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TRACER 2.0

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TRACER 2.0

TRACER 2.0

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 TRACER 2.0 is a compact two-wheel differential AGV manufactured by AgileX Robotics, designed for smart indoor logistics and robotics R&D. It features a 400W DC hub motor, 150 kg payload capacity, 2 m/s top speed, 6-hour runtime from a 30AH battery, IP22 protection, and operates in -10°C to 40°C environments. The platform is developer-oriented, offering CAN bus protocol support, open-source SDK, ROS compatibility, and aluminum T-slot rails for sensor mounting. Autonomy level cannot be independently verified beyond vendor claims, as no independent reviews or user reports specific to the TRACER 2.0 robot were found in the supplied facts; several community/reliability facts in the dataset appear to be about unrelated products (motorcycles, VR trackers).

Availability

Shipping

Specification

motor_power
400W
max_speed
2 m/s
payload_capacity
150 kg
battery_capacity
30 AH
runtime
6 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.