In recent years, with the rapid growth of humanoid robots and collaborative robots, high-precision force control has become a core capability for achieving compliant and safe interaction. At the heart of this capability lies a critical component inside the robotic joint module: the torque sensor, responsible for perceiving force.
However, the installation method of torque sensors directly determines joint performance, reliability, and cost. Today, two main technical approaches dominate the market: embedded (integrated) and external (add-on) torque sensors.
This distinction goes beyond simply “built-in” versus “attached.” The fundamental difference lies in whether the torque sensing structure is an intrinsic part of the mechanical transmission chain and integrated within the joint itself.
Embedded torque sensors are deeply integrated into the joint structure, becoming the fourth core component alongside the motor, reducer, and encoder. This enables a fully integrated system combining drive, transmission, sensing, and control.
Strain gauges are applied to components such as the output flange, hollow shaft, or a dedicated elastic element. Torque is calculated by measuring minute torsional deformation. This is the most classic and widely used method.
Torque is detected by measuring angular differences via magnetic rings or changes in material magnetic properties. This non-contact approach offers excellent sealing and resistance to oil and contaminants, making it a rapidly growing trend.
Existing elastic components—such as the flexspline in harmonic drives or output flanges—are reused as sensing elements. This approach requires advanced mechanical decoupling to avoid interference from axial forces and bending moments.

No additional axial length is introduced, enabling ultra-compact joint modules and improving payload-to-weight ratio.
Internal wiring allows full sealing (high IP rating), protecting against dust, water, and mechanical wear.
High structural stiffness and low inertia support high-bandwidth, responsive force control.
Pre-calibrated at the factory, offering plug-and-play integration and reducing system complexity.
Requires solving strength, stiffness, overload protection, temperature drift compensation, and multi-axis decoupling within a confined space.
Sensor failure often requires returning the entire joint module for repair, leading to longer downtime.
External shocks may cause irreversible micro-damage or zero drift that is not visually detectable.
Humanoid robots
Collaborative robots (cobots)
Quadruped robots
Exoskeletons
Dexterous robotic hands
These applications prioritize compactness, lightweight design, and high reliability in mass production.
External torque sensors are standalone standardized components installed between the joint output and the load via flanges or couplings.
Installed between the joint output flange and the load, acting as a measurement ring. This is the most common approach.
Mounted directly on the transmission shaft, suitable for specific spatial configurations.
Although not a physical sensor, torque is estimated from motor current in low-cost applications. However, accuracy is affected by friction, temperature drift, and gearbox efficiency, making it unsuitable for high-precision force control. This method is widely used in cost-sensitive robotic applications.
Sensors can be quickly replaced, minimizing downtime. Ideal for R&D and iterative development.
High-precision, certified sensors can be used to validate and calibrate embedded solutions.
A large variety of products are available with different ranges, accuracies, and interfaces (e.g., CAN, EtherCAT).
Adds axial length and bulk, making joints less compact.
Additional interfaces and elastic elements may limit control bandwidth and introduce alignment errors.
Exposed wiring requires additional protection against dust, liquids, and mechanical stress.
R&D and testing platforms
High-load or impact-prone environments (using sacrificial sensors)
Retrofit or upgrade projects
If your goal is productization and mass production, prioritizing compactness, lightweight design, reliability, and clean integration →
Choose embedded torque sensors.
If you are in R&D, prototyping, testing, or require high flexibility and easy maintenance →
Choose external torque sensors.
Verify specifications for resistance to bending moments and axial loads (e.g., <2% FS).
Ensure the sensor maintains accuracy after 2× or 5× overload conditions.
Proper flatness, stiffness, and alignment are essential—poor installation can degrade even the best sensors.
Embedded torque sensors represent the future of highly integrated robotic joints, enabling scalable, high-performance, and cost-effective mass production. Meanwhile, external sensors retain enduring value in flexibility, validation, and adaptability.
There is no absolute “better” solution—only the one that best fits your application. Understanding these engineering trade-offs allows you to equip your robot with the most suitable “sense of touch,” achieving the optimal balance between precision, reliability, and cost.
About Author
Theodore Li serves as the Technical Director at HONPINE, overseeing the R&D strategy for replication products, guiding team selection, and managing both pre-sales and after-sales operations.
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