(AMT: Orion, MI) -- Applied Manufacturing Technologies (AMT), a leader in automation engineering specializing in advanced material handling, end-of-line solutions, on-demand engineering services, and autonomous mobile robots (AMRs) for manufacturing, warehousing, and logistics, exhibited at Automate 2026, held June 22–25, at McCormick Place in Chicago. The conference and exhibition is North America’s largest robotics and automation event.
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Exhibiting in the FANUC booth (No. 1001), AMT presented a live collaborative robotic demonstration focused on mixed-load handling applications for warehouse, logistics, and manufacturing operations.
The demonstration featured collaborative palletizing and depalletizing of mixed-case loads using a FANUC CRX collaborative robot integrated with AI-enabled vision and intelligent robot control software from Mujin. Developed by AMT and powered by FANUC collaborative robotics and MujinOS, the intelligent software platform, the application reflects growing demand for flexible automation in inbound logistics, warehouse flow management, 3PL operations, and high-mix distribution environments.
Warehouse operators and manufacturers continue to face labor shortages, ergonomic concerns, and increasing pressure to improve throughput while managing a wider mix of products and packaging configurations. Mixed-load palletizing and depalletizing applications present additional challenges because systems must adapt to changing box sizes, pallet patterns, and material flow requirements.
This demonstration showed how collaborative robotic systems can support warehouse operations where flexibility, portability, and operator interaction are important considerations. The application also serves as an entry point for discussions about larger-scale automation strategies, including high-payload robotic palletizing systems, custom warehouse automation cells, and integrated material handling solutions.
“Many warehouse operations are trying to improve throughput without adding complexity to existing workflows,” says Craig Salvalaggio, president of AMT. “Mixed-load handling is one of the more difficult automation challenges because product configurations, pallet conditions, and inbound material flow can vary significantly from one operation to another. This demonstration gives attendees an opportunity to see a practical application while discussing how similar technologies can be applied to broader warehouse automation initiatives.”
“Mixed-load handling applications require robots to make decisions based on changing pallet configurations and product variations rather than following a fixed sequence of movements,” says Ed Mullen, vice president of Channel Sales at Mujin. “Our technology provides the vision and robot control capabilities needed to manage that variability, making it possible for integrators like AMT to deploy flexible automation solutions for warehouse and logistics operations.”
For more information, visit AMT’s website, LinkedIn, Facebook, X, and YouTube.
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