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SR-6iA

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SR-6iA

FANUC

Not yet assessed

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

SR-6iA

FANUC
Unverified

The FANUC SR-6iA is a 4-axis SCARA industrial robot with a 6 kg payload, 650 mm reach, 210 mm stroke, and ±0.01 mm repeatability, controlled by the R-30iB Compact Plus controller. It is designed for high-speed assembly, pick-and-place, inspection, and packaging applications, and supports iRVision, force sensing, conveyor tracking, and fieldbus connectivity. Pricing is estimated at $13,000–$15,000 USD by a commerce source. The robot operates fully autonomously for its intended industrial tasks once programmed and deployed; no human performs or drives the tasks during operation. A minor user-reported criticism notes limited pneumatic connections, and resolver degradation is a known long-term failure mode.

Availability

Shipping

Specification

payload
6 kg
reach
650 mm
robot_weight
Approximately 30 kg
joint_speeds
J1: ±148° at 440°/s; J2: ±150° at 700°/s
speed_optimization_note
Uninitialized payload defaults to maximum mass, causing 20–40% speed reduction; correcting payload setting yields 20–40% speed improvement

Price

No public price — contact the supplier for a quote.

Good · Bad · Ugly

Evidence-graded claims from the FANUC deep report

Good
  • FANUC industrial robots (welding, palletizing, painting, assembly, machine tending) operate fully autonomously once programmed — no human performs or drives the task during operation.

    Independent community practitioners on Reddit (r/PLC, r/robotics) confirm FANUC robots run their assigned tasks independently in live production environments, consistent with the autonomy verdict (confidence 0.93); no evidence of remote human task-driving was found [16][19][20].

    from FANUC deep report →
  • FANUC's hardware is well-built, reliable, accurate, and very long-lived in real-world industrial deployments.

    Independent community sources on Reddit (r/PLC) corroborate hardware reliability and longevity claims, explicitly contrasting strong hardware quality against software shortcomings [16][17][19].

    from FANUC deep report →
Bad
  • FANUC is showcasing Physical AI and AI-enabled robotics, including a collaboration with Google AI for agent-powered robot operation, representing a meaningful leap in adaptive autonomy.

    Evidence is limited to FANUC America's own press releases from Automate 2026 — no independent third-party testing, customer deployment data, or external validation of the AI capability claims has been identified [11][14].

    from FANUC deep report →
  • FANUC America announced a $90 million investment to construct an 840,000 sq ft robot manufacturing facility in the US (announced March 2026).

    The investment announcement is confirmed by a PR Newswire press release and LinkedIn corroboration, but these are distribution channels for the company's own announcement — no independent journalist investigation, regulatory filing, or construction verification has been identified; the facility is not yet built [10][12].

    from FANUC deep report →
Ugly
  • FANUC robots achieve high positional accuracy in real-world deployments, consistent with advertised specifications.

    Independent practitioner reports on Reddit (r/Fanuc, r/PLC) document ~0.3 mm positional error in real-world mid-range positions and express skepticism about trusting advertised performance data, indicating a gap between spec-sheet claims and field reality [18][19].

    from FANUC deep report →

About the company

Editorial directory of real robot products from leading global manufacturers. Each entry links to the manufacturer's official page.