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Cobots' Build Safety, Flexibility, and Heavy-payload Capabilities

At the Yaskawa Booth, Memco's Peter Tosh told us that collaborative robots are revolutionizing the packaging industry by offering safety and flexibility to brand owners and CPGs while previous limitations on payload, reach, and speed fall away.

Memco's Peter Tosh demonstrates sensor-based gate perimeters, and their speed-reducing affects on the 30-kg payload Yaskawa collaborative palletizing robot demonstrated live, without physical caging.
Memco's Peter Tosh demonstrates sensor-based gate perimeters, and their speed-reducing affects on the 30-kg payload Yaskawa collaborative palletizing robot demonstrated live, without physical caging.

Collaborative robots (cobots) are having a transformative impact on packaging processes, and nowhere on the PACK EXPO floor was this more evident than at the Yaskawa booth. According to Memco’s Peter Tosh, who was helping to demonstrate this equipment, cobots are changing the game for brand owners and consumer packaged goods (CPG) companies, offering a unique blend of safety, flexibility, and efficiency. 

During their early years, cobots were certainly marvels, but still were small, low payload, and low reach machines compared to their gated, less human-friendly industrial counterparts. Early cobots were often considered fragile or unreliable, too, by comparison. But this perception has evolved over the past decade. Cobots are now larger, capable of handling heavier payloads, and possess greater reach and speed while retaining their collaborative nature. 

For example, a large 30-kg payload Yaskawa cobot was operating in the booth, without any gates, as attendees milled about nearby. The 6-axis equipment, a collaborative equivalent of Yaskawa’s GP series, was ,able to extend up to 6-ft. in any direction in free, open space, only gated by sensor automation affecting the palletizing robots’ speed. This expanded capability opens up opportunities for tasks like large(r)-format palletizing, previously considered beyond the reach of collaborative robots. 

One of the defining features of these modern cobots is their safety mechanisms. They employ sensor-based technology, such as area scanners, to detect the presence of humans or objects in their vicinity. As a result, when someone gets closer to a cobot, it automatically slows down, minimizing any potential danger. And they can be programmed to deaccelerate to a crawl immediately, or altogether halt in an instant, in closer vicinities. This level of customization ensures that cobots can be integrated into production lines without posing risks to workers. 

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