Disaster "World's first powered pants" by Arc'teryx and Skip give hikers a boost as they walk - "world's first powered pants"

Article (Archive)
Outdoor brand Arc'teryx and Google spinoff Skip have developed a pair of hiking trousers with a built-in exoskeleton that provides a 40 per cent power boost when walking uphill.

Designed to combat mobility challenges caused by ageing, fatigue and injury, the MO/GO pants work via motors at the knee that support the leg muscles during an ascent and the knee joint during the descent.
skip-mo-go-hiking-trousers-arcteryx_dezeen_2364_col_0-852x1278.jpg
Skip and Arc'teryx have developed "powered" hiking trousers

The project was originally initiated by a team at the Google X research and development facility, who went on to establish their own company Skip in 2023 to bring the idea to market.

Founders Kathryn Zealand and Anna Roumiantseva both have loved ones whose lives were affected by mobility challenges, prompting them to explore potential solutions using wearable robotics and artificial intelligence.

Skip partnered with the Advanced Concepts team at Arc'teryx to combine exoskeleton technology with a practical hiking trouser, adding bespoke carbon fibre support structures that spread force from the motor across the leg while hiking.

The result is the "world's first powered pants", the companies have proclaimed.

"MO/GO feels like a natural extension of the body, enhancing mobility without drawing attention to itself," the project team said. "This sleek, slimline design sets it far apart from the medicalised devices available to date."
skip-mo-go-hiking-trousers-arcteryx_dezeen_2364_col_5-852x1278.jpg
The exoskeleton snaps onto carbon fibre cuffs worn inside the trousers
Skip named the product MO/GO after mountain goats and hopes it will be "the ultimate hiking guide" – encouraging people to enjoy outdoor pursuits that might otherwise be beyond their current capabilities.

Its compact battery-powered motors are integrated within an exoskeleton joint that snaps onto lightweight carbon fibre cuffs worn inside the trousers.

Fixings on the cuffs align with openings in the trouser legs, allowing the external powered module to attach and detach as required.

A pocket in the back of the trousers holds a battery that provides over three hours of maximum assistance when walking uphill – boosting leg strength by up to 40 per cent – and recharges automatically when walking downhill.
skip-mo-go-hiking-trousers-arcteryx_dezeen_2364_col_4-852x568.jpg
Buttons can be used to control the amount of support provided

Three buttons on the device are used to turn the power on or off and to alter the amount of assistance. A suite of sensors linked to a computer module also makes real-time adjustments based on terrain and walking style.

For Skip, MO/GO represents the first example of a new product category it calls "movewear", which involves "integrating exoskeleton technology into consumer products that support you as you move effortlessly, confidently and joyfully".

"We believe that it's not enough to make mobility products that are useful," the company said. "To make a real difference in how people move they need to be something you can't wait to put on in the morning and tell all your friends about."

MO/GO is currently available for reservation through the company's website, with shipments expected in late 2025. The product will also be available to rent from various locations throughout the autumn.

Other examples of products designed to assist movement include a mind-controlled suit that helps paralysed users move their arms and legs and a bionic wearable that uses artificial intelligence to correct walking patterns.
 
While arc’teryx is the brand of effete metropolitan types, I would welcome some robo-knees to enable me to do long days on the hill again.
It’s effectively a brace though, if the cuffs need to attach within the fabric shell. Marketing this trousers seems pointless, just market it as a robotic knee enhancer. The trouser bit is superfluous
 
Reminds me of the Trauma Harness in Fallout
One of the inventions created in the Y-17 medical facility of Big MT, the Y-17 trauma harness is a full body suit designed to automatically retrieve injured soldiers and return them to their home base by automatically taking over their motor functions and "walking" them to the base. A complex network of artificial muscle and fibers encases the user and enables this functionality (rather than the crude hydraulics that dominated military technology circa 2077). The suit can also effectively "learn" new behaviors by recording neuro-auto-muscular movements, up to and including shooting and fighting reflexes.[1] The suit tracks the vital functions of the user and, once a certain injury threshold is reached, it takes over the motor functions of the user and walks them to the designated home base out of harm's way.

However, as the Big MT research teams soon learned, the harness had several design problems which precluded it from entering general production, at least until the issues could be rectified. The primary problem was that calibrating the injury threshold which would trigger the suit was problematic, leading to unpredictable behavior. The harness was also unable to determine whether the occupant expired and will continue to function, even if they are completely dead. This functionality was quickly considered a "feature," as autonomous corpse retrieval would also be useful on the battlefield.
 
