Robot Wars Wiki
Robot Wars Wiki
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[[File:Boom Bot Pits.jpg|thumb|The unnamed loanerbot (below)]]
 
[[File:Boom Bot Pits.jpg|thumb|The unnamed loanerbot (below)]]
As there were many loanerbots built, some of them may not be known, as many were not chosen to replace another robot. One example was a robot which resembled a rusty version of [[The Green House]], minus the plexiglass, and with the addition of a scoop similar to [[Dynamite]].
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As there were many loanerbots built, some of them may not be known, as many were not chosen to replace another robot. One example was a robot which resembled a rusty version of [[The Green House]], minus the plexiglass, and with the addition of a scoop similar to [[Dynamite]]. A possible name for this rusty version is likely '''Boom-Bot''' but this has yet to be properly confirmed.
   
 
== Other examples ==
 
== Other examples ==

Revision as of 00:57, 12 December 2017

To fill spaces in various robot competitions, loanerbots were sometimes included in the lineup. A vast majority of these robots were built by the Robot Wars technical crew. In most cases, this was because the team had experienced a shipping mishap or technical malfunction with their original robot and needed a replacement.

Loanerbots were mainly used in Robot Wars: Extreme Warriors and Nickelodeon Robot Wars, but were also seen in other series.

A specific subset of loanerbot is the stock robot. These robots, unlike loanerbots, were either built exclusively to battle each other, or were entered to make up numbers and were actively encouraged to lose. They were often driven by established roboteers, guest competitors such as celebrities and international representatives, or members of the production team themselves. The three most well-known stock robots were all featured in Robot Wars: The First Wars because only thirty-three robots entered the thirty-six robot bracket.

Role in Robot Wars

In the US and Nickelodeon series, loanerbots were only used to make up the numbers in side events and were usually not allowed to compete in the main US Championship. However, Tiger Cat was brought in as a reserve for Conquering Clown in the Season 1 US Championship, after the latter withdrew due to technical problems, while similarly, Coffin-Bot would be loaned to Team Terminator to replace Skullmania, who also faced technical difficulties. In Dutch Series 2, they were used in the main competition due to a lack of competitors or, in the case of Hard, to replace an identically-named competitor which the team withdrew before the series began.

The loanerbots were, for the most part, below the standards of regular competitor robots, and rarely enjoyed success when fighting against them. Due to their ineffective weapons, fragile armour and basic drive systems, they often became targets for the House Robots to deal extra damage where possible, and generally did not hold much sentimental value among roboteers. The sole exception was the undefeated Tut Tut, which was reworked by Team Raptor's Chris Harriman to feature a more powerful pneumatics system for its axe, and won various events across Extreme Warriors and the Nickelodeon series with these revisions.

The three Series 1 Stock Robots (Grunt, WYSIWYG and Eubank the Mouse) were required to compete in the first series to add to the 33 genuine competitors. They were prohibited from reaching the Arena stage during their heats, resulting in them being eliminated in their Trials after clearing The Gauntlet without much difficulty. The three Stock Robots from the first UK series were robots from international robotic combat competitions that took place before the televised show began.

The modern stock robots were built by Robo Challenge, and used similar components across all eight models, including the same wheels (with one exception) and motors. Robo Challenge's stock robots were initially intended to fight only each other in a side event, and did not necessarily comply with the Robot Wars weight limit, with The Cat in particular weighing in excess of 140kg.

List of Loanerbots

Loanerbots were often given specific identities depending on the wishes of the team in possession. They could also have their colours and even weapons changed. To avoid the arbitrary distinction between two interchangeable names, loanerbots are listed by their generic description and then by the name(s) given to them.

Stock robots are listed in italics.

