Autonomous hull-cleaning robots for maritime vessel maintenance
Fleet Robotics is building autonomous underwater robots designed to clean ship hulls and manage biofouling — a recurring operational cost that degrades fuel efficiency and increases drag. The tech stack reveals a hardware-first company: CAD tools (Fusion 360, Solidworks), embedded systems (C/C++, RTOS, CAN, I2C), and simulation/control (Docker, Protocol Buffers). The hiring mix is heavily intern-weighted (5 of 8 roles) alongside senior engineers, suggesting rapid prototyping and early-stage hardware development.
Fleet Robotics develops autonomous underwater robotic systems for proactive hull cleaning and biofouling management on commercial vessels. The company is focused on reducing fuel consumption losses caused by hull degradation and maintenance downtime. Active development spans underwater localization, swarm coordination, sensor fusion, and obstacle detection — all required for autonomous operation in harsh marine environments. The organization is headquartered in Somerville, MA and currently operates as a small, engineering-focused team.
Autonomous underwater robots for ship hull cleaning and biofouling detection. Active projects include underwater localization, sensor fusion, path planning, waterproof robot body design, and swarm coordination systems.
CAD/design tools (Fusion 360, Solidworks, Altium Designer), embedded C/C++, RTOS, CAN/CAN-FD communication, Docker containerization, Protocol Buffers, and Linux. Heavy emphasis on real-time embedded systems and hardware simulation.
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