DFRobot
BOSON Inventor Series - Royal Guard STEAM Project Kit
· MPN: TOY0083-1
The BOSON Inventor Series Royal Guard Kit is a coding-free STEAM project for students in Grades 1–3. Using plug-and-play BOSON modules, learners build a roya...
The BOSON Inventor Series Royal Guard Kit is a coding-free STEAM project for students in Grades 1–3. Using plug-and-play BOSON modules, learners build a royal guard that begins patrolling when it detects someone approaching — teaching the fundamentals of motion sensors and servo control through hands-on assembly.
The kit includes all electronic modules, craft materials, and a paper model sheet. No coding or soldering is required. The workshop takes approximately 45 minutes to complete.
Key Features
- Plug-and-Play – No coding or soldering required
- Complete Kit – Electronic modules, craft materials, and lesson plan included
- Interactive Project – Motion sensor triggers servo-powered patrol movement
- Grades 1–3 – Designed for approximately 45-minute workshops
Learning Objectives
- Understanding motion sensors and how they detect movement
- Learning how servos convert electrical signals to mechanical motion
- Building and wiring a simple interactive circuit
- Hands-on craft and assembly skills
Specifications
- Operating Voltage – 4.5–5.5 V (3× AAA batteries)
- Dimensions – 355 × 240 × 40 mm (packaged)
- Weight – 197 g
Package Contents
- 1× BOSON Mainboard-1IO
- 1× BOSON Motion Sensor
- 1× BOSON Servo Controller Module
- 1× BOSON 9 g Metal Gear Micro Servo
- 1× BOSON 3× AAA Battery Holder
- 2× 3-pin cables (100 mm)
- 2× Paper model sheets
- 1× Quick start card
Jargon buster
Plain-language definitions for the technical terms used above.
- Boson
- Boson is a modular electronics system that uses plug-in cables and modules to connect sensors, buttons, displays, and controllers without much wiring. If a cable is marked for Boson, it is intended to fit that connector style and pin arrangement.
- servo
- A servo is a motor with built-in position control, usually told to move to a specific angle by a control signal. It matters when you need repeatable movement, such as steering, arms, flaps, or linkages, rather than continuous spinning.
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