Return-Path: Received: from murder (imaphost.bath.ac.uk [138.38.3.83]) by bartali.bath.ac.uk (Cyrus v2.2.12) with LMTPA; Mon, 08 Feb 2010 14:40:12 +0000 X-Sieve: CMU Sieve 2.2 Received: from imaphost.bath.ac.uk ([unix socket]) by imaphost.bath.ac.uk (Cyrus v2.2.13) with LMTPA; Mon, 08 Feb 2010 14:40:13 +0000 Delivery-date: Mon, 08 Feb 2010 14:40:13 +0000 Received: from piquet.bath.ac.uk ([138.38.0.36]) by imaphost.bath.ac.uk with esmtp (Exim 4.69) (envelope-from ) id 1NeUmb-0005WE-Ck for ensab@imaps.bath.ac.uk; Mon, 08 Feb 2010 14:40:13 +0000 Received: from uranus.scholarone.com ([170.107.181.135]) by piquet.bath.ac.uk with esmtp (Exim 4) (envelope-from ) id 1NeUmS-0000Kf-8E for A.Bowyer@bath.ac.uk; Mon, 08 Feb 2010 14:40:13 +0000 Received: from tss1be0008 (tss1be0008 [10.237.148.35]) by uranus.scholarone.com (Postfix) with ESMTP id 0A9D8B288F2 for ; Mon, 8 Feb 2010 09:39:49 -0500 (EST) Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2010 09:39:49 -0500 (EST) From: gregc@jhu.edu Sender: onbehalfof+gregc+jhu.edu@manuscriptcentral.com To: A.Bowyer@bath.ac.uk Message-ID: <1439705179.515221265639989039.JavaMail.wladmin@tss1be0008> Subject: Robotica - Decision on Manuscript ID ROB-REG-09-0184 Errors-To: gregc@jhu.edu MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable X-Errors-To: gregc@jhu.edu X-Spam-Score: 0.0 (/) X-Spam-Report: 0.0/6.0 ---- Start SpamAssassin results ---- End SpamAssassin results X-Scanner: 2b52620a1ff21207d4baea3c3e7facd477e5fa38 08-Feb-2010 Dear Dr. Bowyer: Manuscript ID ROB-REG-09-0184 entitled "RepRap - The Replicating Rapid Prot= otyper" which you submitted to Robotica, has been reviewed. The comments o= f the reviewer(s) are included at the bottom of this letter. The guest editors recommend that the authors revise this submission in acco= rdance with reviewer directions. Depending on the time required to complete= this revision, as well as the outcome of the subsequent review process, th= e revised work may be included in the special issue on Robotic Self-X Syste= ms.=20 To revise your manuscript, log into http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/robotic= a and enter your Author Center, where you will find your manuscript title = listed under "Manuscripts with Decisions." Under "Actions," click on "Crea= te a Revision." Your manuscript number has been appended to denote a revis= ion. You will be unable to make your revisions on the originally submitted versi= on of the manuscript. Instead, revise your manuscript using a word process= ing program and save it on your computer. Please also highlight the change= s to your manuscript within the document by using the track changes mode in= MS Word or by using bold or colored text. Once the revised manuscript is prepared, you can upload it and submit it th= rough your Author Center. When submitting your revised manuscript, you will be able to respond to the= comments made by the reviewer(s) in the space provided. You can use this = space to document any changes you make to the original manuscript. In orde= r to expedite the processing of the revised manuscript, please be as specif= ic as possible in your response to the reviewer(s). IMPORTANT: Your original files are available to you when you upload your r= evised manuscript. Please delete any redundant files before completing the= submission. Because we are trying to facilitate timely publication of manuscripts submi= tted to Robotica, your revised manuscript should be uploaded as soon as pos= sible. If it is not possible for you to submit your revision in a reasonab= le amount of time, we may have to consider your paper as a new submission. Once again, thank you for submitting your manuscript to Robotica and I look= forward to receiving your revision. Sincerely, Prof. Greg Chirikjian Editor in Chief, Robotica gregc@jhu.edu Reviewer(s)' Comments to Author: Reviewer: 1 Comments to the Author This is a very excellent review of the kinematic replication field and summ= ary of the history and accomplishments of the RepRap project. There=E2=80= =99s the same exciting feel as in the earliest days in the PC industry back= in the late 1970s, when Radio Shack and others started selling the first a= ssemble-it-yourself home computers. I enthusiastically recommend this pape= r for publication in Robotica. I didn=E2=80=99t see a statement of the estimated lifetime of a typical mac= hine, e.g., how many hours you can get out of key parts, such as a head, be= fore it must be replaced; nor did I see a statement of the smallest attain= able feature size on product objects that can be fabricated (this is differ= ent from the raw positioning accuracy, which is stated to be 0.1 mm). Addi= ng these two bits of information to the text would improve the paper, but a= re not