There’s something about lawn mowers and hackers. A desire to make them into smart, independent robots. Probably in preparation for the day when Skynet becomes self-aware or the Borg collective comes along to assimilate them into the hive. [Ostafichuk] wanted his to be ready when that happens, so he’s building a Raspberry-Pi powered, Dalek costumed Lawn Mower that is still a work in progress since starting on it in 2014. According to him, “commercial robot lawn mowers are too expensive and not nearly terrifying enough to be any fun, so I guess I will just have to build something myself…”

His first report describes the basic skeletal structure he built using scrap pieces of wood. Two large lawn tractor wheels and a third pivot wheel help with locomotion. The two large wheels are driven by geared motors originally meant for car seat height adjustments. A deep cycle 12V battery, and solar panels for charging would take care of power. A raspberry-pi provides the brain power for the Dalek-Mower and L298N based drivers help drive the motors. The body was built from some more planks of scrap wood that he had lying around. While waiting around for several parts to arrive – ultrasonic sensors, accelerometer, 5V power supply modules – he started to paint and decorate the wood work. Generous amounts of water repellent paint and duct tape were used to make it weather proof. His initial plan was to use python for the code, but he later switched to programming in c along with wiringPi library. Code for the project is available from his bitbucket git repository. Load testing revealed that the L298N drivers were not suitable for the high current drawn by the motors, so he changed over to relays to drive them.

Before starting work on the lawn mowing part, the Dalek-Mower was put to good use during Halloween, after which he put the hardware in storage and got to work on the code. One of his goals was to use the Raspberry-pi cameras for a vision system and markers spread around his yard as waypoints. Getting the RaspiCam to work proved more difficult than he anticipated. After a fruitless struggle to get his c code working he moved to using C++. This part still looks like it needs refinement and it seems to be stretching the Pi to its computing limits. Eventually, he removed all of the raspicam functionality that he had coded, and instead used another video streaming solution.

A web interface now allows him to remotely control functions on the Dalek-Mower such as motor movement controls, playing audio clips, lighting control and several others for future use – Mower, Patrol, Fire Nerf Gun. [ostafichuk] has put in quite a lot of work over almost a year, and we hope he gets the Dalek-Mower ready for whatever sci-fi scenario comes our way in the future. Check the video below of the Dalek-Mower controlled via tablet by [ostafichuk]-junior.

And while on the subject, check out this Robotic Lawn Mower which is the only household robot to make the semifinalists in The Hackaday Prize this year.