According to www.roboticstomorrow.com, Quicktron Robotics will debut its unified QuickMix automation platform in the US at MODEX 2026 in Atlanta — marking the first public demonstration of its integrated tote and pallet robotics systems for North American supply chain professionals.
One Platform, All Scenarios
Quicktron’s ‘QuickMix: One Platform, All Scenarios’ architecture unifies tote-handling, pallet-moving, and shelf-handling robots under a single control framework powered by its proprietary Robot Control System (RCS). This enables coordinated operation across diverse robot types and material handling equipment through a single interface — addressing growing industry pressures including labor shortages, rising fulfillment volumes, regionalization and urbanization of warehousing, and escalating customer service expectations.
Core Systems on Display
At MODEX 2026, Quicktron will showcase two flagship systems:
- QuickBin Ultra: Combines the A5 bin-picking robot (up to 200 picks per hour) with the M5E tote-moving robot (speeds up to 4.5 m/s, carrying two totes simultaneously). Delivers outbound throughput of up to 600 totes per hour per workstation, with vertical lift speeds reaching 3.0 m/s and multi-depth, high-density storage.
- QuickCube: A flexible pallet automation solution using autonomous mobile robots (AMRs) with a proprietary pallet-handling mechanism. Supports payloads up to 1,500 kg, operates in aisles as narrow as 1.8 meters, and uses dynamic path planning to enable collision-free, concurrent AMR operations.
Global Scale, Proven Deployment
As of 2025, Quicktron has deployed more than 42,000 robots worldwide, serving over 1,000 customers across more than 20 countries and regions. Its systems are operational in e-commerce, manufacturing, electronics, pharmaceuticals, and third-party logistics — including for Murata Manufacturing, Mercado Libre, Coupang, 7-Eleven, and FMCG monopoly companies. All Quicktron AMRs and automation systems comply with major international safety standards, including UL, ETL, and CE certifications.
Why This Matters for Supply Chain Professionals
US warehouse operators are increasingly shifting from siloed automation toward integrated, facility-wide infrastructure — a trend accelerated by space constraints in urban logistics hubs and demand for rapid scalability. QuickMix directly responds to this need: its modular design allows phased deployment, reconfiguration without system overhaul, and seamless interoperability between workflows (e.g., pallet receipt, case staging, and piece picking) within the same footprint. For practitioners managing labor volatility and tight ROI timelines, the ability to unify control, reduce integration complexity, and maintain high storage density while supporting flexible throughput represents a tangible operational advantage — especially amid ongoing nearshoring and micro-fulfillment expansion.
Source: www.roboticstomorrow.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










