A giant South Korean-built manned robot that walks like a human but makes the ground shake under its weight has taken its first baby steps.
Designed by a veteran of science fiction blockbusters, the 4m-tall, 1.5 tonne Method-2 towers over a room on the outskirts of Seoul.
The hulking human-like creation bears a resemblance to robots in the movies Avatar and Aliens.
Photo: Reuters
It is claimed as a world first by its creators at Hankook Mirae Technology, a South Korean robotics company, where about 30 engineers were hard at work conducting initial tests on Tuesday afternoon last week.
“Our robot is the world’s first manned bipedal robot and is built to work in extreme hazardous areas where humans cannot go [unprotected],” company chairman Yang Jin-ho said.
A pilot sitting inside the robot’s torso makes limb movements which are mimicked by Method-2, whose metal arms each weigh 130kg.
The robot, more than twice the size of a tall man, is so heavy that it shakes the ground when it takes a step with a loud whirring of motors.
Yang, who dreamed as a child of building his own robot, said that he has invested 242 billion won (US$200 million) in the project since 2014 to “bring to life what only seemed possible in movies and cartoons.”
Building the giant robot was a challenge for the engineers — most of them in their mid and late 30s — as its unprecedented scale meant that they had nothing to refer to, one engineer who declined to be named said.
So far, it remains unclear how the robot will be used. Method-2 is seen more as a test-bed for various technologies that will allow the creators to build any type and size of robot in future.
While its enormous size has grabbed media attention, the creators of Method-2 say the project’s core achievement is the technology they developed and enhanced along the way.
“Everything we have been learning so far on this robot can be applied to solve real-world problems,” designer Vitaly Bulgarov said on his Facebook page. He has previously worked on film series such as Transformers, Robocop and Terminator.
Yang said they have already received inquiries from industries ranging from manufacturing and construction to entertainment. There have even been questions about its possible deployment along the heavily fortified Demilitarized Zone with North Korea.
However, the robot, tethered by a power cable and still a bit wobbly on its feet, is far from finished.
More work is needed on its balance and power systems, according to its creators.
“The robot is one year old, so it is taking baby steps,” Yang said. “Just like humans, it will be able to move more freely in the next couple of years.”
He said the robot will be ready for sale by the end of this year at a price of about 10 billion won.
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