http://www.cnet.com/news/3d-printed-rob ... son-award/But it's what's inside the hand that makes the difference. While many 3D-printed prosthetic hands use myoelectric controls, where a sensor placed on the skin reads the electrical signals sent to the muscles underneath, the most common means of control is a relatively low-tech system of cords that pulls the fingers.
The Open Bionics hand uses a similar system, where steel cables act as tendons that curl the fingers, but these are attached to motors that act as muscles, with each finger individually powered to increase manual dexterity. This gives the wearer a much finer degree of control. The motors can also sense when movement is stopped by an object, which allows a gentle but firm grip.
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Because the hand is 3D printed, each one can be modeled specifically for its wearer. The Open Bionics team scans the arm to which the hand is to be fitted and uses that as a basis for the print, scaling the length of the prosthetic as required. The scanning process can be completed within a few minutes.
Once the design is finalised, the hand takes around 40 hours to print. And, moreover, the cost is a fraction of the higher end prosthetics. A finished hand would sell for less than £1,000 (about 1,570 or AU$2,200 converted directly) and it would cost even less if users could make it themselves using the company's open source plans and instructions.
What a time to be alive.
The opinion of Grace in this video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CkNeVBaRjag
Reminds me of an older thread we had where it was mentioned that a lot of soldiers were stripping the "flesh" off their prosthetics to make them look more robotic since it was "cooler".