This page describes some weight categories of robots, to help us describe how big and heavy a specific robot is.

Robot Size#

Well, big is pretty easy: just measure it,

  • X (width)
  • Y (length)
  • Z (height)

Robot Weight#

As a starting point, here's some weight categories from boxing, courtesy Wikipedia:

DivisionsWeightsYears establishment
Heavyweight200+ lbs160+ lbs in 1738 by Broughton's Rules ; 175+ lbs in 1920 by Walker Law; 190+ lbs in 1979 and finally 200+ lbs
Light heavyweight168–175 lbs175 lbs in 1909 by National Sporting Club of London (NSC)
Middleweight154–160 lbsFights dating back to 1840s; established officially at 160 lbs in 1909 by NSC
Welterweight140–147 lbs145 lbs in 1889; established officially at 147 lbs in 1909 by NSC
Lightweight130–135 lbs160 lbs in 1738 by Broughton's Rules; 140 lbs in 1889; established officially at 135 lbs in 1909 by NSC
Featherweight122–126 lbs118 lbs in 1860 by London Prize Ring Rules ; 110 and 115 lbs in 1889; Official at 126 lbs in 1909 by NSC
Bantamweight115–118 lbs105 lbs in 1860 by London Prize Ring Rules; 116 lbs in 1898; 118 lbs in 1909 by NSC; Official at 118 lbs in 1920 by Walker Law
Flyweight108–112 lbs112 lbs in 1909 by NSC and standardized in 1920 by Walker Law[10]

Hmm. Maybe not appropriate to robots, and we need it in metric units.

I'm thinking more along the lines of:

  • humongous (bigger than a person)
  • large (up to person-sized)
  • medium (maybe cat or dog-sized)
  • small (e.g., KR01)
  • mini (under 1kg, powerable using AA batteries or a USB style battery)
  • micro (insect-sized)

Any ideas? Suggestions?


Tags:  Robot, Hardware