critical. I could find only one minor factual error: on the last line of page 6, =E2= =80=9CReproducing Concepts Team=E2=80=9D should be corrected to =E2=80=9CRe= plicating Systems Concepts Team=E2=80=9D, which was the actual name of the = group in this study. Reviewer: 2 Comments to the Author I found this to be a very interesting, well written narrative of the rep-ra= p project. However, therin lies my greatest objection - that this reads lik= e a narrative or a progress report more than a scientific paper. I think mu= ch of the content is relevant, but it would benefit readers to reorganize t= he paper from section 3 onwards to stress what the "result" is. Describe th= e working, replicating printer clearly, in all its details, and fill in his= tory, variations, and some future directions in separate sections to the ex= tent it enlightens the reader. =20 Specific comments:=20 -Since you do not give an exact definition of "raw" materials, it would be = useful background to present the physical systems that have been demonstrat= ed reproducing, albeit with varying levels of "raw" materials. IE Zykov et = al at Cornell in addition to Chirikjian (JHU) whom your reference elsewhere= .=20 -Although an interesting philosophical read, much of section 2 ("the genesi= s of RepRap") seemed tangential to the results presented here. I would stro= ngly suggest (but not require) that this section be distilled to its core i= deas. -A functional diagram would be helpful along with Fig 4. -Awkward to references authors within the paper, ie "... one of us (VO) cam= e up with a..." -Replace hand-drawn sketch with a clear, computer-generated diagram. (Fig 5= )=20 - Fig 7: functional diagram would be helpful in addition to one exterior vi= ew. Actual picture would be worlds better than a Solidworks screenshot. -"Unlike commercial machines, RepRap also allows interiors to be built full= y dense." Incorrect. All major vendors I am familiar with (Stratasys, ZCorp= , Objet, all laser sintering systems, etc) have this option, if not require= ment. You may be speaking of the fact that stratasys leaves micro-voids eve= n when set to print dense, but after the previous sentence comparing "dense= " to "honeycomb" this is very confusing/misleading. -In mentioning the FaH project, your comment "(this project, incidentally,= was inspired by RepRap)" should be referenced if you wish to assert this. = (quick survey of the FaH site you include as your reference doesn't verify = this...) -One could easily argue that the build precision of your child machines com= es from the positioning system, not the parts produced by the parent machin= e. Please address in your discussion - IE where you call it "self replicati= ng" by your definition. In summary, I believe this is valuable information that should be definitel= y published, but a reader should have a stronger sense of "arrival" at a re= sult than I get from reading this paper. Some relatively deep re-organizing= is in order, but will (I believe) result in a much stronger paper. Reviewer: 3 Comments to the Author This paper is very interesting and useful to the engineering practitioner i= nterested in producing a self-reproducing machine that is also capable of f= abricating other useful engineering artifacts. The establishment of a clear= lexicon around self-reproduction is particularly useful for categorizing e= xisting attempts at self-reproducing kinematic machines. Additionally, the = biomimetic approach provides an excellent justification for the design of t= he RepRap as a kinematic assisted self-replication self-manufacturing machi= ne.=20 To strengthen the paper it would be helpful to more clearly place the RepRa= p in the broader ecosystem of personal fabrication robots (both self-replic= ating and otherwise). For example, the MakerBot and Fab@Home projects are m= entioned as RepStraps, but it would be nice to have an overview of how thei= r capabilities compare to or complement the RepRap's.=20 Secondly, while the hardware design evolution is covered in-depth, the soft= ware is ignored entirely. An overview of the control software, particularly= slicing and filling algorithms would be illuminating. For example, the pap= er mentions that the internal density of the part can be adjusted over a wi= de range. One challenge for any solid free form machine is the production o= f thin-walled parts. Though arbitrary part fabrication is clearly not the p= rimary goal of RepRap, it would be useful to describe its limitations in th= at regard. Also of interest are open source design tools. Are any design to= ols included as part of the RepRap kit, or does the system simply except an= d standard part representations like STL, depending on the user to provide = the tools for designing parts?