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Vision 60 Q-UGV

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Vision 60 Q-UGV

Vision 60 Q-UGV

Ghost Robotics

Not yet assessed

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

Vision 60 Q-UGV

Ghost Robotics
Unverified

The Ghost Robotics Vision 60 Q-UGV is a mid-sized quadrupedal unmanned ground vehicle designed for defense, homeland security, and enterprise applications. It weighs approximately 38–51 kg (configuration-dependent), carries up to ~9–10 kg of modular payload, achieves up to 3 m/s top speed, and offers 2–4 hours continuous or up to 21 hours standby battery life. The platform features IP67 environmental protection, NVIDIA Xavier compute, 3D LiDAR-based SLAM for GPS-enabled and GPS-denied navigation, and supports a wide range of tactical radio integrations. Vendor case studies claim fully autonomous patrol and inspection operations; independent/academic sources corroborate autonomous navigation capabilities but the system also provides a web-based operator command interface with telemetry monitoring, indicating supervised-autonomous operation is the norm in practice.

Availability

Shipping

Specification

weight
Tare: 38 kg; with battery: 45.4 kg; with hardcase: 78.5 kg (commerce/datasheet); one commerce listing states 51 kg — likely a rounded or payload-inclusive figure
dimensions
L: 85 cm, W (leg-to-leg): 54 cm, H (standing): 38–76 cm
top speed
3 m/s
battery
1,250 Wh Li-Ion; standby: 21 hrs; mixed use: 8–10 hrs; continuous motion: 2–4 hrs; range: 6.8–12.8 km (payload and terrain dependent)
payload capacity
~9 kg (datasheet: 9 kg ± with base battery installed); commerce listing states 10 kg maximum
payload modularity
Supports LiDAR, 360° cameras, thermal sensors, manipulator arm (announced Dec 2025), and customizable mission payloads

Price

No public price — contact the supplier for a quote.

Good · Bad · Ugly

Evidence-graded claims from the Ghost Robotics deep report

Good
  • Vision 60 Q-UGVs have been deployed in real-world military and government operations, including by the Japan Ground Self-Defense Force (Noto Peninsula earthquake, Jan 2024) and the US Air Force for base perimeter patrol.

    Ghost Robotics' own case studies [2][4] document these named deployments, and government contract records [9][13] corroborate active military/government procurement; however, the operational details (mission scope, level of autonomy, outcomes) remain vendor-reported and are not independently audited.

    from Ghost Robotics deep report →
  • The Vision 60 supports both teleoperated and autonomous operating modes, making it a flexible platform across a spectrum of human oversight levels.

    Crunchbase [12] explicitly lists both teleoperated and autonomous modes, consistent with defense procurement requirements for human override; this dual-mode design is corroborated by community discussion of thin-client vs. autonomous architectures [19], though actual in-field mode usage ratios are unverified.

    from Ghost Robotics deep report →
  • LIG Nex1 (South Korean defense firm) acquired a majority stake in Ghost Robotics for approximately $240M, closing July 2024, at a $400M enterprise valuation.

    The acquisition close is confirmed by a PR Newswire press release [11] and corroborated by CBInsights and Dealroom financial data [6][10]; the $400M enterprise valuation comes from a single Dealroom source with no contradicting data, but the acquisition itself is independently confirmed.

    from Ghost Robotics deep report →
Bad
  • The Vision 60 can traverse all-terrain environments including rocks, sand, hills, ice, snow, and staircases, recover from falls, and operate while inverted.

    These specifications are consistently stated across official and commerce sources [1][8], but no independent third-party field test or customer report in the dossier specifically validates the full range of terrain claims under operational conditions.

    from Ghost Robotics deep report →
  • Ghost Robotics is developing emerging capabilities including solar charging for remote deployment, integrated sUAS + Q-UGV crash site assessment, counter-sUAS (C-sUAS) payloads, and humanoid robots for the US military.

    SBIR portfolio records [13] and news sources confirm R&D contracts for some of these capabilities, but the humanoid robot claim rests on a single low-confidence source, and none of these emerging capabilities have documented operational deployments beyond R&D/pilot stage.

    from Ghost Robotics deep report →
  • The Vision 60 operates at speeds up to 6 mph with a range of 6+ miles per charge, across temperatures from -40°F to 130°F.

    These performance specifications are cited by a single commerce/news source [8][7] and are not contradicted, but no independent benchmark test or third-party field validation is present in the dossier to confirm these figures under real operational conditions.

    from Ghost Robotics deep report →
  • The Vision 60 features a modular, field-replaceable leg and payload architecture, supporting diverse sensor configurations including LiDAR, thermal/IR cameras, 360° cameras, and mesh radio communications.

    Modularity and sensor options are consistently described across official and commerce sources [1][8], but these are all vendor-originated; no independent reviewer or customer has publicly validated the field-replaceability or the full sensor integration under operational stress.

    from Ghost 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.