KR1410
The KR1410 is a 7-axis collaborative robot arm manufactured by Kassow Robots, a Copenhagen-based subsidiary of Bosch Rexroth AG. It features a 1,400 mm reach and 10 kg payload, designed for assembly, material handling, welding, dispensing, and additive manufacturing applications.
Overview and Use Cases
The KR1410 is a collaborative robot arm produced by Kassow Robots, headquartered in Copenhagen, Denmark. The company became a subsidiary of Bosch Rexroth AG in April 2022. The robot is marketed as a flexible all-rounder capable of performing multiple industrial tasks including assembly, material handling, welding, dispensing, and additive manufacturing.
Key Capabilities
- Autonomous programming: Can be programmed once and operated in fully automatic mode without requiring a teach pendant
- Multi-axis articulation: 7-axis design providing extensive workspace flexibility
- Configuration options: Available in two variants—standard configuration with external controller and Edge Edition with integrated controller
- Speed performance: Maximum TCP (tool center point) speed of 1 m/s
Specifications
- Reach: 1,400 mm
- Payload capacity: 10 kg
- Weight: 35–38 kg
- Axes: 7
- Joint speed: 170–225 degrees per second
- Maximum TCP speed: 1 m/s
- Price range: Approximately €37,500–€40,500 EUR or AUD $49,500
Applications
The KR1410 is positioned for deployment in:
- Assembly operations
- Material handling and transfer tasks
- Welding processes
- Fluid dispensing applications
- Additive manufacturing support tasks
The robot's combination of reach, payload capacity, and multi-axis control enables it to address applications requiring moderate precision and flexibility in industrial and manufacturing environments.
Related entries
RobotRelay Delivery Robot
The Relay Delivery Robot is an autonomous indoor delivery robot developed by Relay Robotics (formerly known as Savioke), designed primarily for hospitality and healthcare environments. It navigates hotel corridors and hospital hallways independently, rides elevators without human assistance, and delivers guest amenities, medications, linens, and other supplies directly to rooms or designated drop-off points. Relay is one of the most widely deployed service robots in its category, reportedly completing over one million lifetime deliveries with a publicly cited success rate of approximately 99.8%. With a cargo capacity of around 10 gallons, the robot is compact enough to operate in busy public spaces while carrying a meaningful payload of everyday supplies.
2,664 views
RobotSpot
Spot is a four-legged autonomous robot developed by Boston Dynamics, a robotics company headquartered in Waltham, Massachusetts. Designed for inspection, security, and data collection in complex or hazardous environments, Spot can navigate stairs, rough terrain, and confined spaces that are inaccessible to wheeled robots. It is commercially available and has been deployed across industries including utilities, oil and gas, construction, and public safety. Spot supports a modular payload system that accommodates thermal cameras, pan-tilt-zoom (PTZ) cameras, lidar units, methane sensors, and other mission-specific hardware. Boston Dynamics also offers the Orbit fleet-management software platform, enabling operators to schedule autonomous inspection routes, aggregate sensor data, and manage multiple Spot units from a central interface. The robot is widely regarded as one of the most capable and commercially mature legged robots on the market.
1,148 views
RobotRealSense Depth Camera D455
The RealSense Depth Camera D455 is a stereoscopic active-infrared depth camera belonging to Intel's D400 series, designed to capture high-fidelity depth data for robotics, autonomous mobile robots (AMRs), drones, and computer-vision applications. It features a 95 mm stereo baseline — the widest in the D400 lineup at the time of its introduction — which reportedly enables depth error of under 2% at ranges up to approximately 4 metres. Originally developed under the Intel RealSense brand, the D455 and related products were later spun off as part of an independent RealSense business unit following Intel's restructuring of the division around 2021–2022. The camera is widely adopted in research, industrial automation, and humanoid-robot development owing to its compact USB-powered form factor, open SDK support, and relatively accessible price point.
540 views
Rosie 2.0
The Rosie 2.0 is a commercial-grade autonomous robot vacuum developed by Tailos, designed to handle large-scale floor cleaning in business and institutional environments. It is offered in a two-pack configuration, allowing facilities to deploy multiple units simultaneously for broader coverage and more efficient cleaning cycles. Built to commercial durability standards, the Rosie 2.0 combines intelligent navigation with powerful suction technology to reduce reliance on manual labor and improve facility maintenance consistency. It targets businesses, hospitality venues, retail spaces, and other high-traffic environments where reliable, automated cleaning is a priority.
468 views