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DIY robot concept

Best servo motors for robot arm

Choose servos by torque, backlash, power draw and duty cycle before you choose by headline speed.

Robot arm servos fail when the arm is designed around price instead of torque. The shoulder and elbow carry the whole load, so those joints need the strongest motors. Wrist and gripper joints can usually be cheaper and lighter.

For a small desktop arm, metal gear hobby servos are fine if the links are short. For better repeatability, move the base and shoulder to steppers or smart servos and leave hobby servos for the gripper.

Core parts

High-torque shoulder servo

$28

Largest torque requirement, usually the first upgrade

Metal gear elbow servo

$18

Handles payload and link weight

Standard wrist servo

$10

Lower torque joint for tool angle

PCA9685 servo driver

$7

Stable multi-servo PWM from ESP32 or Arduino

6V high-current supply

$18

Prevents brownouts and jitter

Design variants

Budget servo arm

Use stronger servos only on shoulder and elbow.

Precision hybrid arm

Use stepper reduction on base and shoulder, hobby servo on gripper.

Practical safety note

Treat the generated output as a prototype plan, not a certified product. Body-adjacent, high-voltage, optical-energy and mobility builds need qualified review before real-world use.

FAQ

How much torque do I need?

Estimate payload plus link weight times distance from the joint, then add a large safety margin.

Why do cheap servos jitter?

Weak power, backlash and poor internal control are the common causes.

Are smart servos worth it?

For feedback and repeatability, yes. For a first low-cost arm, regular servos are enough.

Related robot guides

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