History of Industrial Robotics
George Devol applied for the first robotics patents in 1954
(granted in 1961). The first company to produce a robot was Unimation,
founded by George Devol and Joseph F. Engelberger in 1956, and was based on
Devol's original patents. Unimation robots were also called programmable
transfer machines since their main use at first was to transfer objects from
one point to another, less than a dozen feet or so apart. They used
hydraulic actuators and were programmed in joint coordinates, i.e. the
angles of the various joints were stored during a teaching phase and
replayed in operation. They were accurate to within 1/10,000 of an inch.
Unimation later licensed their technology to Kawasaki Heavy Industries and
Guest-Nettlefolds, manufacturing Unimates in Japan and England respectively.
For some time Unimation's only competitor was Cincinnati Milacron Inc. of
Ohio. This changed radically in the late 1970s when several big Japanese
conglomerates began producing similar industrial robots.
In 1969 Victor Scheinman at Stanford University invented the Stanford arm,
an all-electric, 6-axis articulated robot designed to permit an arm solution.
This allowed it to accurately follow arbitrary paths in space and widened
the potential use of the robot to more sophisticated applications such as
assembly and arc welding. Scheinman then designed a second arm for the MIT
AI Lab, called the "MIT arm." Scheinman, after receiving a fellowship from
Unimation to develop his designs, sold those designs to Unimation who
further developed them with support from General Motors and later marketed
it as the Programmable Universal Machine for Assembly (PUMA).
In 1973 KUKA Robotics built its first robot, known as FAMULUS, this is the
first articulated robot to have six electromechanically driven axes.
Interest in robotics swelled in the late 1970s and many companies entered
the field, including large firms like General Electric, and General Motors (which
formed joint venture FANUC Robotics with FANUC LTD of Japan). US start-ups
included Automatix and Adept Technology, Inc. At the height of the robot
boom in 1984, Unimation was acquired by Westinghouse Electric Corporation
for 107 million US dollars. Westinghouse sold Unimation to St?ubli Faverges
SCA of France in 1988. St?ubli was still making articulated robots for
general industrial and clean room applications as of 2004 and even bought
the robotic division of Bosch in late 2004.
Eventually the myopic vision of American industry was superseded by the
financial resources and strong domestic market enjoyed by the Japanese
manufacturers. Only a few non-Japanese companies managed to survive in this
market, including Adept Technology, St?ubli-Unimation, the Swedish-Swiss
company ABB (ASEA Brown-Boveri), the Austrian manufacturer igm
Robotersysteme AG and the German company KUKA Robotics.