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The Essential Guide to Droids (Page 12-13): Difference between revisions

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Created page with "Category:The Essential Guide to Droids thumb|right == R5 == How do you fix what isn't broken? Answer: you don't. Industrial Automaton tried anyway with the R5, resulting in its first true astromech flop. The R5 was commissioned with no specific market or function in mind, and IA's insistence on cutting corners left the model bereft of the R2's "do anything" versatility. The company had created a new droid not because cust..."
 
 
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== R5 ==
== Astromech: R5 ==


How do you fix what isn't broken? Answer: you don't. Industrial Automaton tried anyway with the R5, resulting in its first true astromech flop.
How do you fix what isn't broken? Answer: you don't. Industrial Automaton tried anyway with the R5, resulting in its first true astromech flop.

Latest revision as of 06:16, 26 July 2025

Astromech: R5

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How do you fix what isn't broken? Answer: you don't. Industrial Automaton tried anyway with the R5, resulting in its first true astromech flop.

The R5 was commissioned with no specific market or function in mind, and IA's insistence on cutting corners left the model bereft of the R2's "do anything" versatility. The company had created a new droid not because customers wanted one, but simply because they could. Dismal first‑quarter sales figures were a bracing wake‑up call to Industrial Automaton and a warning bell to the rest of the industry.

One word described the R5: cheap. That simple word, however, was interpreted quite differently by dealers and consumers. The former pointed out that the R5 was the least‑expensive astromech in the marketplace; the latter responded that a shoddy, shabby, inferior droid like the R5 wasn't worth half that price even on its best day.

It didn't help matters that the model's behavioral circuitry matrix was prone to unwelcome glitches over time, causing many R5s to acquire caustic and disagreeable personalities. Buyers also reported problems with chronic overheating, jammed servos, loose bearings, and blown motivators. After a few lamentable sales seasons, each one worse than the last, IA quietly retired the R5 line.

Like most other astromechs in the R series, the R5 featured a heavy grasper arm with a twenty‑five‑kilo lifting capacity and a fine manipulator arm with less than one‑micrometer placement accuracy. It moved about on three wheeled legs and was outfitted with a holographic projector, arc welder, circular saw, and fire extinguisher. A row of three tiny photoreceptors and sensors replaced the large radar eye found on earlier models.

While the droids could be purchased in bulk for next to nothing, their one‑jump hyperspace capacity made them nearly useless as starfighter counterparts. Undaunted, the Rebel Alliance did some serious installing and reprogramming on their large stable of R5s. When they were finished, the modified units could hold six, seven, even ten sets of navigational coordinates in active memory.

But the droids' personality problems remained, and a few pilots didn't like the larger target profile their "flowerpot" heads offered to an enemy's laser cannons.

Trusty R2s remained the combat droid of choice. Wedge Antilles, legendary commander of Rogue Squadron, used R5‑D2 ("Mynock") as his X‑wing's astromech during the bloody Battle of Borleias. Mynock's terrified screeching grew so annoying, however, that an irritated Wedge soon had him memory‑wiped and renamed R5‑6B ("Cafe").

Info Boxes

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Side View

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  • Head Rotation Point
  • Holographic Projector
  • Broadband Antenna/Receiver
  • Electromagnetic Field Sensor Unit
  • Access Panels
  • Infrared Receptor
  • Photoreceptors (3)
  • Auditory Sensor
  • Computer Interface/Lubricant Arms Compartment
  • Spacecraft Linkage & Repair Arms
  • Loudspeaker
  • Polarity Sink
  • Interference Pulse Stabilizers
  • Systems Diagnostic Input Receptors
  • Third Tread (extended)
  • Motorized Treads
  • System Ventilation
  • Recharge Coupling
  • Power Cells
  • Heat Exhaust

Front View

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  • Spacecraft Linkage & Repair Arms
  • Loudspeaker
  • Polarity Sink
  • Interference Pulse Stabilizers
  • Systems Diagnostic Input Receptors
  • Third Tread (extended)
  • Motorized Treads
  • System Ventilation
  • Recharge Coupling
  • Power Cells
  • Heat Exhaust