Companies

Armolab

Ukrainian developer of the Mamont heavy electric ground robot for frontline logistics and casualty evacuation.

Armolab is a young Ukrainian defence-robotics company co-founded by Dmytro Mamonov, an unmanned-ground-vehicle engineer displaced from the front-line city of Sloviansk who has a long track record in Ukrainian land robotics, having earlier worked on platforms that became the Tencore TerMIT and the Tank Bureau project that grew into NUMO Robotics .

The company’s flagship is the Mamont (“Mammoth”), a heavy six-wheeled electric ground robot weighing around 1.1 tonnes that carries up to 700 kilograms over a range of up to 100 kilometres at speeds reaching 50 km/h, with 330 mm of ground clearance and light armour. It is built for long-range frontline resupply and casualty evacuation: a tipping cargo bed lets supplies be unloaded remotely, a planned open configuration is meant to evacuate two wounded soldiers, and the frame is reinforced to carry anti-drone netting, with FPV-killing turrets envisaged for later versions. Reviewers place the Mamont in the “heavy logistics” lane of Ukraine’s combat-UGV field, distinct from medevac-focused designs such as Tencore’s armoured-capsule TerMIT or the soft-suspension casualty carrier from BeeForces . Armolab also builds the Robonoshi, a compact tracked stretcher robot that can move a single wounded soldier weighing up to 100 kilograms over distances of about 10 kilometres.

Both machines are early-stage. The Mamont was unveiled as a prototype in March 2026, and the company has said it aims to codify and scale production over the summer of 2026; the Robonoshi remains in testing. Beyond that, Armolab has disclosed little — its headquarters, founding date and financing are not public, and the Mamont has not yet been codified by Ukraine’s Ministry of Defence or confirmed in combat. The firm sits among a fast-growing cohort of wartime Ukrainian UGV makers racing to take resupply and evacuation runs off human shoulders in drone-saturated terrain.

ground-robot ugv logistics casualty-evacuation electric counter-fpv

Products

Ground robots

  • Mamont

    Heavy 6x6 electric UGV (~1.1 t, up to 700 kg payload, up to 100 km range, up to 50 km/h, 330 mm clearance) for long-range frontline resupply and casualty evacuation, with light armour, a tipping cargo bed and a frame for anti-drone netting; prototype unveiled March 2026.

  • Robonoshi

    Compact tracked stretcher robot for evacuating a wounded soldier over short distances (up to 100 kg, ~10 km range); in testing.

Sources