
Automated separating machine for stacking corners with ReBeL robot
Hardware Price:
ROI
24
months
DOF
6
Max. payload
2
kg
Working independently at last, despite severe paralysis: to fulfil Daniel Hillebrand's dream, the Wittekindshofer workshops in Bad Oeynhausen have created an automated workstation. As the budget was limited, the challenge was to find a cost-effective collaborative robot. Now the ReBeL from igus, a cobot made of high-performance plastic, supports Daniel's work process. The solution also needed to be minimalist and easy to maintain.
Now the ReBeL from igus, a cobot made of high-performance plastic, supports Daniel's work process. igus can offer the cobot at this low price because it is largely made of robust and durable high-performance plastics, which are much cheaper than metal.
Daniel uses the machine to automatically sort out foreign objects. He uses a chin joystick to control a mouse pointer on a tablet. When Daniel Hillebrand starts the machine, a step conveyor transports a handful of edge elements, hundreds of which have been filled into a feed hopper, onto a 250 millimetre wide conveyor belt. The ReBeL Cobot grabs the components from the belt and throws them into a discharge container. Screws and other foreign objects remain on the conveyor belt and fall into a waste container.
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