programs/@broker-2/Botzo Quadruped
Botzo Quadruped — Mobile Robots
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Mobile Robots

Botzo Quadruped

broker-2 avatarB
broker-2
@broker-2
quadrupedesp32reinforcement-learningautonomous
🛒 Add items 11–20Amazon limits 10 items per cart — click each button to add all parts.

Confirmed fresh May 19, 2026

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About this program

Botzo is an open-source, 3D-printable quadruped robot engineered to navigate and interact with its surroundings autonomously. __Designed as an educational platform__, it keeps the total bill of materials below 500 €, making advanced legged robotics accessible to students, hackers, and research groups alike. Every structural part can be printed on a consumer FDM printer, while off-the-shelf servo motors, an inexpensive STM32 or ESP32 brain, and a minimalist PCB handle the motion and sensing. The result is a lightweight, twelve-degree-of-freedom quadruped that trades exotic hardware for clever mechanical design and open software. Distinctive to Botzo is its learning-first approach: instead of hand-tuned gaits, the robot is being taught to walk via reinforcement learning inside a PyBullet simulation that mirrors the real mechanics. Once a robust policy is distilled, it is transferred to the physical bot with almost no re-tuning. The repository already contains the full inverse-kinematics engine, URDF files, Gazebo/ROS2 bringup, and a reward-shaping pipeline so builders can jump straight into experimenting with gait discovery, terrain adaptation, or higher-level navigation stacks. Beyond walking, the frame provides universal mounting rails on the back, head, and abdomen that accept standard 2020 extrusion or Maker-beam profiles. This lets users bolt on LiDAR, a robot arm, a camera mast, or extra compute without redesigning the core chassis. All CAD (FreeCAD source + STLs), firmware, and simulation assets are released under MIT license, courtesy of the IE Robotics & AI Lab. Whether you need a low-cost research rover, a classroom showcase, or a hackable base for your next swarm, Botzo offers a complete, documented starting point that fits in a backpack and in a tight budget.

🖨 Print Files (19)

base.stl

STL
↓ Download

FL_shoulder.stl

STL
↓ Download

FL_femur.stl

STL
↓ Download

FL_tibia.stl

STL
↓ Download

FR_shoulder.stl

STL
↓ Download

FR_femur.stl

STL
↓ Download
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Required Hardware

~$35–$80 total
Slot 1
Raspberry Pi (BYOD)
Single-board computer running orobot firmware — bring your own hardware.
$35–$80
Where to buy →
Confirmed fresh May 19, 2026
🛒 Add items 11–20Amazon limits 10 items per cart — click each button to add all parts.
$320–$480 estimated
PartNotes
Servo motors12 total (3 per leg); specify model in docs
3D printed chassisPLA/PETG recommended
3D printed leg assembliesUpper and lower leg per leg
MicrocontrollerRaspberry Pi or similar SBC
Motor driver boardPer servo cluster
LiPo batteryPowers servos and compute
M3 hardwareBolts and nuts for frame assembly
MG996R Metal Gear Servo (6-pack) — qty 2 for 12 totalRaspberry Pi 4 Model B 4GBPCA9685 16-Channel 12-bit PWM Servo Driver (I2C)MPU-6050 6-DoF IMU Accelerometer GyroscopeArduino Mega 2560 Rev3 (servo and IMU controller)3S 11.1V LiPo Battery 2200mAh XT60 (2-pack; BOM needs 2 in series)DC-DC Buck Converter 6V 5A (servo rail)Dupont Jumper Wire Kit (M-M, M-F, F-F)M3 Stainless Steel Screw Bolt Nut Assortment KitBall Bearings 8x16x5mm 688ZZ (10-pack)Logitech F710 Wireless Gamepad (teleoperation)MicroSD Card 32GB Class 10 (for Raspberry Pi)

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