Adafruit
Mini 3-Layer Round Robot Chassis Kit - 2WD with DC Motors
A compact three-layer round robot chassis kit with two DC drive motors, matching wheels, and a caster ball for balance. The high-strength anodised aluminium ...
A compact three-layer round robot chassis kit with two DC drive motors, matching wheels, and a caster ball for balance. The high-strength anodised aluminium alloy frame provides a sturdy platform for building your own 2WD mobile robot, with three layers of mounting space for batteries, controllers, and sensors.
The differential drive design (two independently driven wheels) allows a near-zero turning radius, making it ideal for navigating tight spaces on flat indoor surfaces. You'll need to add your own power supply, microcontroller, and motor driver to complete the build.
Key Features
- 3-Layer Chassis – Anodised aluminium with ample mounting space across three tiers
- 2WD Differential Drive – Two independently controlled motors for precise steering
- Near-Zero Turning Radius – Differential drive enables tight manoeuvres
- Compact Size – Small enough for desktop and indoor robotics
- Caster Ball – Plastic ball caster for stable three-point balance
Motor Specifications
- Operating Voltage – 3–6V DC
- Running Current – 200–400mA
- Stall Current – 1.5A
Ideal For
- Beginner robotics projects with Arduino, Feather, or Raspberry Pi
- Line-following and obstacle-avoidance robots
- STEM education and classroom robotics
- Custom mobile platform builds
Package Contents
- 2× DC Drive Motors
- 2× Wheels
- 1× Plastic Caster Ball
- 3× Anodised aluminium chassis plates
- All mounting hardware for assembly
Jargon buster
Plain-language definitions for the technical terms used above.
- microcontroller
- A microcontroller is a small computer on a chip that runs your program and controls connected inputs and outputs. For this product, it is the part that reads buttons and sensors, drives the display and speaker, and communicates over Bluetooth.
- motor driver
- An electronic circuit that lets a low-power controller switch and control a motor that needs more current than the controller pins can safely provide. Checking motor driver support matters because pumps and motors usually cannot be connected directly to a microcontroller output.
Find this product in
Brands
Robotics & Motion
Related Tutorials
Free guides on learn.littlebird.com.au