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UR20 - Welding Package
Universal Robots
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UR20 - Welding Package
Universal RobotsThe UR20 is a collaborative robot (cobot) from Universal Robots (Danish manufacturer) featuring 1750 mm reach and a payload that has been updated from 20 kg to 25 kg with PolyScope 5.19, housed in a Ø 245 mm footprint at 64 kg weight. As a welding package, it is sold through multiple integrator bundles (Smooth Robotics SmoothTool, Migatronic CoWelder, Vectis Automation, Hirebotics/Miller) offering MIG/arc welding capabilities including Touch Sense, Weaving, Multipass, and no-code teach-by-Freedrive programming. The robot autonomously executes pre-programmed welding paths without a human performing the weld task itself, but path teaching/programming is a required human setup step; once programmed, it runs unattended. Independent community sources raise concerns about cost-competitiveness versus traditional industrial robots, and research literature confirms that teach-and-playback remains the dominant paradigm in robotic welding, with fully autonomous seam detection still largely in the research phase.
Availability
Specification
- reach
- 1750 mm
- payload
- Originally 20 kg at launch; updated to 25 kg with PolyScope 5.19
- weight
- 64 kg
- reach_advantage_for_welding
- 18 inches additional reach radius (36-inch diameter increase) vs. prior UR cobots; broadens weldment range in a given fixture setup
- price_range
- $95,000–$150,000 for complete cobot welding packages (system-level); UR20 unit price not publicly listed
Price
No public price — contact the supplier for a quote.
Good · Bad · Ugly
Evidence-graded claims from the Universal Robots deep report
UR cobots operate autonomously on programmed industrial tasks (pick & place, welding, machine tending, assembly, etc.) without a human performing or driving the task during operation.
Wikipedia (independent) and Automate.org confirm cage-free autonomous task execution; community criticism on Reddit [15][16] targets programming/integration difficulty, not human-in-the-loop task performance, corroborating autonomous operation at the task level — though setup, programming, and maintenance overhead remain non-trivial.
from Universal Robots deep report →Universal Robots is the cobot market leader with approximately 40–50% market share and 50,000+ units installed worldwide.
Automate.org (independent industry association) [14] and Wikipedia [13] both independently cite 50,000+ installations and ~40–50% market share as of 2022; the specific figures have not been re-verified post-2022, so current share may have shifted.
from Universal Robots deep report →UR cobots can operate collaboratively without safety cages or fencing, making them the first commercially viable cobot of this type.
Wikipedia [13] independently confirms UR as the pioneer of commercially viable cage-free collaborative robots; safety certifications (ISO 10218, TÜV, UL 1740) are confirmed across official product pages [2][3][4], though independent third-party test reports of real-world cage-free deployments are not cited in the dossier.
from Universal Robots deep report →
UR cobots deliver up to 65% higher joint accelerations and up to 37% faster cycle times versus the prior generation, with the UR15 achieving up to 5 m/s maximum speed.
These figures come exclusively from UR's own official product pages [2][4] with no independent benchmark, third-party test, or customer validation cited in the dossier; furthermore, community sources [15][16] note UR cobots are slow and inaccurate compared to SCARA alternatives, suggesting the vendor's speed claims are relative only to prior UR generations.
from Universal Robots deep report →Total system cost (robot arm + gripper + integration/setup) is typically approximately 2x the base robot arm price.
Multiple commerce sources [6][7] consistently cite the ~2x multiplier, but these are reseller/distributor sites rather than independent audits or customer case studies; community sources [19] suggest real-world integration costs and ongoing support costs can significantly exceed this estimate, making the figure plausible but unverified by neutral parties.
from Universal Robots deep report →The UR+ Ecosystem and partnerships (e.g., Rapid Robotics, Teradyne/Flex) meaningfully expand UR cobot deployment capabilities and scale.
The Rapid Robotics partnership is reported by a trade news outlet [10], providing some independent corroboration, but the dossier contains no independent evidence of deployment outcomes, scale, or customer results from these partnerships — only vendor announcements and a single trade press item.
from Universal Robots deep report →
UR Care maximizes uptime and reduces total cost of ownership (TCO), with UR cobots trusted for reliable long-term deployment across industries.
Independent community sources [19][20] report real-world deployment failures including overpromising by integrators, overly rosy cost projections, lack of long-term support, and insufficient training at handoff — directly contradicting the vendor's reliability and TCO claims, which are sourced only from UR's own marketing [1][11].
from Universal 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.



