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2 projects
Deli Group Ninghai Intelligent Logistics Center - General Merchandise warehouse automation project in China
Unit Load AS/RSMini Load AS/RSShuttle Systems
AGV - Unit LoadAutonomous Mobile RobotsCase and Piece Picking
Picking RobotGoods-to-Person SystemsOthers
Fully Automated
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#Office Supplies#AS/RS#Case Picking#AMR#Shuttle System#Daifuku+2
General Merchandise

Deli Group Ninghai Intelligent Logistics Center

DaifukuNinghai, China

China's leading office supplies manufacturer built a 110,000 sq m intelligent logistics center with a multi-system AS/RS complex, AMRs, and picking robots to process 200,000 cases daily and store 130,000 pallets.

110,000200,000/dayStorageTransportPickingSortation
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Shigemasa Co., Ltd. Deploys MiR250 Hook AMR to Automate Cart Transport After Warehouse Expansion - Wholesale Distribution / Industrial Supply warehouse automation project in Japan
1 × MiR250 Hook (MiR250 AMR base + MiR Hook 250 top module)MiR Fleet Management Software
MiR Robot Interface (multi-device: iPad, PC)Inventory Management System Integration (WMS linkage for cart collection and delivery instructions)
April Tag Cart Identification
Partially Automated (AMR handles cart transport; humans manage tasks requiring human judgment)
Video
#MiR#MiR250#MiR250 Hook#MiR Hook 250#Mobile Industrial Robots#AMR+13
Wholesale Distribution / Industrial Supply

Shigemasa Co., Ltd. Deploys MiR250 Hook AMR to Automate Cart Transport After Warehouse Expansion

MiRUp to 500 kg (MiR250 Hook towing capacity), Japan

Shigemasa Co., Ltd., a machinery parts and tools supplier based in Fukuyama-shi, Hiroshima, Japan, deployed a MiR250 Hook autonomous mobile robot to automate cart towing operations after a warehouse expansion significantly increased internal transport distances. The MiR250 Hook — an AMR with a patented towing hook top module — autonomously collects carts from designated yard locations and delivers them to shipping bases in response to instructions from the company's inventory management system. Key selection criteria included no infrastructure change requirements, multi-device remote operation capability, a simple one-click user interface, and pre-installation verification at the DAIKI ROBOTICS Robotics Lab in Osaka. The deployment freed human workers from repetitive transport tasks to focus on work that only humans can do, and was selected over AGV and competing AMR solutions that required magnetic tape, layout changes, or manual loading and unloading.

00Transport
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