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M79M72

M79M72 is a fictional modular robotics platform designation used in speculative discussions to illustrate a compact, plug‑in rover chassis. In this context, M79M72 describes a base platform capable of carrying diverse sensor packages and actuators, enabling rapid prototyping of autonomous behavior.

Design and construction are focused on modularity. The base chassis is compact, roughly 0.8 by 0.7 meters,

Software and interoperability are central to the concept. The platform is described as ROS 2‑compatible, with

Variants commonly cited include M79M72‑A and M79M72‑B, offering different payload capacities and endurance targets. The A

History and usage are typically framed in educational and research contexts. In fictional literature and open‑source

and
supports
four‑wheel
drive
with
optional
track
modules.
Standard
mounting
interfaces
allow
plug‑in
sensors,
grippers,
or
small
arms.
A
common
power
system
uses
swappable
lithium‑ion
packs,
with
an
on‑board
power
manager
to
balance
performance
and
endurance.
a
reusable
backplane
electrical
system
(CAN
and
I2C)
and
a
minimal
Linux‑based
compute
module.
The
reference
software
emphasizes
sensor
fusion,
localization,
planning,
and
a
modular
driver
architecture
so
researchers
can
mix
perception,
navigation,
and
control
stacks.
variant
prioritizes
lightweight
autonomy
for
classroom
demonstrations,
while
the
B
variant
focuses
on
extended
operation
and
ruggedization
for
field
trials.
demonstrations,
M79M72
has
been
used
as
a
teaching
platform
for
swarm
robotics,
multi‑agent
coordination,
and
hardware‑in‑the‑loop
testing.
While
not
a
commercially
marketed
product
in
the
real
world,
it
serves
as
a
conceptual
model
for
modular
rover
design.