Sandia’s Robot Rodeo provides training for bomb squads

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Sandia news media contact

Mollie Rappe
mrappe@sandia.gov
505-228-6123

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One robotics team catches a “hazardous” liquid in an orange bucket while maneuvering around debris and working with another robot trying to stop the leak by turning three valves during the 2017 Robot Rodeo at Sandia National Laboratories.

Credits

Photo by Norm Johnson

Caption

A hazardous duty robot climbs the second of three flights of stairs during the 2017 Robot Rodeo at Sandia National Laboratories. The safety line catches the robot if it falls, ensuring it doesn’t get damaged.

Credits

Photo by Norm Johnson

Foreground: Robot holding an orange bucket. Background: Puddle of water and a robot by some pipes. General messy workshop space around.
One robotics team catches a “hazardous” liquid in an orange bucket while maneuvering around debris and working with another robot trying to stop the leak by turning three valves during the 2017 Robot Rodeo at Sandia National Laboratories.

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — For a dozen years, robotics experts from the national laboratories have shared their skill with first responders who use robots for hazardous tasks by coordinating annual training competitions to help prepare them for dangerous real-world situations.

Next week, Sandia National Laboratories will host the 12th annual Western National Robot Rodeo, a weeklong, 11-event competition where 10 civilian and military bomb squad teams from around the region will solve challenging, simulated scenarios.

“Each scenario is designed to push the teams and the robots to their limits, so they can learn how to work around those limits and gain confidence,” said Jake Deuel, Sandia robotics manager and Robot Rodeo coordinator. “The bottom line of the Robot Rodeo is we’re trying to take good robot operators and turn them into great robot operators.”

Scenarios from last year included “What a Mess,” in which teams had to use their robots to stop a “hazardous” leak in an area too dangerous for humans to enter and “Stairway to Heaven,” which involved the robots having to climb flights of stairs and solve dexterity challenges on each level. This year, two scenarios are “Red Dawn,” like the movie, and “Water Park.” Imagine what these scenarios may entail as the participants certainly are.

Robot on treads climbing a flight of concrete stairs with a black safety line.
A hazardous duty robot climbs the second of three flights of stairs during the 2017 Robot Rodeo at Sandia National Laboratories. The safety line catches the robot if it falls, ensuring it doesn’t get damaged.

Instructors from the FBI’s Hazardous Devices School will run several events and sponsors from the Department of Energy Office of Environmental Management will observe this year’s competition. For the first time, Sandia is hosting a robotics camp for local high school students the same week. The students will play an important role in one of the Robot Rodeo scenarios.

Military Explosive Ordnance Disposal teams scheduled to participate include the defending champions, the Army’s 21st EOD Company, along with an Air Force EOD team, a Marine Corps EOD team and an Air National Guard EOD team. Civilian bomb squad teams scheduled to participate include police departments from Albuquerque, Farmington and Los Alamos, the Doña Ana County Sherriff’s Office, the New Mexico State Police and the Riverside County Sheriff’s Office from California.

 

Sandia National Laboratories is a multimission laboratory operated by National Technology and Engineering Solutions of Sandia LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Honeywell International Inc., for the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration. Sandia Labs has major research and development responsibilities in nuclear deterrence, global security, defense, energy technologies and economic competitiveness, with main facilities in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and Livermore, California.

Sandia news media contact

Mollie Rappe
mrappe@sandia.gov
505-228-6123