A More Human Machine: 色库TV Researchers and Designers Help Develop a Vision of the Future

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Students, staff and faculty design for the world鈥檚 largest 100 per cent human-piloted exo-skeleton.
It鈥檚 got four legs, weighs 9,000 pounds, stands nearly two storeys tall and, if its creator has his way, will be the next evolution of human-machine sports. Just don鈥檛 call it a robot.
The 鈥渕ech鈥 suit, named Prosthesis, is based on an idea that has set imaginations ablaze for decades. But until recently, it was an idea stuck in the fictional worlds of stories such as 鈥淎vatar,鈥 鈥淎liens,鈥 鈥淧acific Rim鈥 and 鈥淕undam.鈥
Which makes standing next to one in a warehouse just off of Vancouver鈥檚 Great Northern Way a disorienting experience. It looks impossibly huge, and, despite its stillness, feels as if it could leap into action at any moment.
Jonathan Tippett, the man behind the machine, assures me it will not. That鈥檚 the difference between a robot and a mech, he says. A robot is meant to be capable of operating on its own. A mech, on the other hand, needs a pilot.

鈥淚t has no self-awareness, no gyros, no autonomy,鈥 Jonathan, the co-founder and CEO of Furrion Exo-Bionics, says. 鈥淚t has no ability to walk or balance by itself. It looks like a robot because it鈥檚 somewhat anthropomorphic, and it鈥檚 anthropomorphic because it鈥檚 built around the pilot. Ironically, the fact that it鈥檚 centered around a human pilot ends up making it look like a robot.鈥
Winter and spring 2019/20 saw Jonathan and his team stashing Prosthesis at the eatART warehouse at the Centre for Digital Media on Great Northern Way while tune-ups and design work took place. But as the pandemic swept the globe, the pressure to keep the project alive has intensified.
Furrion Exo-Bionics recently to reach their next goal 鈥 training a new cohort of mech pilots to inform the design of second-generation mechs, setting a foundation from which the sport of mech racing can begin to take shape and grow. As a bonus, pledges to the can earn supporters a chance to pilot Prosthesis themselves.
鈥淗aving achieved a sufficient level of performance and safety from the technology, it is time to bring our attention to developing the sport,鈥 Jonathan writes of this latest development. Recently, Cassie Hawrysh, former Team Canada National Champion Skeleton Racer, became the first in a series of pro-level athletes being invited to help develop the pilot training program.
Meanwhile, any human pilot, in order to perform at their best, needs to understand their machine. Currently, the beating heart of the zero-emissions mech is a proprietary lithium ion battery system. But its many moving parts involve a number of machine systems, all of which need to be monitored. Which is why students and staff from Emily Carr University have joined the team.
In collaboration with Basically Good Media Lab Director Maria Lantin, Faculty Lead Ben Unterman guided a team of students through the unprecedented task of prototyping a 鈥渉eads-up display鈥 (HUD) for the mech prototype. Which is no small feat. The team was essentially tasked with designing an instrument panel for a one-of-a-kind machine; Prosthesis is the only fully-functioning, large-scale exo-skeletal mech currently in operation, and holds the
The team鈥檚 work is also critical to advancing the project; an effective HUD will gather all of the mech鈥檚 self-reporting into one area, in the pilot鈥檚 natural field of vision 鈥 an upgrade Jonathan says will bring the pilot into more intimate contact with the limits and capabilities of the machine.
鈥淭he instrumentation will tell you when you're running the machine efficiently, and it will tell you how close to the limit of its ability you're pushing it,鈥 Jonathan says. 鈥淗aving better visibility on that means we can push it harder, which means you can train longer and harder. When you don't know what's happening, how hot things are, how close the batteries are to carrying too much current, you just have to be conservative and you can't push the machine.鈥

The goal, he continues, is for a pilot to be able to absorb information instinctively, the way people unconsciously receive signals from their bodies.
To this end, Ben and Maria, alongside Research Technician Sean Arden, Industry Liaison Alan Goldman and Student Researchers Colby May and Azlen Elza, have done no small amount of dreaming. Some of their sleek, alien-looking prototype designs include flourishes like a 鈥渉eavy metal horn sign,鈥 which would light up when the machine is fully charged and ready to go.
鈥淗aving the opportunity to work on Prosthesis has proven to be one of the most exciting and challenging experiences in my academic career,鈥 says Colby, an Interaction Design major, adding the team鈥檚 research began in science fiction, quickly progressing toward developing their own unique vision of future tech.
鈥淏eing able co-create with our team as well as the creator, technician, fabricator, and lead pilot has allowed us to successfully test every prototype decision. Access to the WIP Lab, BGML, and all the equipment in the school has opened up so many doors for us. This project has been eye-opening to the realization that we are living in the future; even the mech itself shows how far along we really are, and designing for these unknown solutions makes for an incredible experience.鈥

Jonathan first began dreaming of a mech nearly 15 years ago. His experience as a designer of medical equipment including vascular brain implants gave him an inkling of the productive power of human-machine interfaces. Little did he know the drawings he鈥檇 begun to doodle in his spare time would become his full-time obsession, and make him one of the very first mech pilots in the world.
For Jonathan, the machine is a 鈥渃elebration of human skill鈥 at a time when automation is increasingly replacing human labour and even, in some cases, decision-making. First steps involved figuring out whether a human could even control an anthropomorphic machine; the many tests Jonathan and his team ran to this end were increasingly successful. The next hurdle was getting the thing built 鈥 an iterative process Jonathan says Kate Amstrong, Director of and the at Emily Carr, was instrumental in helping to refine.
鈥淏ack in the day, in 2009, Kate was helping me, guiding me,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hrough trying to understand and articulate with her what the project was about and why I was excited about it, it became apparent that what I was creating was a sports machine.鈥
That insight, Jonathan adds, was key in the project鈥檚 trajectory to its current state. A fortuitous introduction to Aaron Fiddler, founder and CEO of Furrion, a technology and lifestyle company, led to an ongoing partnership. From there, Furrion Exo-Bionics 鈥 and a dream of a future Mech Racing League 鈥 were born.

Hundreds 鈥 and perhaps thousands 鈥 of training hours later, Jonathan can get the thing spider-walking at a brisk pace. He also says he鈥檚 managed to sustain the coveted 鈥済orilla gait鈥 (a kind of mechanical gallop) several times in recent months. But more than anything, Jonathan says he鈥檚 excited to begin to grow the sport of mech racing, and to share the exhilaration of piloting a dream machine with the public.
鈥淚t鈥檚 unbelievable,鈥 he says of donning the mech suit. 鈥淔or a while, it's terrifying and disorienting and exhilarating and frustrating. Initially you take just one step, and then you reset, and then you take another step and then you reset. But the first time you do three steps in a row, it feels like when the Wright brothers鈥 plane took off for them.鈥
