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AGILOX OFL

AGILOX OFL

AGILOX

Not yet assessed

Height
1,200 mm (47.2 in) maximum station height
Payload
Verified autonomy
not assessed
Real deployment
not assessed
Status
Price
verified / really deployed unverified / demo-stage

AGILOX OFL

AGILOX

The AGILOX OFL is an omnidirectional, scissor-free autonomous mobile robot (AMR) designed for intralogistics tasks including pallet picking, putaway, replenishment, and conveyor supply up to 1.2 m lift height with an 800 kg payload. It operates on AGILOX's proprietary X-SWARM decentralized peer-to-peer swarm intelligence, requiring no central fleet management software or infrastructure modifications. The OFL was unveiled at LogiMAT 2025 and made its North American debut at PACK EXPO Las Vegas (September–October 2025). Multiple independent and community sources corroborate the core hardware specifications and autonomous navigation claims, though some payload figures show minor discrepancies across sources. Several extracted facts (humanoid robot specs, SITCOM/AGILE research, Neuro Robotics) are clearly unrelated to the AGILOX OFL and have been excluded from the reconciled picture.

Availability

Shipping

Specification

max_payload
800 kg (1,764 lbs)
max_lift_height
1,200 mm (47.2 in) maximum station height
dimensions
1,655 mm (L) x 800 mm (W) x 1,988 mm (H)
dead_weight
575 kg
max_speed
1.4 m/s (4.6 ft/s)
min_passage_width
1,400 mm (55.1 in)
min_aisle_width
1,600 mm (63 in)
deployment_speed
Operational within a few hours on-site (per customer testimonial)
future_payload_roadmap
Planned future capacity increase to 1,200 kg (per Scanlox community source)

Price

No public price — contact the supplier for a quote.

Good · Bad · Ugly

Evidence-graded claims from the AGILOX deep report

Good
  • Carlyle Group has made a growth capital investment in AGILOX (amount undisclosed), signalling institutional validation of the company's commercial trajectory.

    Carlyle's own media room press release [10] independently confirms the investment, though the undisclosed amount and the absence of revenue or unit-economics data limit what this validates about operational performance.

    from AGILOX deep report →
Bad
  • X-SWARM decentralized swarm intelligence enables fully infrastructure-free operation — no master fleet management computer, no floor wires, reflectors, or beacons required beyond standard WiFi and chargers.

    This claim is consistent across official product pages and commerce aggregators (Qviro, RoboticsTomorrow [7]), but all sources are vendor-originated or vendor-citing; no independent third-party teardown, site audit, or customer testimony in the dossier independently verifies infrastructure-free operation in real-world deployments.

    from AGILOX deep report →
  • AGILOX AMRs operate fully autonomously — no human performs or drives the transport task; human involvement is limited to setup, scheduling, and maintenance.

    The autonomy verdict is vendor-sourced only; no independent operational reviews, user community reports, or third-party tests in the dossier confirm the absence of teleoperation fallback or active human supervision during real-world task execution [1][2][7].

    from AGILOX deep report →
  • 2,000+ AMRs have been deployed at enterprise customers including Siemens and BMW.

    The deployment figure and named customers appear in official/commerce sources only; no independent customer case study, press release from Siemens or BMW, or third-party audit in the dossier corroborates the scale or confirms active production-level deployment (vs. pilot) [1][10][11].

    from AGILOX deep report →
  • The AGILOX product line spans load capacities from 300 kg (ODM) to 1,500 kg (OCF), with the ONE reaching 1,000 kg and the OFL reaching 800 kg.

    Specifications are consistent across official product pages and the Qviro commerce aggregator [6], but all sources ultimately trace back to vendor-supplied data; no independent load-capacity test or certification body result is present in the dossier.

    from AGILOX deep report →
  • AGILOX AMRs feature omnidirectional movement (forward, backward, parallel, diagonal, and rotation around own axis) enabling operation in narrow aisles.

    Omnidirectional movement is described on official product pages [3][4] and echoed by commerce aggregators, but no independent benchmark, video analysis, or third-party aisle-width test in the dossier verifies real-world maneuverability performance.

    from AGILOX deep report →
Ugly
  • AGILOX's pricing model includes no subscription fees and no fleet management software licensing costs.

    The vendor's own blog [8] frames software licensing costs as a key AMR evaluation criterion without explicitly exempting AGILOX, creating an internal contradiction; no independent source confirms subscription-free long-term operation, making this claim ambiguous at best.

    from AGILOX deep report →

About the company

Editorial directory of real robot products from leading global manufacturers. Each entry links to the manufacturer's official page.