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UR20 - Mobile Base Package

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UR20 - Mobile Base Package

UR20 - Mobile Base Package

Universal Robots

Not yet assessed

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

UR20 - Mobile Base Package

Universal Robots
Unverified

The UR20 Mobile Base Package is a collaborative robot arm (cobot) from Universal Robots — a Teradyne Robotics subsidiary — featuring a 20 kg payload and 1750 mm reach, now integrated with MiR's mobile platform (notably the MC600 = MiR PalletJack + UR20) to form a mobile manipulator. The UR20 arm itself is well-characterized by consistent hardware specs across official and commerce sources. As a mobile base package, it autonomously performs industrial tasks (palletizing, welding, material handling) without a human performing or driving those tasks, qualifying as Autonomous. Pricing is not officially published but reseller/commerce sources indicate a base arm price of roughly $57,000–$63,000, with total deployment costs potentially 1.5–2x that figure. Several extracted facts relate to third-party research systems and unrelated companies (Galbot, Neuro Robotics, Figure 02) that are not the UR20 Mobile Base Package and should be treated as contextual noise.

Availability

Shipping

Specification

payload
20 kg
reach
1750 mm
degrees_of_freedom
6 DOF, 360° per joint
robot_weight
64 kg (arm); 77.8 kg (unit with controller)
power_consumption
Max 750 W; typical 300 W
power_input
100–240 VAC, 47–440 Hz (single-phase conventional outlet)
controller_weight
12 kg

Price

No public price — contact the supplier for a quote.

Good · Bad · Ugly

Evidence-graded claims from the Universal Robots deep report

Good
  • UR cobots operate autonomously on programmed industrial tasks (pick & place, welding, machine tending, assembly, etc.) without a human performing or driving the task during operation.

    Wikipedia (independent) and Automate.org confirm cage-free autonomous task execution; community criticism on Reddit [15][16] targets programming/integration difficulty, not human-in-the-loop task performance, corroborating autonomous operation at the task level — though setup, programming, and maintenance overhead remain non-trivial.

    from Universal Robots deep report →
  • Universal Robots is the cobot market leader with approximately 40–50% market share and 50,000+ units installed worldwide.

    Automate.org (independent industry association) [14] and Wikipedia [13] both independently cite 50,000+ installations and ~40–50% market share as of 2022; the specific figures have not been re-verified post-2022, so current share may have shifted.

    from Universal Robots deep report →
  • UR cobots can operate collaboratively without safety cages or fencing, making them the first commercially viable cobot of this type.

    Wikipedia [13] independently confirms UR as the pioneer of commercially viable cage-free collaborative robots; safety certifications (ISO 10218, TÜV, UL 1740) are confirmed across official product pages [2][3][4], though independent third-party test reports of real-world cage-free deployments are not cited in the dossier.

    from Universal Robots deep report →
Bad
  • UR cobots deliver up to 65% higher joint accelerations and up to 37% faster cycle times versus the prior generation, with the UR15 achieving up to 5 m/s maximum speed.

    These figures come exclusively from UR's own official product pages [2][4] with no independent benchmark, third-party test, or customer validation cited in the dossier; furthermore, community sources [15][16] note UR cobots are slow and inaccurate compared to SCARA alternatives, suggesting the vendor's speed claims are relative only to prior UR generations.

    from Universal Robots deep report →
  • Total system cost (robot arm + gripper + integration/setup) is typically approximately 2x the base robot arm price.

    Multiple commerce sources [6][7] consistently cite the ~2x multiplier, but these are reseller/distributor sites rather than independent audits or customer case studies; community sources [19] suggest real-world integration costs and ongoing support costs can significantly exceed this estimate, making the figure plausible but unverified by neutral parties.

    from Universal Robots deep report →
  • The UR+ Ecosystem and partnerships (e.g., Rapid Robotics, Teradyne/Flex) meaningfully expand UR cobot deployment capabilities and scale.

    The Rapid Robotics partnership is reported by a trade news outlet [10], providing some independent corroboration, but the dossier contains no independent evidence of deployment outcomes, scale, or customer results from these partnerships — only vendor announcements and a single trade press item.

    from Universal Robots deep report →
Ugly
  • UR Care maximizes uptime and reduces total cost of ownership (TCO), with UR cobots trusted for reliable long-term deployment across industries.

    Independent community sources [19][20] report real-world deployment failures including overpromising by integrators, overly rosy cost projections, lack of long-term support, and insufficient training at handoff — directly contradicting the vendor's reliability and TCO claims, which are sourced only from UR's own marketing [1][11].

    from Universal 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.