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KR 240

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KR 240

KUKA

Not yet assessed

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

KR 240

KUKA
Unverified

The KUKA KR 240 is a heavy-duty 6-axis industrial articulated robot arm with a 240 kg payload capacity and reach variants from approximately 2700 mm to 3330 mm, belonging to the KR QUANTEC series. It is a fixed, floor- or ceiling-mounted industrial manipulator used for material handling, welding, foundry, machine loading, and similar tasks, controlled by KR C4 or KR C5 controllers. Used units trade in the €8,000–€27,000 range; new/integrated systems can reach $60,000–$150,000+. The extracted facts also contain substantial off-topic material (AMD Kria K26 SOM, academic robotics planning algorithms, KUKA AMR fleet products, and KUKA AMP AI software) that does not directly describe the KR 240 itself. As a pre-programmed industrial robot arm, the KR 240 executes its assigned tasks (welding, handling, etc.) autonomously once programmed and set up, with no human performing or driving the task during operation.

Availability

Shipping

Specification

payload_capacity
240 kg rated payload (up to 655 lb / ~297 kg maximum on FORTEC variant)
reach
2696 mm (R2700 variant); 3195 mm (R3200 PA variant); 3330 mm / 130.9 inches (R3330 FORTEC variant)
robot_weight
1111 kg (R2700 variant); ~2421 kg / 5338 lb (FORTEC R3330 variant)
power_requirements
480 Volts 3-Phase

Price

No public price — contact the supplier for a quote.

Good · Bad · Ugly

Evidence-graded claims from the KUKA deep report

Good
  • KUKA industrial robot arms execute welding, material handling, and palletizing tasks autonomously — no human performs or drives the task during normal operation.

    Independent community sources [15][16][17][18][19] describe KUKA arms operating in live production environments without per-task human intervention; this is further consistent with the standard definition of industrial robot autonomy and corroborated by Wikipedia [13].

    from KUKA deep report →
  • KUKA hardware is well-built, reliable, and accurate — particularly strong for heavy-payload and welding applications.

    Multiple independent Reddit practitioners [16][17][18][19][20] across different forums corroborate hardware quality and reliability for heavy-payload and welding use cases, though long-term repeatability comparisons with FANUC remain contested [19].

    from KUKA deep report →
  • KUKA partnered with Viam (April 2024) to publish a driver in the Viam Modular Registry, and with Nokia for a 5G SA private wireless network deployment.

    Both partnerships are confirmed by independent third-party announcements: the Viam partnership via PR Newswire [11] and the Nokia 5G deployment via Nokia's own newsroom [12]; however, operational outcomes and scale of deployment remain unverified.

    from KUKA deep report →
Bad
  • KUKA's iiQWorks engineering suite delivers 98% cycle time prediction accuracy, collision-free path programming from CAD, and seamless simulation-to-controller transfer.

    These capabilities are described exclusively in KUKA's own official iiQWorks documentation [4]; no independent test, customer case study, or third-party reviewer has verified the 98% accuracy figure or the seamless transfer claim.

    from KUKA deep report →
  • KUKA's KMP autonomous mobile robot series navigates autonomously for material transport in industrial environments.

    KUKA's official AMR pages [3][1] describe autonomous navigation capabilities and offer a fleet sizing calculator, but no independent customer deployment report, third-party test, or journalist account verifying real-world KMP fleet performance at scale was found in the dossier.

    from KUKA deep report →
Ugly
  • KUKA occupies the premium market segment with higher upfront costs than ABB, FANUC, and Universal Robots, justified by superior performance and lower total cost of ownership.

    The TCO superiority claim originates from a commerce/analyst source with promotional bias [5][6]; independent community users recommend KUKA primarily as an escape from FANUC-specific frustrations rather than as an objectively superior platform [16][18], and the software friction documented by practitioners directly undermines the TCO argument.

    from KUKA deep report →
  • KUKA offers AI-based predictive maintenance and computer vision as part of its software capabilities.

    This claim appears only in a commerce/analyst source [5][6] with no independent verification; no KUKA official documentation, customer case study, or third-party review in the dossier substantiates deployed AI predictive maintenance or computer vision functionality.

    from KUKA deep report →

About the company

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