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MC12S

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MC12S

Nachi Robotics

Not yet assessed

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

The extracted facts contain a significant data mismatch: the system identifier 'MC12S' maps to two entirely different subjects. The majority of facts describe the Nachi-Fujikoshi CMZ12 collaborative robot (a 12 kg payload industrial cobot), while a separate cluster of facts describes the Maserati MC12 Versione Corse (a rare GT racing car, 50 road units + 12 track-only units sold). Additionally, several facts describe Nachi Robotics' corporate partnerships and trade show appearances, which are unrelated to either product's technical specifications. No facts specifically describe a product called 'MC12S' by name. The reconciled picture below covers the CMZ12 cobot as the most plausible robotics system match, while flagging the Maserati data as likely erroneous inclusions.

Availability

Shipping

Specification

payload_capacity
12 kg
reach
Longer reach than CMZ05 (exact value not specified in sources)
speed_collaborative_mode
Up to 1,000 mm/sec
speed_non_collaborative_mode
Up to 3,000 mm/sec
speed_limitation_acknowledgment
Vendor acknowledges collaborative robots generally operate slower and are less productive than humans and non-collaborative robots

Price

No public price — contact the supplier for a quote.

Good · Bad · Ugly

Evidence-graded claims from the Nachi Robotics deep report

Good
  • Nachi's CMZ12 collaborative robot delivers ±0.025 mm repeatability, 12 kg payload, 1,214 mm reach, and operates at 1,000 mm/sec (collaborative mode) / 3,000 mm/sec (non-collaborative mode) with IP67 rating and full ISO safety compliance.

    Independent trade publication Robotics & Automation News [10] reported these specific technical specifications at the CMZ12 launch (August 2024), constituting third-party corroboration; the 2,400 units/year sales target remains unverified by any independent source.

    from Nachi Robotics deep report →
Bad
  • Nachi has installed 35,000+ robots in North America, establishing it as a major industrial robotics supplier in the region.

    The 35,000+ figure comes from Automate.org [9], a commerce/directory source likely drawing on Nachi marketing materials, while Nachi's own LinkedIn [7] cites only 25,000+; neither figure is independently audited, and the discrepancy of up to 10,000 units is unresolved.

    from Nachi Robotics deep report →
  • Nachi robots have demonstrated advanced autonomous manipulation capabilities — including ~100% success-rate chopstick grasping of swinging objects (CherryBot) and in-air rope knotting via deep learning — using Nachi hardware.

    Peer-reviewed arXiv papers [22][25] from CMU/UW confirm Nachi hardware was used in these academic research demonstrations, but these are lab proofs-of-concept — not production deployments — and the capabilities have not been independently validated in any commercial or industrial setting.

    from Nachi Robotics deep report →
  • Nachi-Fujikoshi's parent company is executing a credible strategic pivot to make robotics 30–35% of revenue by 2030, up from ~13% currently, backed by a new president drawn from the Robot Division.

    The revenue target and leadership appointment are reported by TipRanks [11] and a Japanese financial note [13], both of which relay company announcements rather than providing independent analyst verification of the target's achievability or the current 13% baseline.

    from Nachi Robotics deep report →
  • Nachi's industrial robot simulation tools reliably predict real-world cycle times on a per-joint basis, making advertised performance data trustworthy for production planning.

    A Reddit practitioner thread [32] confirms simulation tools are generally reliable for robot motion cycle times, but notes real-world deviations arise from process dwells and slow approach moves — this is a community observation, not a controlled independent benchmark, and is not Nachi-specific.

    from Nachi Robotics deep report →
  • Nachi's CMZ series collaborative robots are safety-certified for genuine human-robot co-working under ISO 13849-1, ISO 10218-1, and ISO TS 15066, enabling deployment without safety fencing.

    The ISO compliance specifications are reported by Robotics & Automation News [10] at product launch, but the article relays Nachi's own claims about certification; no independent certification body confirmation or third-party safety audit of deployed CMZ units is cited in the dossier.

    from Nachi Robotics deep report →
Ugly
  • Nachi's robot payload range extends up to 1,700 kg, covering the full spectrum from precision light-duty to ultra-heavy industrial applications.

    The 1,700 kg upper bound appears only on Nachi's LinkedIn page [7] (a vendor-controlled source), while the independent commerce directory Automate.org [9] caps the range at 1,000 kg; the discrepancy is unresolved and the higher figure lacks any independent corroboration.

    from Nachi 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.