what a letdown.
You’ll still end up with the one that has a prop out of balance and it will vibrate like hell the entire time you’re in the store.
Exactly. And that vibration will shake shit off the cart onto the floor. And our lives will be so much more better for these…
I’m sure one corner will dip and drag
Cool, instead of having the back of your feets hit by the axle of a cart while waiting, now you will have your thighs cut by its rotors
“Or if lost, will they just keep rising up and up and eventually ding the doors of a 737?”
Reminiscent of the old story about a magician performing an act at an open-air festival where he has volunteers lie down on a table so he can hypnotize them whereupon they briefly levitate off the table; a heckler keeps badgering him so much that he challenges the heckler to lie down on the table and let him hypnotize him; once the magician succeeds in hypnotizing the heckler who starts levitating the magician then suffers a fatal heart attack. The story ends with the poor heckler continuing to rise into the sky and disappearing into the clouds.
Finally tracked down the story. I’d come across it many years ago and couldn’t remember any details other than the premise; when I came across the story in an old pulp paperback I was with someone who was a semi-professional bookseller who was quite dismissive of the story by saying they had seen it many times in books and on TV. After relating the story in the above comment I decided to be…dismissive of their appraisal and looked it up online. Turns out it was actually a short story, “Levitation”, by Joseph Payne Brennan (1918-1990) who was a prolific writer of fantasy and horror (and poetry) and published many stories in a number of pulp magazines, most notably Weird Tales. Per Wikipedia Stephen King called him “a master of the unashamed horror tale.” And the story was anthologized in a collection of Brennan’s stories titled Nine Horrors and a Dream which is apparently influential in the field of horror literature: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nine_Horrors_and_a_Dream
Even back in 2010 when I spent a few years working in Korea, the large shopping marts, like e-Mart and Costco, had switchback belts between floors. The carts either had brakes that were applied unless you squeezed the handle or the belts had magnets that latched your cart to the belt. The only point of this invention would be to have customers keep the floors swept.
Did I ever tell you about car parking lots where you could park perpendicular to the occupied parking space blocking several cars? You had to leave your car unlocked and in neutral, so a worker could push your car out of the way, when a blocked car wanted to leave. These existed in Korea when I first moved there. I don’t think it exists anymore, but I could be wrong.
With absolutely no cost passed on to the consumer!
I want drones that I can step on and that will raise me up so I can reach the top shelves in the grocery store where they usually stuff the cheaper store brands.
Hey, McFly, you bojo! Hoverboards don’t work on waterā¦unless you’ve got power!
Assuming a standard 48″x48″ pallet/drone thingy with 4 propellers underneath, capable of carrying a modest amount of groceries + itself (let’s call that 50 kg or 110 lbs total combined weight) – on a nice cool day it would have to be blowing air downwards at 60 miles per hour to keep itself hovering. I hope you don’t plan to wear a skirt or a pair of those throwback JNCO’s you’ve been eyeing up.
Or, you know, you could just put some casters under it.
I wish I still had my JNCOs. I’d hang them in my closet with the hope my kids would find them.
The standard North American pallet is 40″ x 48″
The *second* most common pallet size in NA is 48 x 48… and it made the math easier. š
They’d save labor costs on sweeping the floors every night. Of course, on the other hand you might not want to take this down the baking goods aisle right after someone drops a 5lb sack of flour.
The dust storm these things would cause is grossing me out.
Now instead of just sweeping the floors every fruit and vegetable has to be dusted and cleaned every night because the floor germs get blown up everywhere.
Seems like it would eliminate that one wheel that never works right.
Until you get one of these with a wonky rotor.
What happens when little kids run under it?
Free haircut!
Do kids still run?
I can confirm they do, but only when you don’t want them to. Like underneath unprotected spinning blades.
Pro: Won’t get stuck on a tumbleweave in the parking lot.
Con: My kid cant ride it while playing his nintendo switch and sneaking expensive junk food.
Question.
Is a tumbleweave anything like a tumbleweed?
Tumbleweave is my “Word of the Day” today! Thanks!
On the plus side, you can lie under the cart on a really hot day.
I’ve taken a shopping cart up and down the escalator in a two-story department store. Because I needed supplies from both floors. I was surprised I wasn’t criticized for it by an observant employee, because that was a terrible idea. But what is the other option? You have to get back to ground level somehow.
Sometimes they have a separate escalator for the carts.
IKEA has shopping cart escalators
How easy are they to assemble?
As does Menards. It’s pretty cool how the cart wheels lock in.
They probably don’t mind as long as you don’t drop it on the occupied stroller 5 steps further down… I swear, finding the elevator is not a big deal, parents.
Yes, but how good of a job will these do at blocking the entrance to the supermarket? I like to take one half step through the door, then stand there with my cart and read through the circular while people wait behind me to enter the store
Ask the Daleks.
I’ve been clipped on my heels a couple of times by inattentive shoppers in the grocery store before. I’ve never been smacked in the head by inattentive shoppers in the grocery store before. So it’s got that going for it.
Wasn’t my first concern but yeah that would not make the shopping experience better.
Reply meant for KYFire, reposted where it belongs.
To be fair, it works for both really.
Just what I need to add to listening to people talk on speaker phone at the store, the din of ultra high speed drone motors running full tilt to carry a day’s worth of food.
Wasnāt my first concern but yeah that would not make the shopping experience better.