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HSR-065
DENSO Robotics
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HSR-065
DENSO RoboticsThe DENSO HSR-065 is a 4-axis SCARA industrial robot with a 650 mm arm reach, 8 kg maximum payload, and a cycle time of 0.31 seconds (2 kg load). It features advanced vibration control, a rigid lightweight arm, improved heat dissipation, and repeatability of ±0.012 mm, targeting high-speed pick-and-place, assembly, and packaging applications in food, medical, and cosmetics industries. Announced in 2017 by DENSO Robotics (a division of DENSO Corporation, founded 1949), it is available in floor-mount and overhead-mount configurations with optional IP65 and cleanroom (ISO 3/5) variants. As a programmed industrial robot arm, it executes its assigned tasks autonomously once deployed and programmed, with no human performing the task itself during operation.
Availability
Specification
- maximum payload
- 8 kg
- maximum TCP speed (HSR-065)
- 8,850 mm/s
- T-axis (4th axis) speed
- 2,500°/s
- T-axis rotation range
- ±360°
Price
No public price — contact the supplier for a quote.
Good · Bad · Ugly
Evidence-graded claims from the DENSO Robotics deep report
DENSO robots operate autonomously during manufacturing tasks — humans are only involved in programming, setup, and maintenance, not in performing the tasks during operation
Community practitioner posts on r/PLC [17][18][19] independently confirm that DENSO robots execute programmed industrial tasks (assembly, pick-and-place) without real-time human intervention, consistent with standard industrial automation practice.
from DENSO Robotics deep report →Total cost of ownership may exceed initial quote due to add-ons, licensing, and activation fees
DENSO's own official buying guide [6] explicitly warns prospective buyers of these additional costs, making this a vendor-acknowledged limitation rather than a marketing claim; a third-party commerce source [7] independently corroborates software licensing costs of $5,000–$20,000.
from DENSO Robotics deep report →DENSO has donated $800,000+ to FIRST Robotics since 2002 and granted $155,000 to Kettering University for industrial robotics education
The FIRST Robotics donation figure is reported in a DENSO press release [10], and the Kettering University grant is independently confirmed by Kettering University's own news release [14], providing a non-vendor corroboration for the latter figure.
from DENSO Robotics deep report →
DENSO is the world's largest manufacturer and user of small assembly robots
This claim appears consistently across DENSO's own official sources [1][2][4] but no independent third-party audit, industry analyst report, or regulator has verified the market-share ranking in the supplied dossier.
from DENSO Robotics deep report →143,000+ robots deployed at external customer sites (most recent figure)
The 143,000+ figure comes exclusively from DENSO's own homepage [1]; older official pages cite only 80,000+, and no independent source verifies any specific deployment count.
from DENSO Robotics deep report →27,000+ robots deployed in DENSO's own manufacturing facilities
The 27,000+ in-house figure is sourced solely from DENSO's homepage [1], with older official pages citing only 20,000+; no independent facility audit or third-party verification exists in the dossier.
from DENSO Robotics deep report →DENSO robots use harmonic-drive motors enabling high-speed continuous multi-shift operation with a ~35,000-hour greasing interval
The harmonic-drive claim is from DENSO's official source [4], and a single community post [18] corroborates a 35,000-hour greasing interval, but this is one unverified user report and no independent durability test or third-party benchmark is present in the dossier.
from DENSO Robotics deep report →
About the company
Editorial directory of real robot products from leading global manufacturers. Each entry links to the manufacturer's official page.
