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M150 Plus
Quicktron
Not yet assessed
- Height
- 60 mm
- Payload
- —
- Verified autonomy
- not assessed
- Real deployment
- not assessed
- Status
- —
- Price
- —
M150 Plus
QuicktronThe extracted facts span at least four entirely different products all sharing the designation 'M150 Plus' or similar: (1) Quicktron's M150 warehouse AMR (1,500 kg load, QR navigation), (2) MoTeC's M150 ECU (automotive engine control unit, $3,095), (3) E-Plus-3D's EP-M150 Pro metal 3D printer (SLM, 500W fiber laser), and (4) GMKtec's NucBox G3 Plus mini-PC with Intel N150 processor. The facts cannot be reconciled into a single coherent system. No independent reviews, teardowns, or community reports exist in the supplied facts specifically for the Quicktron M150 Plus AMR; the Quicktron M150 spec data comes exclusively from official sources. The autonomy verdict below is applied to the Quicktron M150 AMR as the most robotics-relevant interpretation, but the analyst notes the dataset is severely contaminated by unrelated products.
Availability
Specification
- Quicktron M150 – lifting height
- 60 mm
- Quicktron M150 – max no-load speed
- 1.5 m/s
- Quicktron M150 – battery life
- 7.5 hours
Price
No public price — contact the supplier for a quote.
Good · Bad · Ugly
Evidence-graded claims from the Quicktron deep report
Quicktron holds a strategic partnership with KION Group, one of the world's largest intralogistics companies, which also led a prior C+ funding round.
KION Group's own press release [9] — an independent corporate disclosure from the partner, not Quicktron — confirms the strategic partnership; the C+ round led by KION is further corroborated by trade publications Robotics247 [12] and MMH [13], though specific partnership deliverables and commercial outcomes remain unverified.
from Quicktron deep report →Quicktron has established a physical presence in the Americas, expanding beyond its Asia-Pacific base to serve global markets.
Asian Robotics Review [5], an independent trade publication, reported Quicktron's Americas office establishment; however, the article does not specify the number of deployed units or named customers in the Americas, leaving actual commercial traction in the region unverified.
from Quicktron deep report →Quicktron completed a Series D funding round exceeding $100M USD, with investors including Golden Oriole Capital, FarGlory Group, and two government-linked funds.
The Robot Report [11], an independent trade publication, reported the $100M+ Series D; Quicktron's own blog [10] names the four investors, and the Robot Report article corroborates the round's existence and scale, though the exact final close amount and investor terms are not independently audited.
from Quicktron deep report →
Quicktron AMRs operate fully autonomously on material-handling tasks (navigation, lifting, transport) without human teleoperation or remote driving, using QR code + inertial or SLAM navigation with ±10 mm positioning accuracy.
Navigation specs and autonomy description come exclusively from Quicktron's own product pages [2][3][4] and official site [1]; no independent third-party test, customer audit, or journalist field verification of the ±10 mm accuracy or teleoperation-free operation is present in the dossier.
from Quicktron deep report →Quicktron has deployed 42,000+ AMR units across 1,000+ clients in 20+ countries at full commercial scale.
The 42,000+ figure appears only on Quicktron's own website [1], while the only independent-adjacent figure (LinkedIn, also Quicktron-controlled) states 25,000+; no third-party customer audit, analyst report, or journalist count independently corroborates either deployment number.
from Quicktron deep report →Quicktron's F-series autonomous forklifts (FD140/FD150) use SLAM navigation to operate in 2,500 mm minimum aisles, lifting up to 1,500 kg to 3,244 mm height at up to 2 m/s.
All F-series specifications originate exclusively from Quicktron's official product pages [4]; no independent forklift safety certification body, customer deployment report, or journalist field test in the dossier verifies these operational specs or the SLAM navigation performance in real warehouse conditions.
from Quicktron deep report →
Quicktron's robots deliver 75% storage efficiency gain, 4× faster order fulfillment vs. manual, and 99.99% picking/order accuracy.
These performance figures appear only on Quicktron's LinkedIn company page [7] as vendor marketing claims; the dossier explicitly flags them as unverified with no independent customer outcome data, third-party audit, or case study from a named client corroborating any of the three metrics.
from Quicktron deep report →
About the company
Editorial directory of real robot products from leading global manufacturers. Each entry links to the manufacturer's official page.
