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KR1410

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KR1410

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 Kassow Robots KR1410 is a 7-axis collaborative robot arm manufactured by Kassow Robots (Copenhagen, Denmark), a subsidiary of Bosch Rexroth AG since April 2022. It features a 1,400 mm reach and 10 kg payload, positioned as a flexible all-rounder for applications including assembly, material handling, welding, dispensing, and additive manufacturing. The robot can be programmed once and run in fully automatic mode without a teach pendant, and is available in both standard (external controller) and Edge Edition (integrated controller) variants. Pricing ranges from approximately €37,500–€40,500 (EUR) or AUD $49,500, with a minor conflict on robot weight between sources (35 kg vs. 38 kg) and on repeatability (0.03 mm vs. 0.1 mm).

Availability

Shipping

Specification

reach
1,400 mm
payload
10 kg
weight
35–38 kg (conflicting; see conflicts)
joint_speed
170/225 deg/s
max_tcp_speed
1 m/s

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.