Startup to Use $63M Series B to Redefine Robotic Arm Training With AI

Investors just gave one robotics arm company a major lift.

Robotics startup Standard Bots announced July 12 it had secured $63 million in Series B funding, led by General Catalyst with additional participation from Amazon Industrial Innovation Fund and Samsung Next.

More from Sourcing Journal

The Glen Cove, New York-based startup, will use the newly announced funds to amp its research and development (R&D) work—both on a new, AI-powered robot and on a larger robotic arm for logistics—and to open a new manufacturing site, which will allow it to build its robot arms itself.

Evan Beard, the company’s co-founder and CEO, said Standard Bots already assembles the cobot arms it sells or leases to clients, but vertically integrating and producing all of the arms’ components domestically would be a major milestone.

“With our next facility, we’re really trying to make a Made in America arm where we have 12-foot-long stock pieces of metal going in the door and robots going out, so we’re really excited about that,” he said.

He went on to say that the majority of the individual parts will be primarily sourced from the United States. The company currently imports some of its parts, but Beard noted that nearly all of the imported pieces are of Standard Bots’ own design—the motors, controllers for the motors and more.

“Other than the chips, we make almost everything in the arm. For this new facility, we’re literally buying aluminum—and our plan is to buy the aluminum local and the steel local,” he said. “Our goal is a Made in America arm—that virtually everything, other than some of the chips and minor components [is sourced from the U.S.].”

Beard said he expects the facility, which will be about 15,000 square feet, to come online around October. The company’s goal is to start putting out its first Made in America robots by the end of the calendar year, and it plans to add a few positions to its production team to account for the additional work that will need to be done in the facility.

In addition to its new building, Standard Bots has some lofty goals ahead for the type of robots it will offer to clients; it already has two core models, which it calls RO1 and RO2, in production.

On top of the new way of training robots, the company has been gearing up to release another robotic arm, which it will call the RO3-Max, into the market. It will be larger than the previous models Standard Bots has created and will also have increased capabilities, like a two-meter reach and a 30-kilogram payload, Beard said.