Assembly and dispensing
Wide application range. Snap-fit insertion, screw-driving, glue / sealant dispensing, label application. Cells designed around the specific assembly task.
What this application actually is.
Assembly and dispensing is the most heterogeneous application bracket in the cohort. Cells span snap-fit insertion (force-controlled, slow), screw-driving (force + torque feedback, medium speed), glue / sealant dispensing (precision path-following), and label application (high-speed positioning). The cobot bracket fits short-to-mid-volume assembly where dedicated automation is uneconomic. Payback ranges (10-24 months) reflect the application heterogeneity — high-volume label cells pay back fast, low-volume snap-fit cells more slowly. The cohort's structural argument for this application is force-feedback EOAT: a Robotiq FT-300 or equivalent ($5-6K) gives any cobot the force-control needed for most snap-fit and screw-driving applications, except where sub-Newton precision is required (then KUKA iiwa is the right arm). Dispensing applications have their own software-licence cost in addition to the EOAT — Graco InvisiPac and dispensing pattern software add $8-18K.
Which cobot fits, and why.
The cost most buyers underestimate.
Robotiq FT-300 ($5-6K) + assembly software ($3-8K) for snap-fit / screw-driving. Dispensing adds Graco InvisiPac or Nordson licence ($8-18K). For sub-Newton precision, ATI 6-axis FT sensor + dedicated software runs $15-25K.