Premium Only Content

Pipebots could stop water leaks.Pipebots patrolling UK’s water network next 5 years. #waterleakage
Pipebots could stop water leaks.Pipebots patrolling UK’s water network next 5 years. #waterleakage.
These smart mini-robots could soon clean and inspect pipes.
The maze of pipes underneath our homes and cities are tricky to access and therefore expensive to maintain.
A mini-robot, called Joey, has been developed that can independently find its way through underground pipes.
The robot is cheap to produce, smart, small and light – allowing it to move through pipes despite the challenging terrain it's faced with.
Researchers from the University of Leeds have developed the first mini-robot, called Joey, that can find its own way independently through networks of narrow pipes underground, to inspect any damage or leaks. Joeys are cheap to produce, smart, small, and light, and can move through pipes inclined at a slope or over slippery or muddy sediment at the bottom of the pipes. Future versions of Joey will operate in swarms, with their mobile base on a larger ‘mother’ robot Kanga, which will be equipped with arms and tools for repairs to the pipes.
Beneath our streets lies a maze of pipes, conduits for water, sewage, and gas. Regular inspection of these pipes for leaks, or repair, normally requires these to be dug up. The latter is not only onerous and expensive – with an estimated annual cost of £5.5bn in the UK alone – but causes disruption to traffic as well as nuisance to people living nearby, not to mention damage to the environment.
Now imagine a robot that can find its way through the narrowest of pipe networks and relay images of damage or obstructions to human operators. This isn’t a pipedream anymore, shows a new study in Frontiers in Robotics and AI by a team of researchers from the University of Leeds.
“Here we present Joey – a new miniature robot – and show that Joeys can explore real pipe networks completely on their own, without even needing a camera to navigate,” said Dr Netta Cohen, a professor at the University of Leeds and the final author on the study.
Joey is the first to be able to navigate all by itself through mazes of pipes as narrow as 7.5 cm across. Weighing just 70 g, it’s small enough to fit in the palm of your hand.
Pipebots project
The present work forms part of the ‘Pipebots’ project of the universities of Sheffield, Bristol, Birmingham, and Leeds, in collaboration with UK utility companies and other international academic and industrial partners.
First author Dr Thanh Luan Nguyen, a postdoctoral scientist at the University of Leeds who developed Joey’s control algorithms (or ‘brain’), said: “Underground water and sewer networks are some of the least hospitable environments, not only for humans, but also for robots. Sat Nav is not accessible undergound. And Joeys are tiny, so have to function with very simple motors, sensors, and computers that take little space, while the small batteries must be able to operate for long enough.”
Joey moves on 3D-printed ‘wheel-legs’ that roll through straight sections and walk over small obstacles. It is equipped with a range of energy-efficient sensors that measure its distance to walls, junctions, and corners, navigational tools, a microphone, and a camera and ‘spot lights’ to film faults in the pipe network and save the images. The prototype cost only £300 to produce.
Mud and slippery slopes
The team showed that Joey is able to find its way, without any instructions from human operators, through an experimental network of pipes including a T-junction, a left and right corner, a dead-end, an obstacle, and three straight sections. On average, Joey managed to explore about one meter of pipe network in just over 45 seconds.
To make life more difficult for the robot, the researchers verified that the robot easily moves up and down inclined pipes with realistic slopes. And to test Joey’s ability to navigate through muddy or slippery tubes, they also added sand and gooey gel (actually dishwashing liquid) to the pipes – again with success.
Importantly, the sensors are enough to allow Joey to navigate without the need to turn on the camera or use power-hungry computer vision. This saves energy and extends Joey’s current battery life. Whenever the battery runs low, Joey will return to its point of origin, to ‘feed’ on power.
Currently, Joeys have one weakness: they can’t right themselves if they inadvertently turn on their back, like an upside-down tortoise. The authors suggest that the next prototype will be able to overcome this challenge. Future generations of Joey should also be waterproof, to operate underwater in pipes entirely filled with liquid.
#innovation #robots #leaks #uk #watersolutions #drainagesystem #pipes
-
LIVE
Jeff Ahern
1 hour agoNever Woke Wednesday with Jeff Ahern (big time speech)
671 watching -
39:10
Producer Michael
18 hours agoINSIDE AN INSANE MIAMI SUPERCAR COLLECTION!
28.5K3 -
LIVE
The Pete Santilli Show
10 hours agoDems Proved They Hate America & Angry They Can’t Lord Over All Americans [EP 4461-8AM]
1,851 watching -
12:32
Melonie Mac
20 hours agoAmouranth 2A's Intruder
14.7K27 -
16:39
Scammer Payback
15 hours agoNo Mercy for this Scammer
12.6K12 -
31:19
Uncommon Sense In Current Times
17 hours ago $3.87 earned"The Truth About Government Waste: How USAID is Failing & What Christians Must Do w/ Cheryl Chumley"
12.7K4 -
1:00:32
Trumpet Daily
21 hours ago $4.24 earnedA Dangerous Era of Rearmament - Trumpet Daily | Mar. 4, 2025
14.8K8 -
3:25
Gun Drummer
22 hours ago $0.99 earnedDrowning Pool - Bodies, Gun Cover
11.5K12 -
8:04
New York Post
1 day agoEXCLUSIVE: Was President Trump's would-be assassin Thomas Crooks part of a larger conspiracy?
15.8K17 -
3:06:37
TimcastIRL
13 hours agoLIVE: Trump Joint Presidential Address, IRS To Fire 45,000 Staff w/Rachel Wilson | Timcast IRL
454K350