

Buy anything from 5,000+ international stores. One checkout price. No surprise fees. Join 2M+ shoppers on Desertcart.
Desertcart purchases this item on your behalf and handles shipping, customs, and support to Italy.
🚀 Elevate your coding game with the ultimate Raspberry Pi tank robot kit!
The FREENOVE Tank Robot Kit is a programmable crawler chassis designed for Raspberry Pi models 5, 4B, 3B+, and others. Featuring a liftable clamp, camera, and ultrasonic sensor, it offers wireless control via a dedicated app compatible with Android, iOS, and computers. This kit includes detailed Python tutorials for assembly and coding, empowering users to learn robotics and programming hands-on. Note: Raspberry Pi and batteries are not included.



























































| ASIN | B0BNDQFRP1 |
| Age Range Description | Kid |
| Are Batteries Required | No |
| Batteries are Included | No |
| Battery Description | Lithium-Ion |
| Best Sellers Rank | 123,125 in Toys & Games ( See Top 100 in Toys & Games ) 26 in Robot Model Building Kits |
| Brand Name | FREENOVE |
| Colour | Multicolor |
| Country Of Origin | China |
| Customer Reviews | 4.0 4.0 out of 5 stars (124) |
| Educational Objective | Learn programming and robotics through hands-on experience |
| Included Components | Cross |
| Is Assembly Required | Yes |
| Item Dimensions | 22.5 x 15.3 x 16 centimetres |
| Item Weight | 948 Grams |
| Manufacturer | Freenove |
| Material Type | Plastic |
| Maximum Age Recommendation | 24 |
| Model Name | FNK0077 |
| Model Number | FNK0077 |
| Model Year | 2019 |
| Number of Batteries | 2 Nonstandard Battery batteries required. |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Number of Players | 1 |
| Operation Mode | remote control |
| Power Source | Battery Powered |
| Set Name | Single Set |
| Size | Small |
| Special Features | Wireless |
| Subject Character | no subject character |
| Theme | Robotics |
| Toy Vehicle Form | Crawler |
| Unit Count | 1.0 count |
A**E
A great introduction to Raspberry Pi controlled robots
OK so this is a fun kit! The first thing to note is that you need a Raspberry Pi. The Pi has been in short supply and unscrupulous sellers are trying to get ludicrous prices so be aware! I strongly recommend sourcing your Pi first before buying this kit. A Raspberry Pi 4 Model B with 4gb of RAM is a good choice and should cost around £60 or £80-90 if bundled with extras such as sd card and power supply. Reliable sellers include The PiHut, Pimoroni, Kitronik, Coolcomponents. There are plenty of others so it's worth a little hunt around. Some of these sellers let you register to be notified when stock comes in. You will also need a couple of 18650 batteries and a charger. I have found the BAk 18650 from nubattery.co.uk to be a good value choice and they also sell chargers. I have purchased several Freenove robot kits and I keep going back to them because of the high quality of their support team, any issues with the build or the programming and they usually respond within 24 hrs. This kit was a fun build and not too complicated. There are a couple of tricky nuts to attach when mounting the servos, my tip is to hold them in place on the servo with a small bit of sticky tape before fitting to the kit. My other tip is, when mounting the motors, to just use one screw at first so that you can twist the motor diagonally to make fitting the tracks easy (see photo). Freenove always supply a few extra nuts and bolts and I always need them as I have a tendancy to drop the occasional nut and be unable to find it afterwards! Be aware there are no spare screws in the servo packs, so be very careful with these! The instructions are a pdf file that you download and it takes you through the build a step at a time. Having completed the build there is a full set of tests to check every part of your build accompanied by explanation of how the program code works. Once completed you can control the robot from your phone or PC or set it off on it's own, hopefully avoiding obstacles or following a black line. For me, the best part is then moving on to develop your own code and if you have an interest in Python coding this is a great place to start, but the robot is fully functional without further programming if this does not interest you. Personally I'm looking forward to finding out just how much i can do with the front gripper. I think this kit is a great introduction to Raspberry Pi controlled robot kits
P**R
Good for beginners
Quite a good robot for the beginner, but will only function with raspberry pi operating system Bookworm. Also, battery setup is a bit limiting (uses 2 x 18650 batteries - not supplied). It is also quite handy for adapting to your own uses, as the camera and sonar are quite basic.
D**D
Satisfying kit to build, good instructions/support. Fun picking things up and putting them down.
I bought this kit for my son who is 9 years old. He has built some similar kits before with lots of help from me and this time, he wanted to build it by himself. He managed to do 90% of it but needed to have a little assistance with getting the nuts and bolts to the right tension, so the little robot arm/crane would work nicely. We had a little issue getting the camera to work but the support at Freenove, who make the kits, helped us to solve that without any problems. A lot of fun driving around using the camera to navigate picking up light objects like the supplied soft red ball and moving them around.
