Pain Points of Spider Robots

  1. Limited Workspace
  • Descripción: Its working envelope is relatively small and dome-shaped due to the parallel-arm structure.
  • Pain Point: Unsuitable for long-distance movement; ideal only for compact work areas.
  1. Very Low Payload Capacity
  • Descripción: Designed for speed, with lightweight components limiting load capacity.
  • Pain Point: Typically handles only a few grams to a few hundred grams.
  1. Restricted End-Effector Orientation
  • Descripción: The moving platform has limited ability to independently control tool orientation during motion.
  • Pain Point: Not ideal for tasks requiring complex tool reorientation, like intricate screwdriving.
  1. Fixed Mounting Configuration
  • Descripción: Typically ceiling-mounted, with a fixed work zone after installation.
  • Pain Point: Reduces layout flexibility compared to floor-mounted robots on tracks.
  1. More Complex Programming and Tuning
  • Descripción: Relies on complex inverse kinematics. Deep optimization requires specialized expertise.
  • Pain Point: Higher technical barrier for programming and debugging.
  1. Relatively High Cost
  • Descripción: Requires multiple high-precision servos and specialized controllers, leading to higher unit cost.
  • Pain Point: High initial investment threshold.

In summary, the pain points stem from its inherent design trade-offs: it sacrifices workspace, payload, and orientation flexibility to achieve unparalleled speed, precision, and dynamic performance. It is a specialist, not a generalist.

 

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es_PESpanish (Peru)