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3D-printable humanoid legs let robotics experiments run wild
computer-science

3D-printable humanoid legs let robotics experiments run wild

Ars Technica · May 26, 2026, 5:16 PM

A $2,500 pair of humanoid robot legs built from 3D-printed parts and off-the-shelf components is not going to win marathons just yet. But such relatively inexpensive hardware could enable researchers to more easily test and train AI-powered robotics software in a physical body during real-world experiments. The newly available Le Robot Humanoid project comes from the machine learning and AI development platform Hugging Face. The full-stack release gives robot builders and researchers access to a bill of materials, files for 3D-printable parts, wiring documentation, and physical assembly instructions—but it also includes software tools for calibrating and controlling the robot in both the physical body and in simulation. “If you are looking for the most advanced humanoid robot, this is not it,” according to Virgile Batto, a robotics engineer at Hugging Face, in a blog post coauthored with other colleagues. “If you are looking for a humanoid you can build, understand, repair, instrument, simulate, and use for learning experiments, this is the robot we are trying to make.”Read full article Comments

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