J**N
Great kit
This is a great kit but to the price you’ll need to add a Pi4 or Pi5 to complete it. The full features also need a second machine PC, Mac or Pi to get everything working. Loads more to learn with this kit as well.
E**B
Doesn’t work with RP 4 at moment.
This doesn’t work. At first they said it didn’t work with the current standard Raspberry Pi OS and suggested a legacy 32 bit OS, but when their script still didn’t work they blamed me for trying to replicate the script that didn’t work manually myself. Now they are ghosting me when I’ve refused to start again. The quality of the robot is pointless if it doesn’t work on a Raspberry Pi 4 4GB. They’ve said they will update the script but now claim it works. I’ve run it 10 times or so. It doesn’t work. I’ve asked them to just me a working image file, but they ignored that suggestion. Maybe a 5 or updated the script so it runs with current OS.
A**R
Little software reference, and zero hardware documentation
I bought this kit to serve as the base for a demo project. The idea was to have the basic components and features, and add my own atop of it, and it severely disappointed me. Batteries: This kit takes batteries, and nowhere in the description there was a mention that they were supposed to be 18650 Li-Ion batteries, which Amazon won't ship to some places (specially unprotected cells). There is indeed a reference saying "check the about batteries" page, but the first link I found to that came in the actual box that landed on my doorstep. The battery box connects to the board via a barrel jack, so you can use a bench power supply for testing as long as it can provide ~8.4V at a few amps. There's also no charging circuit on the provided board, so you will need your own separate charger. Assembly: The physical assembly takes 2-3 hours, mostly because there's a multitude of differently-sized screws, both in length but specially in diameter, so there's a continuous need of cherry-picking and checking references to make sure the right one's being used. To be clear, they *are* all individually and clearly marked, but this doesn't help the hunting when there's 15+ packages to rummage through, and some of them almost fit together. Note that you need to setup your raspberry pi and use it at least halfway through the assembly. This is because the instructions expect you to use one of the provided pieces of software to align the servo position before assembling the arm. The 2-3 hours I mention don't include setting up the rpi. Software: The provided samples (search FREENOVE on github, and lookup the repo for kit "FNK0077") do show the basic robot functionality, and the samples do roughly do what they say, albeit using the older RPi.GPIO libraries, instead of the currently-recommended gpiozero ones. Some of the commands stutter a bit, because there's no reference or pointer to using rpigpiod for it, which is what upstream recommends for minimal stuttering. The biggest problem, and the key reason for me giving low ratings for this kit, is once you're done running the sample demos, there's ZERO documentation on how to go from there: There's no documentation to any of the provided examples (besides "this is how you invoke it"), most of the example code has little if any comments describing the defines, and there's absolutely no reference, diagram, or schematic to the provided board functionality, or even which GPIO is each sensor/actuator connected to, if you ever want to write your own code. For a simple example, and the very first thing I had to come up with once I started, there's no explanation or any code for dampening the servo motion, so by default any movement leads to the servo immediately snaps to position, sometimes jerking quite violently in doing so. If you are in doubt, all the code they provide (at least as of this comment) uses BCM-referenced pin numbers, not physical header positions. They do explain the different ones (anyone is free to use whichever they prefer), but they never clearly state what their examples are using. One last thing: This isn't necessarily relevant to the kit, and I don't factor this in my rating, but this is not a good kit for you to build upon: There's no unused mounting point for anything else not included in the kit, and little space left too. The chassis is acrylic, so you'll want to be very careful if drilling extra holes to not shatter it.
S**7
配達されたタンクロボットキットの部品を確認したところ、2個のサーボパックの内の1個の外観形状が写真と違っていました。Freenove社のサポートに問い合わせメールを送りましたが1週間経っても返信がなかったので、返品処置にしました。
M**R
works as expected. beginner friendly.
F**R
It's a good kit in general, but it needs a new driver board that can actually power Raspberry Pi 5. In my case, I'm using 10A high drainage batteries that can power drones, but the Pi would crash from time to time just driving around, with a 75-100% battery capacity left. This means that the way it's powering the Pi is either having too much fluctuation, or other problems. Anyway I redneck engineered it by soldering 2 1000uf capacitors between the two sets of 5V VCC and GND pins. (Image 1 I attached) I'm not sure if this would damage the pi or robot in the long run, but it works currently. I monitored the temperature of gpio pins and it seems to be working. I have a few recommendations: 1. Change the power system to 3s allowing 3 18650 @ 11.1V. Reducing the current required. 2. Add more capacitors on the PCB to stabilize the output to Pi. 3. Expose I2C and try to reserve SPI for future extension if you're going to make a v3 board. Video 2 shows the full robot operating after all the mods. I added a power bank on top to power the Pi, a speaker and microphone for AI interaction, also upgraded the camera to IMX708AF. I would update my review rating after I hear from the manufacturer about the fixes they might make.
S**T
Produit de qualité, mais la documentation pourrait être améliorée. Il faut vraiment avoir des notions de programmation pour avoir un robot fonctionnel. L'installation de la caméra constitue le problème majeur, car sans elle, le robot ne peut pas être utilisé.
S**A
Molto soddisfatta.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
3 days ago