Millburn & FlatQueen
Millburn Millburn
I've been sketching a micro-robot that can fold into a cube for transport—mind if we blend my crazy engineering with your sleek minimalism?
FlatQueen FlatQueen
Sure, I love a clean design—let’s keep it tight and functional, no fluff.
Millburn Millburn
Great, I’ll strip it down to the essentials, keep the joints tight, and give it a sleek silhouette. Let’s see how it turns out.
FlatQueen FlatQueen
Sounds good—just make sure every joint has purpose, no extra bits that only add weight. Keep the silhouette sharp, clean, and it’ll move like a piece of high‑tech art. Let's see the prototype.
Millburn Millburn
Here it is—tiny, all-metal cube, each side a single sliding plate that snaps into place. Every joint is a precision screw‑driven lock that lets the cube fold flat, then pop back into a 3‑meter high, 200‑kilogram rig. No extra guts, just the core actuator, gyros, and a single power cell. It moves on a magnetic track, shifting with zero friction—like a living sculpture that rolls.
FlatQueen FlatQueen
Wow, that’s slick—no fluff, pure function. Just watch the weight distribution; a 200‑kg rig on a 3‑meter frame will need a robust base. The sliding plates are neat—make sure the lock tolerances are tight so it won’t wobble on the track. Looks like a minimalist masterpiece.
Millburn Millburn
Thanks, I’ll reinforce the base with a carbon‑fiber lattice and tweak the actuator torques so the 200‑kg weight stays centered; the lock tolerances are at 0.02 mm, will feel like a humming needle—just wait till it rolls.
FlatQueen FlatQueen
Nice, that carbon‑fiber lattice will give the needed stiffness without the bulk. Tight tolerances like that will keep the cube dead‑center—just make sure the magnetic track can handle that smooth, humming motion without a hitch. Ready for the roll‑test.