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Warehouse robots come of age

extremetech.com

31 points by Glowbox 14 years ago · 6 comments

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ahi 14 years ago

More than a decade ago I worked in a warehouse with far superior automation than moving pods. Pieces could be picked off 50 foot high shelves and moved to the proper packing stations and loading dock on conveyors. Moving entire shelving units around seems a horrible waste of energy, not to mention floor space (limits on shelving height plus allowance for movement).

  • zeteo 14 years ago

    Using robots for this task is more a question of fixed cost than anything else. Rather than build a conveyor belt to each cubbyhole in the warehouse - some of which may not be used for weeks on end - it's much cheaper to have a few robots that go to each spot as needed. And it's also more flexible, since it's easy to add or remove robots as needed.

    In computing terms, conveyor belts everywhere cost O(warehouse space) to build, whereas mobile robots cost O(activity volume). Profits are also, most likely, O(activity volume).

    • onemoreact 14 years ago

      I think maintenance costs / downtime is also a big factor. With robots most failures simply reduce throughput but with conveyor belts you risk shutting down sections of the warehouse when something breaks or needs to be repaired. On the other hand you can order a few extra robots and swap then out for maintenance.

      As to energy costs, moving a shelf a at most 1/2 mile at low speeds on a level floor using electric motors probably uses less energy than you might think. Don't forget human pickers are say 150lb people walking up and down the same isles and they use about 150-200W to do so. The shelves weigh more (up to 1,000 lb), but you can a turn off most of the lights and electric motors are more efficient than walking. Assuming it's 400W a robot that's around 4 cents an hour per robot or something like 300$ a year.

asdfdsa1234 14 years ago

This article has a low but not abysmal content-to-annoying-ad ratio

  • ahi 14 years ago

    Most of the content seems to be thinly veiled PR/ads as well.

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