90 cents
It costs about $100,000 per pound to send something to space.
Well there is no specific cost it depends what you build it out of
Weekdays it costs £2.00
Weekdays it costs £2.00
The question cannot be answered as asked, since building a robot is such a vague description. The definition of a robot can be anything from an automated arm that pushes something when a proximity sensor fires, all the way to something unimaginably complex. As such, the cost can be anything from just a few dollars, up to the costs of whatever hardware you want to put in it.
The cost of the original Voltes V toys, which were 5 ships that can combine (or "Volt In" if you will) to the super robot costs well over $1000 USD. More recent versions made by Bandai (2006 and onwards) are in the $200 range on up.
Sending a robot to Mars can cost anywhere from $100 million to $2.9 billion, depending on the complexity of the mission and the technology involved. This cost includes the spacecraft, launch vehicle, mission operations, and scientific instruments.
I dont think it costs anything to go to times square
A costing system that traces direct costs to a cost object by using the actual direct-cost rates times the actual quantities of the direct-cost inputs and that allocates indirect costs based on the budgeted indirect-cost rates times the actual quantities of the cost-allocation bases.
Sending a robot into space can cost anywhere from tens of millions to billions of dollars, depending on the complexity of the mission and the spacecraft. Costs include research and development, launch services, operation expenses, and maintenance. Commercial companies and government agencies typically bear these expenses.
Cherry Pie costs 10 cents in the Colonial Times.
10,000