Rummage through a Roomba: Sensor-packed vacuum robot attracts hacks
This autonomous robot packs a series of sensors and motors to not only vacuum homes the world over, but also double as a robotic platform for would-be developers.
By Robert Cravotta, Technical Editor -- EDN, March 15, 2007

Four IR cliff sensors reside around the front bottom of the unit. If the robot cannot detect a bounce back of the IR signal, it assumes it is on a cliff or stair edge and changes its behavior to avoid falling off. Inside the unit are two IR sensors working with two paddles, each containing a window, to detect when the robot has collided with something. The position of the sensors and the mechanical orientation of the robot frame does not detect collisions or cliffs if the unit is moving backward. Therefore, the proper behavior to moving backward is to rotate the robot and then move it forward.
The Roomba contains four motors. A separate motor drives each of the large side wheels. No motor drives the front caster wheel, as it provides only stability and not any locomotive force to the robot. A smaller motor drives the two counter-rotating brushes to capture large debris. The smallest motor spins the edge-cleaning side brush, which pushes dirt on wall and furniture edges into the cleaning path of the robot.
IRobot offers a Command Module (not
shown) that uses an 8-bit, 20-MHz (Atmel
ATMega 168) microcontroller to expand how
third-party developers can interact with the
unit’s onboard microcontroller, motors, lights,
sounds, and sensor readings with software
written in C or C++.The 14.4V nickel-metal-hydride-battery pack is the largest and heaviest single component in the robot. The user can charge the battery directly through the battery-charger socket or through the contact points with the home base station.
On the topside of the unit is the IR virtual wall sensor, which allows the user to set up virtual walls with IR transmitters that the kit includes. The virtual wall sensor can also receive signals from the home base station and the handheld remote-control unit (not shown). On the side of the unit is an IR wall sensor, so that the robot can adjust its behavior to clean along walls and furniture. An accessible serial-port interface allows home developers to program the unit for other uses.
Click here to view a Flash presentation that highlights some of the engineering behind the Roomba's abilities.
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Evidently irobot got tired of us hacking the Roomba and now sell a de-contented unit for experimenting:
Aitch,Tea,Tea,Pea,colom,slash,slash, irobot.com/sp.cfm?pageid=289
Mark Seagondollar - 2007-9-5 10:18:00 PDT -
nice article, however there are a few ommisions in the article.
first the front wheel does do something, the wheel itself is half white and half black... there is a sensor directly above the wheel to detect movment
second, there is a fifth motor to the roomba and that is the actual vacuum motor, found in the dust collection bin
there is also a dirt detection sensor above the rotating burshes, so that if the roomba detects dirt the roomba changes its behavior to deep clean that area
Magnus1 - 2007-16-3 10:35:00 PDT





















