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MiR1000

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MiR1000

Mobile Industrial Robots

Not yet assessed

Height
Payload
Verified autonomy
not assessed
Real deployment
not assessed
Status
Price
verified / really deployed unverified / demo-stage
Unverified

The MiR1000 is a heavy-duty autonomous mobile robot (AMR) manufactured by Mobile Industrial Robots (MiR), headquartered in Odense, Denmark. It carries up to 1000 kg (2200 lbs) at up to 1.2 m/s and is designed as a collaborative, safe alternative to forklifts for internal logistics and manufacturing transport. The robot features 360° safety sensing (2x SICK microScan3, 2x Intel RealSense D435, 8x proximity sensors), complies with multiple international safety standards (ISO 13849-1, ISO/CD 3691-4, EN 1525, ANSI B56.5), and supports modular top attachments including pallet lifts, conveyor belts, and robot arms. It was launched at Automate 2019 with a list price of approximately $82,780 and is deployed globally at major manufacturers including Airbus, Toyota, and Honeywell. All evidence consistently supports fully autonomous task execution with no human performing or driving the transport task.

Availability

Shipping

Specification

payload_capacity
1000 kg (2200 lbs)
max_speed
1.2 m/s (2.6 mph) with maximum payload on flat surface
dimensions
W920mm x H320mm x L1350mm; load surface 1300mm x 900mm; 30mm ground clearance
robot_weight
230 kg
battery
48Vdc, 40Ah Li-NMC battery; minimum 700 charge cycles
minimum_corridor_width
2100 mm (default footprint); minimum pivoting width 2600 mm (normal setup), 2500 mm (improved setup)

Price

No public price — contact the supplier for a quote.

Good · Bad · Ugly

Evidence-graded claims from the Mobile Industrial Robots deep report

Good
  • MiR products are fully commercially deployed at scale across manufacturing, warehousing, and healthcare environments — not in pilot or demo stage.

    Independent distributor [9] and industry tracker [11][12] sources confirm commercial availability and active distribution; the DENSO 43-robot fleet, while vendor-reported, is corroborated by the company's documented $50M–$100M revenue and ~270 employees [12], consistent with scaled commercial operations — though individual deployment outcomes remain unaudited.

    from Mobile Industrial Robots deep report →
Bad
  • MiR's DENSO deployment achieved 500,000+ successful missions with a fleet of 43 AMRs (27 MiR1350 + 16 MiR250) at an error rate below 0.5%, processing ~1,000 items per shift.

    These figures originate exclusively from MiR's own marketing/customer success materials [1][14]; no independent journalist, auditor, or regulator has verified the mission count, error rate, or throughput figures.

    from Mobile Industrial Robots deep report →
  • The MiR1200 Pallet Jack uses AI-based pallet detection capable of identifying shrink-wrapped pallets, enabling fully autonomous pallet pick-up without human assistance.

    The AI pallet detection capability is described only on MiR's official product page [3]; no independent benchmark, customer field report, or third-party test has verified detection accuracy or reliability on shrink-wrapped pallets in real-world conditions.

    from Mobile Industrial Robots deep report →
  • MiR and Universal Robots jointly showcased integrated AI-powered automation workflows combining AMRs with collaborative robot arms at Automate 2025 (Detroit, May 2025).

    The joint showcase is confirmed by an official UR/MiR press release [13], but this is a vendor announcement of a trade-show demo — no independent reporter, customer, or analyst has verified the capabilities demonstrated or confirmed any resulting commercial deployments of the integrated system.

    from Mobile Industrial Robots deep report →

About the company

Editorial directory of real robot products from leading global manufacturers. Each entry links to the manufacturer's official page.