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HAIPICK A3S-C

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HAIPICK A3S-C

HAIPICK A3S-C

Hai Robotics

Not yet assessed

Height
5.5m (18 feet)
Payload
Verified autonomy
not assessed
Real deployment
not assessed
Status
Price
verified / really deployed unverified / demo-stage

HAIPICK A3S-C

Hai Robotics

The HAIPICK A3S-C is an Autonomous Case-handling Robot (ACR) manufactured by Hai Robotics (HAIROBOTICS Co., Ltd., Shenzhen, China), designed for SMT surface-mounting and manufacturing environments requiring Class 10000 cleanliness and anti-static handling. It is a variant of the A3 series, featuring LiDAR SLAM navigation, up to 5.5m picking height, 50kg payload, and autonomous inbound/outbound operations managed by the HaiQ platform. The system is deployed in 100+ projects with 10,000+ robots globally, though no independent user reviews or third-party teardowns of the A3S-C specifically were found among the supplied facts. Several extracted research facts (surgical robotics, sim-to-real challenge) appear to be unrelated to this system and are disregarded. The autonomy evidence from vendor and community sources consistently describes fully autonomous task execution with no human performing the picking/transport task itself.

Availability

Shipping

Specification

picking_height_max
5.5m (18 feet)
payload_capacity
50 kg
max_speed
1.2 m/s (Red Dot); 1.57 m/s (Robolist detailed spec); 4 m/s listed as 'top speed' on Robolist (likely erroneous or platform speed)
minimum_aisle_width
1000 mm
dimensions
Width: 900mm, Length: 1650mm, Height: 12000mm (mast extended); lift height: 3600mm
battery
Li-ion; ~3 hours runtime; auto-dock charging

Price

No public price — contact the supplier for a quote.

Good · Bad · Ugly

Evidence-graded claims from the Hai Robotics deep report

Good
  • Hai Robotics has established a strategic partnership with LX Pantos (a major Korean 3PL) to accelerate global warehouse automation deployment.

    The LX Pantos partnership is corroborated by an independent trade publication, Intralogistics Magazine [15], which reported on the partnership announcement separately from Hai Robotics' own press release [13], confirming the partnership exists — though the scale and outcomes of actual deployments remain unverified.

    from Hai Robotics deep report →
Bad
  • Hai Robotics ACR systems operate fully autonomously — robots self-navigate, retrieve totes/cases from racks up to 15m high, and deliver them to human workstations 24/7 without any human driving or performing the retrieval task.

    The Goods-to-Person operational model is confirmed by official product pages [1][9] and referenced in the Maersk Singapore deployment announcement [10] and Kokuyo case [14], but no independent third-party teardown, regulator audit, or customer-authored review in the dossier independently verifies the autonomy level from a skeptical standpoint — all corroborating sources are vendor-issued or vendor-adjacent press releases.

    from Hai Robotics deep report →
  • HaiPick Climb reaches up to 15 metres vertical height, making it the tallest ACR in Hai Robotics' product line (launched 2025), with the A42T reaching 12m and the A42 reaching 6m.

    Vertical reach figures for all models are sourced exclusively from Hai Robotics' own official product pages [1][2][3] and IPO-related news [11][12]; the Kokuyo deployment article [14] references HaiPick Climb at a new logistics centre but does not independently confirm the 15m specification via measurement or third-party validation.

    from Hai Robotics deep report →
  • Hai Robotics' RaaS (Robot-as-a-Service) subscription model is available only in Singapore, with a minimum viable deployment of 3 robots, 1 charger, and 1 Robot Control System.

    Both the Singapore-only geographic restriction and the minimum deployment configuration are stated on Hai Robotics' own RaaS page [6], with no independent customer, analyst, or news source in the dossier confirming actual RaaS uptake, pricing, or whether the Singapore-only restriction remains current as of mid-2026.

    from Hai Robotics deep report →
Ugly
  • The Maersk Singapore deployment achieves throughput exceeding 1,000 totes per hour with 99%+ pick accuracy.

    Both the >1,000 totes/hour throughput and 99%+ pick accuracy figures appear only in Hai Robotics' own press release about the Maersk deployment [10]; Maersk has not independently published operational performance data, and no third-party auditor, journalist, or industry analyst in the dossier corroborates these specific metrics.

    from Hai Robotics deep report →
  • Hai Robotics' systems deliver up to 6x efficiency improvement, 3x throughput increase, and 5x footprint reduction versus conventional warehousing.

    These figures appear only on Hai Robotics' own solutions page [9] and conflict internally with the 3–4x efficiency claim on the product page [1]; the competitor comparison source (Brightpick [5]) does not validate Hai Robotics' figures, and no independent benchmark, customer case study, or third-party analyst in the dossier corroborates any of these multipliers.

    from Hai Robotics deep report →
  • Hai Robotics holds over 30% global ACR market share.

    This market share figure is drawn exclusively from Hai Robotics' own IPO filing as reported by China Tech Pulse [11] and Asia Tech Daily [12] — a self-reported claim in a document designed to attract investors — and no independent market research firm, industry analyst, or regulator in the dossier corroborates the 30%+ figure.

    from Hai Robotics deep report →

About the company

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