
The robot sprays itself with water to stay cool and uses thermal cameras to see through smoke.
Hyundai Motor Group
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Firefighters in South Korea will soon start deploying alongside a massive, six-wheeled, self-cooling autonomous robot that could help keep them safe. Hyundai recently revealed the new, driverless ground drone, built atop a chassis initially intended for military use and looking like something out of a sci-fi film. The robot has a massive hoseâin place of a munitions cannonâthat can both douse fires and illuminate dark areas to help in search and rescue situations. It also has thermal imaging sensors that can see through thick smoke. Hyundai says the goal is to send the bright, red behemoth into dangerous areas ahead of firefighters to start tackling blazes and map out safe escape routes.
âBy tackling dangerous situations in place of people, the robot ultimately protects the lives and safety of firefighters and citizens,â Hyundai notes in a press release.Â

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Firefighting is a crucial but deadly job. Data from South Koreaâs National Fire Agency and cited by Hyundai estimates that 1,788 firefighters were killed or injured on the job over the past decade. In the U.S., the National Fire Protection Association estimates there were 62 firefighter deaths while responding to incidents in 2024 alone. Even when first responders survive, toxic smoke and falling debris can expose them, and those they are trying to save, to serious injury.
Thatâs where this new Unmanned Firefighting Robot comes in. The machine operates on a self-driving platform, meaning it can enter dangerous areas without any human onboard. It can also maneuver into extremely hot environments that would normally burn a human driver. The firefighting robot uses a self-spraying system that continuously cools it with water, keeping its external temperature between 122 and 140 degrees Fahrenheit even when operating in environments exceeding 1,000 degrees.

The truck (though itâs really more like a tank) can reach speeds of up to 31 miles per hour. More importantly for firefighting, its chassis lets it climb inclines of up to 60 percent, meaning it can reliably access sloped areas like underground parking lots and warehouse ramps. When not spraying water, its hose also acts as a powerful light source to light the way for firefighters entering a building. Each wheel has its own independent motor with waterproof electrical modules to prevent malfunctions in difficult terrain.

âThe true value of this robot is not merely its heat resistance or fire suppression power, but its role as a âPhysical AIâ that operates in actual disaster sites,â National Fire Agency Acting Commissioner Seung-ryong Kim said in a statement. âIn extreme environments where firefighters cannot enter, it will collect and learn from real-world operational data to develop into a sophisticated disaster response platform.âÂ
Though itâs unclear how much each of these robots cost, Hyundai says it has already donated two of them to a pair of firefighting stations in South Korea, with two more on the way. And they arenât alone in the firefighting robot space. The Los Angeles Fire Department began experimenting with their own, lower tech fire fighting drone back in 2020. Boston Dynamicsâ Spot quadruped robot (also owned by Hyundai) has also been deployed in some firefighting efforts.Â
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