I'm not aware of what happened internally at Trossen, but I've not seen much of several of their long-time employees and their development platforms have shifted almost exclusively to ROS and robot arms/rovers.
Humanoids are very difficult in terms of both hardware costs and software development, but the HROS-1/5 were intended to decrease the hardware costs through a fairly inexpensive, open-source, standardized design using relatively few custom parts compared to many humanoid development systems that are either one-off experiments in research labs or require long-term company support via closed-source software for the hardware to do anything useful. Unfortunately, everything was initially built on providing compatibility with the DARwIn-OP framework which is nice for getting started quickly (and playing soccer) but was rather difficult to expand/experiment. It seems that adoption of the hardware was not very widespread compared to the stock Robotis Bioloid kits that can be slightly reconfigured and augmented with additional servos and a new control board to give a bot very similar in design to the HROS-1.
All of the metal frames are still available individually in the Trossen store, but the HROS specific parts do not appear to be available in the shop any longer. They might have some leftovers hanging around the place that they could sell if you email them directly. Models for the required 3D printed and laser-cut parts can be extracted from the models repository (
https://github.com/Interbotix/HROS1-3D-Models). If you are really desperately interested in a true HROS-1, I have two printed head/neck tilt printed part kits and at least some of the laser cut parts and other kit components (
http://forums.trossenrobotics.com/sh...off-some-stuff). Using laser cut acrylic and plastic standoffs for the HROS-1 torso never sat well with me, so intended to replace them with 3D printer torso box to hold all the electronics in a stronger, stiffer, safer design. Unfortunately, I backed a 3D printer on kickstarter instead of buying a kit...
Overall, humanoids are still a bit too specialized compared to wheeled rovers with arms, or even just non-humanoid bipeds. All that extra weight swinging around high off the ground makes control schemes an area of active research while not providing much benefit to non-researchers. A humanoid torso on a wheeled base is much easier for interactions as you don't have to deal with weight, balance, and power/runtime issues anywhere near as severe as with a legged humanoid. A arm/torso-free biped is often adequate for research into bipedal gaits with cost savings on the arms that can go into better servos for the legs.
One of my biggest regrets is that I received a free HROS-1 from Tyberius but never actually did much with it. If only it had gone to a researcher/educator actually capable of being productive instead of me. Ripley has been in a partly assembled state for nearly three years without so much as a minute of actual software development towards making her walk again. I've been trying to make myself partly reassemble her to make a MechWarfare biped (legs with swivel/tilt torso holding airsoft turret), but there are lots of things I've been trying to make myself do for years while failing miserably.
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