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HUNTER SE

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HUNTER SE

HUNTER SE

AgileX Robotics

Not yet assessed

Height
Payload
Verified autonomy
not assessed
Real deployment
not assessed
Status
Price
verified / really deployed unverified / demo-stage
Unverified

The AgileX Hunter SE is a compact, drive-by-wire unmanned ground vehicle (UGV) chassis built around front-wheel Ackermann steering, manufactured by AgileX Robotics (founded 2016, China). It is designed as a research and development platform for autonomous driving and robotics applications, priced at approximately $7,000 USD. The platform provides an open-source SDK and ROS compatibility, enabling researchers to build autonomous navigation stacks on top of the hardware, but the chassis itself ships as a controllable platform rather than a fully autonomous out-of-the-box system. Key specs include a 50 kg max payload, 4.8 m/s top speed, 2–3 hour runtime, and operation from -20°C to 60°C.

Availability

Shipping

Specification

dimensions
820 x 640 x 310 mm (L x W x H)
curb_weight
42 kg
max_payload
50 kg
max_speed
4.8 m/s (no-load)
battery
24V / 30Ah
runtime
2 to 3 hours

Price

No public price — contact the supplier for a quote.

Good · Bad · Ugly

Evidence-graded claims from the AgileX Robotics deep report

Good
  • AgileX completed a Series A funding round of ~100 million RMB (~US$15.5M) in July 2021, backed by Sequoia Capital China, 5Y Capital, Vertex Ventures China, and Hong Kong X Technology Fund

    The funding round is corroborated by both AgileX's official blog and an independent third-party news source (5Y Capital news), naming the same investors and amount — though the long-term deployment impact of this capital remains unverified [10][14].

    from AgileX Robotics deep report →
  • The PiPER arm is being used by developers to build real-world physical AI applications combining LLMs, computer vision, and robot control

    An independent Reddit community post documents a developer building a functional physical AI chess agent using the PiPER arm with YOLO vision and LLM integration — confirming real developer adoption, though this represents a single hobbyist project rather than scaled deployment [16].

    from AgileX Robotics deep report →
Bad
  • The PiPER robotic arm achieves 0.1 mm repeatability with a 1.5 kg payload at a reach of 626 mm

    Specs are consistent between the official product page and an independent tech blog (TechEBlog), but no third-party laboratory test or customer validation of the 0.1 mm repeatability figure under real operating conditions has been identified [2][7].

    from AgileX Robotics deep report →
  • AgileX has partnerships with Alibaba, Huawei, Honda, and 50+ global top universities

    These partnership claims appear solely on AgileX's LinkedIn company profile; no independent press releases, joint publications, or third-party confirmations from any of the named partners have been identified in the dossier [12].

    from AgileX Robotics deep report →
  • The Ranger Mini 3 supports a 100 kg payload, 2.0 m/s speed, 8-hour runtime, and operates in -20°C to 50°C conditions with hot-swap battery capability

    All Ranger Mini 3 specifications originate exclusively from AgileX's official product page with no independent benchmark tests, field validation, or third-party reviews confirming these performance figures under real operating conditions [3].

    from AgileX Robotics deep report →

About the company

Editorial directory of real robot products from leading global manufacturers. Each entry links to the manufacturer's official page.