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SmartCart AGC
Daifuku
Not yet assessed
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SmartCart AGC
DaifukuThe SmartCart AGC is an Automatic Guided Cart (AGC) product line from Daifuku's Jervis B. Webb Company, designed for cost-effective, flexible material handling in manufacturing and warehouse environments. It uses magnetic tape guidance with real-time traffic control and an optional SmartSteer feature for off-guidepath operation, and is available in multiple models with load capacities ranging from 60 lbs to 6,000 lbs. All technical and capability facts derive exclusively from vendor/official/commerce sources; no independent reviews, teardowns, or user community reports are present in the evidence base. The system autonomously performs its material transport task without a human driving or performing the task itself, qualifying it as Autonomous under the provided definitions.
Availability
Specification
- towing_capacity_range
- 27 kg to 2,700 kg (tugger variants); specific model 100TT-R rated at 1,950 lbs (~885 kg) max towing
- model_100TT_R_dimensions
- W: 490mm × L: 1,595mm × H: 275mm
- model_100TT_R_weight
- 240 lbs (110 kg) without batteries; 360 lbs (165 kg) with batteries
- model_100TT_R_traction_power
- 40 lbs constant / 80+ lbs starting
Price
No public price — contact the supplier for a quote.
Good · Bad · Ugly
Evidence-graded claims from the Daifuku deep report
Daifuku's AS/RS, conveyors, sorters, and automated manufacturing lines operate autonomously — performing storage, retrieval, sortation, and material handling without a human performing those tasks.
Independent deployments at Denver International Airport (baggage handling), Birla Opus Paints (6 sites, lead time cut by one-third, same-day shipment enabled), and Fast Retailing (warehouse automation with MUJIN/Exotec) corroborate autonomous task execution [11][14]; however, internal monitoring and maintenance roles remain unquantified.
from Daifuku deep report →Daifuku's Checkpoint Property Screening System is on the TSA Qualified Products List, and the company has deployed baggage handling systems at Denver International Airport.
Daifuku ATEC's news page [11] references both the TSA Qualified Products List inclusion and the Denver International Airport deployment; TSA QPL is a U.S. government regulatory listing constituting independent third-party validation, though the DEN deployment scale/scope remains unspecified.
from Daifuku deep report →Fast Retailing has a strategic global partnership with Daifuku (alongside MUJIN and Exotec) for supply chain and warehouse automation.
Fast Retailing's own IR news release [14] independently announces the expanded strategic partnership naming Daifuku as the first member alongside MUJIN and Exotec, constituting a customer-side disclosure rather than vendor PR; deployment scope and outcomes remain unspecified.
from Daifuku deep report →Daifuku completed a $35 million facility expansion in Hobart and opened a new Tokyo Lab R&D hub in March 2026, alongside a new semiconductor factory building completed in April 2026.
The Hobart $35M expansion is corroborated by an independent local news video report [12]; the Tokyo Lab and semiconductor factory openings are reported only via Daifuku's official news page [13][1], leaving those two items unindependently verified.
from Daifuku deep report →
Daifuku is the world's #1 AS/RS (Automated Storage and Retrieval System) provider.
This claim appears only on Daifuku's own India intralogistics page [3] with no independent market-share data, third-party analyst report, or industry body ranking cited in the dossier to substantiate it.
from Daifuku deep report →Daifuku's Birla Opus Paints deployment across 6 sites in 12 months cut lead times by one-third and enabled same-day shipment.
The specific performance metrics (lead time reduction, same-day shipment) are sourced from Daifuku's own case study [8] with no independent customer statement, audit, or third-party report in the dossier to verify the figures.
from Daifuku deep report →Daifuku covers the full automotive manufacturing line — from pressing through engine testing — with its automation systems.
The full product lineup (chainless conveyor, monorail, chain conveyor, transfer/lifting, EV battery mounting, engine testing, paint systems) is listed on Daifuku's own automotive solutions page [2] with no independent customer or third-party source in the dossier confirming end-to-end deployment at any single facility.
from Daifuku deep report →Daifuku's operating margin grew 2.4x (from 5.2% to 12.6%) over the reported period, with share price rising 9.2x to 3,300 yen by end of December 2024.
Both figures are drawn from Daifuku's own IR annual report [8], which, while an audited financial document, is a vendor-originated source; no independent analyst or exchange filing cross-check is cited in the dossier.
from Daifuku deep report →
About the company
Editorial directory of real robot products from leading global manufacturers. Each entry links to the manufacturer's official page.