
By slashing price and weight, Tesollo lowers the entry barrier for humanoid robot hands, accelerating commercial deployment across research and industry.
The robotics market has long wrestled with the trade‑off between capability and cost in humanoid manipulators. Traditional robotic hands often exceed the weight and price thresholds needed for mobile platforms, limiting their use to laboratory settings. Tesollo’s DG‑5F‑S directly addresses this gap, delivering a human‑scale hand that can be integrated into a wide array of platforms without overburdening power budgets or structural designs. This shift mirrors a broader industry trend toward lightweight, energy‑efficient components that enable true field deployment of humanoid robots.
Technically, the DG‑5F‑S leverages Tesollo’s in‑house actuator suite, employing a direct‑drive architecture that eliminates gear backlash and enhances positional fidelity. The five‑finger, 20‑DoF configuration mirrors the anatomical complexity of a human hand, while optional tactile sensor arrays provide real‑time feedback for delicate manipulation. Waterproof enclosures and algorithmic tuning further expand the hand’s suitability for harsh industrial environments, positioning it as a versatile tool for both precision assembly and unstructured service tasks.
From a business perspective, the 40% price reduction and sub‑kilogram mass dramatically broaden the addressable market. Start‑ups and academic labs, previously deterred by high acquisition costs, can now prototype and scale humanoid solutions more rapidly. Established manufacturers gain a plug‑and‑play option that shortens development cycles, potentially accelerating the transition of humanoid robots from research prototypes to commercial products. As adoption spreads across the 16 countries already using the DG‑5F, Tesollo is poised to cement its leadership in the global humanoid hand segment.
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