Robot Transfer Units can significantly extend the usability of 6 Axis Robots by adding a 7th Axis, linear movement of the entire robot arm, to the robot which dramatically increases the operating envelope of the standard 6 or less axis robot.
Automation engineers have creatively utilized Robot Transfer Units to improve capacity and productivity and reduce labor costs, errors and safety incidents across a wide range of applications. When most people think of robots in factory automation, they imagine welding and painting operations on assembly lines or if they’re more knowledgeable perhaps they think of shuttling parts and tooling into and out of machining centers.
However, significantly increasing the operating envelope of a robot arm can create an endless array of opportunities to automate a wide range of factory operations. The options are really only limited by the imagination.
One under-represented application area for Robot Transfer Units is in material handling. Material Handling Automation using MHUs (material handling units) can seem like an afterthought. However, as you think about it, an operator and forklift can be an expensive combination to operate. It can be tied up serving other areas or doing things like offloading trucks. It can be prone to errors and mishaps. Perhaps an operator is out sick. A fully automated production operation needs to be running at capacity and often 24/7 – 365. Automating the provision of parts can ensure maximum uptime while reducing other costs. You can easily imagine a row of machining centers that are fed by an Robot Transfer Units. Now imagine a row of these Robot Transfer Units fed systems that are in turn fed by an Robot Transfer Units that extends into a material staging area or warehouse.
Robot Transfer Units give an additional axis that was otherwise foregone. The ability to transverse a room to complete multiple tasks. While the manufacturing process of most companies include Robots there is often a human worker component still in place to move one product from robot to robot, or line to line. When the production line in question is operating large, bulky, and heavy components that human job is daunting. Motion Index Drives has a solution, the addition of the 7th axis, the ability to translate the robot. Carriage Robot Transfer Units are incredibly useful, versatile, and most important, accurate. They allow for one robot to operate between different factory areas to complete a greater volume of tasks. Used in tandem with other robots on similar carriage Robot Transfer Units a line that would have 4 robots and employment of workers to move component from robot to robot is eliminated.
Using this thinking, Robot Transfer Units can serve a variety of tasks, aiding robots in part picking and selection, binning and transferring, palletizing, packing as well as machine loading and unloading . With the ability to bring a robot to do any number of these tasks rather than having a robot for each, production benefits.
When faced with heavy equipment and lots of moving parts, inclusion of a human workforce is time consuming and expensive. Each worker needs to be trained on the equipment, workspace, and the line. Safety risks are a larger concern when the handlers of heavy equipment’s and parts are human. Risk for injury increases with every additional worker. A reduction in required present work force doing dangerous and tiresome work will reduce injuries and lower insurance premiums. The addition of the RTU removes all these factors from the production plan as they have the ability to accomplish any and all tasks assigned to it. With no risk of human error or injury.
Simply put Robot Transfer Units diversify and expand the work of robots in any multi-step production process. Integrated within the layout of the production sequence Robot Transfer Units increase the flexibility and efficiency, which often turn into cost reductions.
Benefits of RTUs in Material Handling Applications:
Labor:
Quality:
Safety: