Through the implementation of reconfigurability to achieve flexibility and adaptation to tasks by morphology changes rather than by increasing the number of joints, malleable robots present advantages over traditional serial robot arms in regards to reduced weight, size, and cost. While limited in degrees of freedom (DOF), malleable robots still provide versatility across operations typically served by systems using higher DOF than required by the tasks. In this paper, we present the creation of a 2-DOF malleable robot, detailing the design of joints and malleable link, along with its modelling through forward and inverse kinematics, and a reconfiguration methodology that informs morphology changes based on end effector location— determinin...