5 GIANT ROBOT SUITS

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Robots come in many shapes and sizes. The most intriguing, appealing, and acceptable are the ones that resemble us, humans.
 
Humanoid robots these are used for research and space exploration, personal assistance and caregiving, education and entertainment, search and rescue, manufacturing and maintenance, public relations, and healthcare.
 
Before the advent of covid-19 pandemic and the economic uncertainty, Statistics Market Research Consulting expected that the Global Humanoid Robot Market would reach $13 billion by 2026. While future market behavior is now unclear, robot usage is on the rise: Chinese companies were rushing to deploy robots and automation technology, as doctors were grappling with COVID-19.
 
For example, a field hospital staffed by robots—the Smart Field Hospital—opened in Wuhan, China, in early March. There, humanoid robots—donated by CloudMinds Technology, a Silicon Valley company—disinfect, measure temperatures, deliver food and medicine, and entertain medical staff and patients.    
 
As the virus spreads to the rest of the world, robots are being deployed in many countries. Some robots can help relieve tired nurses in the hospitals, do basic cleaning and deliveries, others can help in the warehouses, while industrial robots can help maintain some production for manufacturing companies while their human co-workers are quarantined.
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5. Prosthesis

12 years in the making, Furrion’s Prosthesis is a “celebration of the pursuit of physical mastery and human skill,” Co-founder and CTO, Jonathan Tippett, claims. Tippett worked over 5 years in CAD before they began building the Prosthesis. The goal for Furrion’s Prosthesis is to eventually popularize the sport of mech racing.

It’s 2018, and you know what that means: mech racing isn’t the sport of the future anymore, it’s the sport of the present. A company called Furrion brought “Prosthesis,” its first exo-bionic racing mech, to CES this year. It looks bonkers. Prosthesis is 15 feet tall and weighs over 8,000 pounds. It’s an exoskeleton, not a robot, meaning it doesn’t operate automatically, it’s completely controlled by the human trapped inside. Like how it works in Power Rangers.

Prosthesis can run up to 20 mph, step over obstacles, and run for up to an hour on a battery charge. It also has a very tiny cockpit.

4. Powered Jacket MK3

This Japanese student shows an electromechanical exoskeleton. The numerous feature, the Powered Jacket MK3. As per the maker Sagawa Electronics, the aluminum and carbon fiber exoskeleton is more than 7 feet tall, weighs 55 pounds and will be created in a restricted run of five models. The organization has likewise delivered a manga arrangement about the Powered Jacket. Given the ironical idea of the video, and the absence of data on the Powered Jacket MK3, it’s indistinct if the item is really bound for creation. That being stated, Sagawa Electronics asserts the exoskeleton will be openly exhibited at Wonder Festival 2013 in Chiba City, Japan toward the finish of July.

3. Kuratas

The ultimate war machine, its one of the most enhanced robot suit ever built by the Japanese organization Suidobashi Heavy Industry , the pilot has a connect face visual input along with touch screen interface for identifying and striking target on the battle field. So far no dangerous weapon has been installed on the machine, the system will fire BB’s when the pilot smiles 

Kuratas is a rideable and user-operated mecha. Charged as “the world’s first goliath boarding robot”, the Kuratas was uncovered when the site was opened in 2012It was exhibited at Wonder Festival. In June 2015, MegaBots provoked Suidobashi Heavy Industry to its first robot duel standing up to Kuratas versus their Mark II.

2.MegabotMK2

The Mk2 is  foottall, it controls an object over a hundred and thirty miles per hour and MK3 is been built which will have the power to lift over twenty five hundred pounds. 

Megabots MK2 is a useroperated andrideablerobot developed by the American organization MegaBots Inc. The robot made its presentation in May 2015 at Maker Faire San Mateo. A refreshed rendition of the robot, Mk.III, is planned for August 2017 to participate in a no holds barred battle with Kuratas, a robot worked by Suidobashi Heavy Industry of Japan MegaBots reported plans in August 2015 to overhaul Mark II with scuffle capacities so as to go up against Kuratas, utilizing assets from a Kickstarter campaign.

  1. Method 2

This mech robot is 13-feet tall (approximately 4-meters) and weighs in at 1.5 tons. This robot shakes the ground as it walks. Method-2 is being tested in Gunpo, South Korea – just south of Seoul.

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