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| Hoosain Dixon assembles his robots using only hand tools. |
Not very far from where he sits is his latest creation, Robot 5, or R5, which took about two months to build, GroundUp reports.
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"I have been good with my hands since I was a young boy of eight. I would fix old toys, and even put together old broken dolls. You see the field over there?
That is where I get my scrap. Every single thing I used for the R5 I got at the dumping site. Even the 350 screws I used to put him together, I got at the dumping site," says Dixon.
A father of three daughters, Dixon worked for 25 years in the hospitality industry but was laid off. He says he is currently unemployed and builds robots to keep him busy and make some money to support his family.
He said his dream would be to see his work in shows or exhibitions and to be able to give his robots some sort of movement, in the arms, legs or body.
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"As you can see, I have connected wiring to this robot which is why these tiny light bulbs work, but I am yet to connect something to make it move."
Three or four times a week he walks around pushing R5 in a trolley around Bridgetown, Athlone and sometimes as far Mowbray.
He says people come up to him and ask him about R5. But last year he was almost arrested wheeling a robot in a wheelbarrow at night. Police thought he was transporting a dead body.
He sometimes stands at shopping malls with the robot and charges people a fee of R5 or R10 to take photographs of themselves with it. He has already managed to sell two robots.
READ MORE: Will a robot be doing your job by 2030?
"There is a lot of crime here in this area by youngsters who are unemployed. I want them to see that you can do things to keep yourself busy that do not involve crime," Dixon said.


