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KR810

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KR810

KR810

Kassow Robots

Not yet assessed

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

The KR810 is a 7-axis collaborative robot arm manufactured by Kassow Robots (Copenhagen, Denmark), a subsidiary of Bosch Rexroth AG since April 2022. It features 850mm reach, 10kg payload, 225 deg/s joint speed, and a compact 130×130mm footprint, with an optional Edge Edition integrating the controller into the robot base for AGV/AMR mobile deployments. Once programmed, the arm executes tasks autonomously in automatic mode without a teach pendant, making it a true industrial cobot for applications such as machine tending, palletizing, and material handling. No independent teardown or user-community evidence contradicts the vendor's hardware specifications, though the weight figure shows a minor discrepancy across sources (24kg vs. 25kg).

Availability

Shipping

Specification

KR810 reach
850 mm
KR810 payload
10 kg
KR810 weight
24–25 kg (minor discrepancy between sources; see conflicts)
KR810 joint speed
225 deg/s
KR810 max linear TCP speed
1 m/s
degrees of freedom
7 axes
Edge Edition power
42 VDC to 58 VDC (direct DC, battery-compatible for AGV/AMR)

Price

No public price — contact the supplier for a quote.

Good · Bad · Ugly

Evidence-graded claims from the Kassow Robots deep report

Good
  • All Kassow Robots cobot arms feature 7 degrees of freedom (7-axis) across the entire product lineup, enabling redundant motion and superior reach around obstacles compared to standard 6-axis cobots.

    The 7-axis configuration is confirmed by official specs, the Bosch Rexroth acquisition page [12], independent distributor listings [5][6], and The Robot Report [13] — multiple independent commerce and news sources corroborate the vendor claim, though real-world dexterity advantages over 6-axis rivals remain unverified by independent benchmarks.

    from Kassow Robots deep report →
  • The Edge Edition (launched April 2024) integrates the controller into the robot base, enabling a 160×200mm footprint and direct DC power (42–58VDC), making it compatible with AGV/AMR mobile platforms.

    The April 2024 launch and AGV/AMR compatibility are independently confirmed by an Automate.org news article [10], which also notes the 2025 EDGE Award recognition — though real-world AGV/AMR deployment outcomes are not documented by any independent source.

    from Kassow Robots deep report →
  • Kassow Robots has been majority-owned by Bosch Rexroth AG since April 2022, providing industrial manufacturing scale and distribution backing.

    The Bosch Rexroth acquisition is confirmed by the official Bosch Rexroth corporate page [12] and independently corroborated by The Robot Report [13] and distributor sources [9] — the strategic/operational impact of this ownership on actual production scale remains unquantified.

    from Kassow Robots deep report →
Bad
  • Kassow Robots cobots operate autonomously — once programmed, they execute industrial tasks (palletizing, machine tending, material handling, automotive punching) entirely without a human performing or remotely driving the task.

    The autonomy verdict (confidence 0.95) is drawn from the dossier's own reconciliation and official case studies [7][8] — no independent third-party audit or customer testimony outside vendor-controlled channels confirms unattended autonomous operation at scale.

    from Kassow Robots deep report →
  • The KR1824 model achieves a 40kg payload at 1800mm reach, extending Kassow's cobot lineup into heavy-duty collaborative applications.

    The KR1824's 40kg payload and 1800mm reach are stated on the official Kassow Robots news page [2] and corroborated by the Bosch Rexroth page [12], but no independent test, customer deployment, or third-party review has verified these specifications in practice.

    from Kassow Robots deep report →
  • The KR810 achieves ±0.1mm repeatability and a maximum TCP speed of 1 m/s, positioning it as a precision-capable entry-level cobot.

    The ±0.1mm repeatability and 1 m/s TCP speed figures come from a distributor commerce listing [5][6] rather than an independent laboratory test or third-party review, so while plausible, they remain unverified vendor-proximate specifications.

    from Kassow Robots deep report →
Ugly
  • Kassow Robots cobots have demonstrated ROI within 2 years and logged 1.2 million+ cycles in an automotive punching automation application.

    Both the ROI claim and the 1.2M+ cycle figure originate exclusively from Kassow Robots' own blog [7][8] — no independent customer, auditor, or journalist has verified these operational outcomes, making this vendor self-reporting without corroboration.

    from Kassow 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.