Mr. Saburo after restoration at the Kanagawa Institute of Technology in Japan. The caption from a 2010 Japanese catalogue reads (after translation): Three mid-size robot brothers Fujio [富士夫], Saburo [三郎], Kuro [ä¹éƒŽ]. These robots look very similar. The middle robot is the same as the one in the top photo, although the above image calls it Saburo. I'll …
An Aizawa robot that stands on a pedestal. Wrapped ready for transit. I don't know what this robot does. It appears it can nod its head. The front checkerboard patterns have many lamps behind them, maybe generating various patterns in light. The robot after restoration at the Kanagawa Institute of Technology in Japan. See the full …
å‰æŽ²æ›¸2é より æ˜å’Œ22年(1947年)製作㮠「ユニãƒãƒ¼ã‚µãƒ«ãƒãƒœãƒƒãƒˆç¬¬2å·ã€ éƒ½ç«‹å·¥è”“é«˜æ ¡ã®å‰µç«‹å››å年記念ç¥ã«å¦ç”ŸãŸã¡ã¨è£½ä½œã—ãŸã€Œã‚¨è”“一郎ã€å›ã®æ¬¡ã«è£½ä½œã•ã‚ŒãŸå¼Ÿã§ã‚ã‚‹ Rough English translation… Cit from Page 2 1947 (1947) production "Universal Robot No. 2" Made with students in Senior high school was founded four decades Jubilee Metropolitan Industrial vine "Mr. Ichiro " is your brother, was made following. Opened back of robot. See the full Jiro Aizawa story here .
An Expo'70 [Osaka, Japan) postcard showing Kuro-Kun. Two post-cards (one cut down) showing Kuro-Kun (Mr. Kuro). The image is covered in a thin prismatic film so that when tilted, the robots internals can be seen. The images below show a very similar robot. Most likely the same robot, but the chest pattern and hands were possibly …