General Description First Identity Second Identity Notes
A two-wheel driven robot with a horizontal bar spinner. Arena Cleaner
(Scott Mills and Chris Stark and Dave Moulds, Battle of the Stars)
Battle of the Stars Episode 1 winner.
A green box wedge-shaped robot with a hammer. Bondi Titch
(Matthew Jennings and Linda Jennings, Extreme Series 2)
Built specifically to represent Australia in the Commonwealth Carnage, to be driven as a prize for a contest. Not acknowledged by the show, it was later confirmed to be a stock robot by John Heatlie of Team Corkscrew.
A robot resembling a coffin, with a horizontal flywheel. Coffin-Bot
(Team Terminator, US Season 1)
Competed in the main US Championship after Skullmania withdrew.
An invertible thwackbot with a bladed arm. Dee
(Jordan Stephens and John Reid, Battle of the Stars)
Rabid M8
(Team REC, Series 10, International Special)
Technically violates the active weaponry rule established by Robot Wars.
A box-shaped robot with a lifting scoop. Dynamite
(Team Dynamite, German Series/UK Series 6)
A pyramid-shaped grey robot with a mouse's head and boxing gloves. Eubank the Mouse
(Steve Dove, Series 1)
Also competed in the 1995 UK Open Competition. Its alleged breakdown in Heat F allowed eventual Grand Finalist T.R.A.C.I.E. through to the arena stage.
A long wedge with barbs. Grunt
(Matthew Dickinson, Series 1)
Built by judge Eric Dickinson to compete in the 1995 UK Open Competition and driven by his son Matthew. Drove off the sumo ring deliberately in under five seconds, much to the displeasure of the Barry team, who had been eliminated in the Gauntlet and felt their machine would have done far better in the Trial.
A round shell robot utilising weapons from other loanerbots. Hard
(Team Compactory, Dutch Series 2)
Utilised the axe from Tut Tut and the flipping arm from The Green House; the latter weapon was used as a static ram/wedge.
A round robot with an overhead spinning mechanism. Hoot
(Robotics Club Kinderdijk, Dutch Series 2)
Hoot
Team Piecemaker, Nickelodeon)
A flat cylinder with a full body spinner. Joker
(Sylvan Lake Robot Warriors, US Season 1)
Humdrum
(Team Robot Dojo, Nickelodeon)
A two-wheel driven wedge with a front-hinged flipper. Interstellar: MML
(Maggie Aderin-Pocock and Shane Swan, Battle of the Stars)
A box-wedge robot with a hammer. Jar
(Jonathan and Alistair Brownlee and Gabriel Stroud, Battle of the Stars)
Stroud incorporated his own robot's armoured front wedge onto the loanerbot.
An invertible axlebot with a vertical flywheel. Kadeena Machina
(Kadeena Cox and Ellis Ware, Battle of the Stars)
Battle of the Stars Episode 2 winner. The only robot to go undefeated in the rebooted series of Robot Wars.
A cylindrical pushing robot with raised ridges and front spikes. Nemesis
(Team Nemesis, Series 1-2)
Terror Australis
(Unnamed Australian team, Series 3)
Unlike most instances, Nemesis was an established UK competitor robot, built by Team Nemesis. However, when the Terror Australis team's original robot broke down in the International League Championship, Nemesis was repainted, renamed and entered in its place.
A roughly box-shaped robot with an axe. Rigby
(Team Chippermonkey, Nickelodeon)
A humanoid machine. Ramrombit (George Francis, Series 2) Specifically designed for the Inferno Insurrection by the Robot Wars crew. Flammable.
An box-shaped robot with a flipping arm, inspired by the dragon of the Welsh flag. Robo Savage
(Robbie Savage and Jason Marston, Battle of the Stars)
A wooden box-shaped robot with an axe. Rot Box
(Team Boltz, US Season 1)
Bang
(Team Boltz, US Season 2)
The only instance of a single team renaming a loanerbot across two appearances.
A silver box-shaped robot with a cutting disc. Silver Box
(Team Vicious US Season 1)
Zanzara
(Team Creative Steel, Nickelodeon)
Covered in purple fur in the Zanzara guise.
A two-wheel driven robot armed with a vertical crusher. Soldier Ant
(Neil Oliver and Will Thomas, Battle of the Stars)
A robot featuring an axe and porcupine spikes. Spike
(Sinclair Robotics, US Season 1)
A two-wheeled, box-shaped robot with exposed electronics. Teddybot (No team, Series 4) Designed and built by producer Bill Rudgard and Derek Foxwell, Teddybot was built specifically for a demonstration battle with Sir Killalot held during the Series 4 qualifiers and destroyed, before later being repaired by George Francis of Team Chaos.
Invertible robot based upon a cat, armed with horizontal flywheel. The Cat
(Suzi Perry and Craig Danby, Battle of the Stars)
Significantly overweight at around 140kg, with its weapon alone weighing roughly 45kg.
A box-wedge robot with clear polycarbonate armour. The Green House
(Team Bot-Head, US Season 1)
Vert-I-Go
(Team In-Theory, Nickelodeon)
A mouse-designed robot armed with a flipping shell. The Green Mouse
(Team Katana, US Season 1)
Squirmin Vermin
Team Chippermonkey, Nickelodeon)
Changed fur colours from green to yellow between appearances.
A box wedge with an axe, covered in fur. Tiger Cat
(Dynamic Duo, US Season 1)
Flammable; was doused in WD-40 by the team owing to their dissatisfaction with the robot.
A pyramid-shaped robot with an axe. Tut Tut, (Team Raptor, US Season 1) Tut Tut, (Team Juggerbot, Nickelodeon) Original working name was King Tut. US Season 1 Tag Team Terror co-champion (along with Drillzilla), Nickelodeon Challenge Belt winner.
White double-wedge shaped featherweight. WYSIWYG (Michelle Wheeley, Series 1) Originally competed in Robot Wars '96. The driver for Series 1, Michelle Wheeley, joined the Cruella team in Series 2.
Boom Bot Pits

The unnamed loanerbot (below)

As there were many loanerbots built, some of them may not be known, as many were not chosen to replace another robot. One example was a robot which resembled a rusty version of The Green House, minus the plexiglass, and with the addition of a scoop similar to Dynamite. A possible name for this rusty version is likely Boom-Bot but this has yet to be properly confirmed.

Other examples

Stanoscloir Loaner

Stanoscloir

  • Stanoscloir was a robot entered by Team Nemesis in Robot Wars' sister show, Techno Games. Stanoscloir was, itself, a loanerbot, with an extremely similar shape and design to Rigby. Stanoscloir however was lacking a weapon, and instead used a wooden pole used for battering.
  • Kan-Opener was also lent to the original team during Series 8, as it was actually owned by Jason Marston of Thor. However, this loan was handled away from the production of the show, and was a private exchange between the two teams.