  • Like
Reactions: TowinKarz
Say what you want about Arcteryx, but this is pretty cool.
I would like to get my dad a pair, if they work and don't cost $2000. He's been an avid outdoorsman his entire life, but his legs have gone bad the last few years.
 
A pocket in the back of the trousers holds a battery that provides over three hours of maximum assistance when walking uphill – boosting leg strength by up to 40 per cent – and recharges automatically when walking downhill.
They missed a "partially" before "recharges" there, and I'm curious to see how big that battery pack actually is...and if it can be easily swapped for a fresh one. If the promo pics are any indication it looks like it may go across the entire upper bum and stick out 2-3 inches.

Also note the camera work in the video, they're trying VERY HARD not to show the area the battery pack is. :story:

My primary concern with the pack is the location though: most people don't crawl on their stomach unless something has gone VERY wrong, but I know I've used the old "scoot down the hill with a butt assist" trick for steep downslopes especially if I didn't trust the surface to provide enough traction. The position of the pack seems to put it in some conflict with this eventuality. Honestly this could be fixed by just allowing the pack to be free-floating with a cord from the pants that can disconnect, in a sturdy carrier that can be strapped, MOLLE'd, or carried independently whever the user chooses.
 
You can literally accomplish the same thing with a high quality knee brace without having to pay a fortune for a fragile electronic device.
A knee brace provides good stability and protects you a bit against the repeated compression, but it’s not compensating past that.
Interesting that they’re focusing on max assist UPhill, I didn’t see that in the first read through. Anyone with borked knees or hips will tell you that UPhill is fine and dandy. It’s downhill that hurts. I can climb hills all day, getting down the fuckers is another matter. Anyway the power assist up rather than down implies these are more for military than helping those of us with creaky joints.
 
A knee brace provides good stability and protects you a bit against the repeated compression, but it’s not compensating past that.
I should have been more clear, I'm not talking about a regular brace, I'm talking about spring loaded braces that constantly push to keep the leg open reducing the load on the knee.

1722701401329.png1722701407352.png1722701419502.png
You use gravity to bend the knee and this uses springs to unbend it.

Of course it won't be as finesseful as the electronic one, but its more reliable, cheaper and doesn't require a charge.
 
You use gravity to bend the knee and this uses springs to unbend it.
Huh. I didn’t know you could buy spring loaded ones…. Might take a look at those. I imagine you have to really strap them on tight?
Thanks, will see if they might be good ….
 
Real braces (like the ones worn by supercross maniacs) are bulky as fuck and cost $500+ each, I remember looking into this. How does this flimsy piece of shit work if an unpowered one looks like a traction device? The fabric hides the most important part, the actual bracing that has to "incorporate" with your leg.

Anyone who is up on their praxis knows that this shit is a toy. Does it provide some level of assistance for grandma's baby steps up a graded dirt road? Sure. It might even be kind of effective for literal cripples and octogenarians. For active males over the age of say, 10, it's almost definitely an uncomfortable and expensive hindrance.

To be fair they (apparently) did advertise it as being for the lame and blind, so I'm not sure it's fake news, but there's still an undercurrent of hype - "look at muh bionic exoskeleton power suit" bullshit. I can't help but laugh at how badly tech has gotten stuck. Face it, the modern age has peaked hard and the most important thing now is to avoid ingesting microplastics and stay in shape rather than buy more baby toys.
 
MO/GO is currently available for reservation through the company's website, with shipments expected in late 2025. The product will also be available to rent from various locations throughout the autumn.
Fuck MO/GO, that's just a bandaid over the real problem, which is that these fucking meat suits we're all trapped in have a shelf life of 60 years and then start painfully breaking down. I want MI/GO - take my brain out of my body and put it in a jar managed by crab people.
 
While arc’teryx is the brand of effete metropolitan types, I would welcome some robo-knees to enable me to do long days on the hill again.
It’s effectively a brace though, if the cuffs need to attach within the fabric shell. Marketing this trousers seems pointless, just market it as a robotic knee enhancer. The trouser bit is superfluous

Yep, it's basically the electronic version of a traditional pneumatic or hydraulic knee offloader, and those have been around for 2 decades.
 
Back