ABAGY
Software : Operational Technology : Industrial Robot
Automate welding of high-mix products. With ABAGY software, you can use welding robots even for custom projects and one-of-a-kind parts. No need to program robots. Just click and weld.
Assembly Line
ABAGY Team
π¦Ύπ§βπ The Robotization of High-mix, Low-volume Production Gains Momentum
One company, ABAGY, overcomes the limitations of traditional robotics. With this software, manufacturers can use robots for custom projects or even one-of-a-kind parts. No robot programming is required. The software automatically generates a robot program to produce a specific product, which only takes minutes. Using machine vision, the system scans the parts and adjusts the robotβs path depending on the actual position and deviations of the product.
A manufacturer in Sabetha, Kan., already had a robotic cell, but wanted to increase its utilization. The robotic cell was used for a limited number of parts because the programming was tedious. After implementing a new system with AI and machine vision, the setup time reduced dramatically β only 10-to-15 minutes for a new product β and the robot can now be used for many more products. It used to take 90-to-120 minutes to program a robot to produce one rotor. Thatβs a big win for a manufacturer with high-mix production. In the first month of the robotic cellβs operation, the company created 50 different technical charts. The company plans further robotization of production.
Cycle Time with Robots. Faster or Slower?
Can Large Language Models Enhance Efficiency In Industrial Robotics?
One of the factors that slow down the penetration of industrial robots into manufacturing is the complexity of human-to-machine interfaces. This is where large language models, such as ChatGPT developed by OpenAI, come in. Large language models are a cutting-edge artificial intelligence technology that can understand and respond to human language at times almost indistinguishable from human conversation. Its versatility has been proven in applications ranging from chatbots to language translation and even creative writing.
It turns out that large language models are quite effective at generating teach pendant programs for a variety of industrial robots, such as KUKA, FANUC, Yaskawa, ABB and others.