Back to directory
HS180

Let's compare

HS180

Hyundai Robotics

Not yet assessed

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

The system identifier 'HS180' is ambiguous across the extracted facts: one source clearly identifies the Holy Stone HS180 as a low-cost consumer RC quadcopter drone ($39.99 USD, US-only, designed for kids/beginners with LED lights and 3 batteries), while the majority of the remaining facts describe HD Hyundai Robotics' industrial and collaborative robot portfolio, Hi7 controller, humanoid welding robot partnerships, and large-scale investment plans — none of which are labeled 'HS180.' These two product domains are entirely unrelated and appear to have been conflated during extraction. The Holy Stone HS180 drone is the only product directly identified by the 'HS180' designation in the facts. The Hyundai Robotics facts cannot be reliably attributed to any product called 'HS180' based on the supplied evidence.

Availability

Shipping

Specification

weight
45–48 grams
dimensions
112 × 112 × 35 mm
battery
500 mAh (modular); 3 batteries included

Price

No public price — contact the supplier for a quote.

Good · Bad · Ugly

Evidence-graded claims from the Hyundai Robotics deep report

Good
  • Boston Dynamics' Spot robot is actively deployed at Hyundai's Metaplant America for exterior quality inspection — a real production deployment, not a pilot or demo.

    A Reddit user who visited the Metaplant independently described Spot performing quality inspection in the weld shop [17], corroborating the official deployment claim [8]; however, the scale, autonomy level, and whether it operates without human supervision during inspection runs remain unverified by formal third-party audit.

    from Hyundai Robotics deep report →
Bad
  • Some Hyundai Robotics (and broader industry) demonstrations present teleoperated robots as autonomous, without adequate public disclosure of the distinction.

    A Reddit robotics community thread credibly discusses the industry-wide practice of undisclosed teleoperation in demos [20], but the thread is not specific to Hyundai Robotics' systems, reducing its direct evidentiary weight against this particular company.

    from Hyundai Robotics deep report →
  • Hyundai Robotics' RaaS (Robot-as-a-Service) subscription model is a live, commercially available offering — not merely a concept — covering maintenance, software updates, hardware scaling, and remote monitoring.

    The RaaS model is described consistently across multiple commerce and news sources [6][7][11], but all descriptions trace back to Hyundai's own announcements or paraphrases thereof; no independent customer case study, contract disclosure, or analyst verification of active RaaS subscribers has been identified in the dossier.

    from Hyundai Robotics deep report →
Ugly
  • Atlas humanoid robot will be deployed at Hyundai's Georgia manufacturing complex and mass-produced at ~30,000 units/year by 2028.

    The 2028 targets are Hyundai's own aspirational announcements [7][8][11]; the welding humanoid prototype is not expected until 2027 [2], community sources flag real operational constraints in manufacturing environments [15], and no independent evidence of production-ready Atlas units or confirmed factory orders exists — making these forward-looking targets unverified and likely overstated.

    from Hyundai 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.