Wowwee robotic toy MiP hacking

robm

Billy Mays
Staff member
Hey!

So my son got this thing about a year ago:

Mip-1.jpg


He played with it for a bit, and that was basically the end. It's a cool little toy, a self-balancing robot that can balance things in it's arms, avoid obstacles, and respond to visual and audio cues.

But, it's sat unused for months and months, and, well... it was made to be hacked, so therefore we shall.

The tear-down:

First, take off the wheels. There are plastic caps over the screws; simply use a small flathead screwdriver, shove it in there as deep as you can, and pry it off - they're glued in. Discard once they're out.

12717268_10208983540531616_5418106476431185870_n.jpg


Next, remove the eight screws on the back of the robot...
12743610_10208983541291635_5746869978699012444_n.jpg


Then separate the two halves:
12744538_10208983540571617_7457621516673716394_n.jpg


Unplug the three plugs that keep the two halves from separating completely. Then, make a hole shown here:
12743883_10208983542331661_503638016935205941_n.jpg


I need to take some additional pictures and update this log. But, order the Pro Mini protopack from Sparkfun, along with the extension cable and headers:
1897660_10208983540691620_9196078688651002286_n.jpg


According to Sparkfun, we were to leave the back portion of the battery compartment off and just bolt the protoback to the back of the battery pack. Problem with this is that the battery pack was too loose and gave us some unstable results. Therefore, I cut a hole in the back of the battery pack and fed the harness through it as well, so the pro mini pack just kind of chills on the outside. I'm going to go with a studded battery pack bolt solution to keep the pro mini board secure, but for now loose is fine.

Video... first portion is with the pro mini connected, second portion shows normal operation without the modification.

https://www.facebook.com/gmorrowiv/vide ... 474449964/

Apologies for the non-youtube link for now, I'll fix later.

This is a work in progress; I need to solder a header to the pro mini board so I can actually program the thing. Documentation isn't particularly plentiful on this, so commands and such are a learning experience...
 
Once I'm done with this, I'll combine everything into the first post into a mega MiP hacking tutorial, but here's the sound file documentation:

--------------------
MiP sound catalog

Sound 1 - Burp
Sound 2 - Snore
Sound 3 - Grumble
Sound 4 - Fart
Sound 5 - "stack mode" sound
Sound 6 - Punch sound
Sound 7 - Punch sound # 2 (stronger)
Sound 8 - Punch sound # 3
Sound 9 - Tracking sound? Sounds like: "mmmnope"
Sound 10 - Standard MiP sound
Sound 11 - Standard MiP sound, faster?
Sound 12 - Standard MiP sound, slower?
Sound 13 - Ooh!
Sound 14 - Awww :(
Sound 15 - Ohh yeah!
Sound 16 - Blehh
Sound 17 - Awww (deeper)
Sound 18 - Mmhmm
Sound 19 - Robot babble
Sound 20 - Robot babble #2
Sound 21 - Hah
Sound 22 - Hello
Sound 23 - Boom
Sound 24 - Boom smaller
Sound 25 - Hiya
Sound 26 - Ooh2
Sound 27 - Hahaha
Sound 28 - Let's go
Sound 29 - Wawa
Sound 30 - Munch
Sound 31 - Eek
Sound 32 - Grrr
Sound 33 - Bouncing sound?
Sound 34 - Ohh no
Sound 35 - Whaa?
Sound 36 - Aww3
Sound 37 - Huh?
Sound 38 - Doo de doo de doo
Sound 39 - Wawawa
Sound 40 - Hahaha hahaha
Sound 41 - Waaa
Sound 42 - Harp
Sound 43 - Babble
Sound 44 - Hahahaha
Sound 45 - Noo
Sound 46 - Music 1
Sound 47 - Music powerdown noise
 
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