Dynamic and contact-rich object manipulation, such as striking, snatching, or hammering, remains challenging for robotic systems due to hardware limitations. Most existing robots are constrained by high-inertia design, limited compliance, and reliance on expensive torque sensors. To address this, we introduce ARMADA (Affordable Robot for Manipulation and Dynamic Actions), a 6 degrees-of-freedom bimanual robot designed for dynamic manipulation research. ARMADA combines low-inertia, back-drivable actuators with a lightweight design, using readily available components and 3D-printed links for ease of assembly in research labs. The entire system, including both arms, is built for just 6,100.Eacharmachievesspeedsupto6.16m/s,almosttwicethatofmostcollaborativerobots,withacomparablepayloadof2.5kg.WedemonstrateARMADAcanperformdynamicmanipulationlikesnatching,hammering,andbimanualthrowinginreal−worldenvironments.Wealsoshowcaseitseffectivenessinreinforcementlearning(RL)bytraininganon−prehensilemanipulationpolicyinsimulationandtransferringitzero−shottotherealworld,aswellashumanmotionshadowingfordynamicbimanualobjectthrowing.ARMADAisfullyopen−sourcedwithdetailedassemblyinstructions,CADmodels,URDFs,simulation,andlearningcodes.WehighlyrecommendviewingthesupplementaryvideoatthishttpsURL.
@article{kim2025_2502.16908,
title={ Design of a low-cost and lightweight 6 DoF bimanual arm for dynamic and contact-rich manipulation },
author={ Jaehyung Kim and Jiho Kim and Dongryung Lee and Yujin Jang and Beomjoon Kim },
journal={arXiv preprint arXiv:2502.16908},
year={ 2025 }
}