Hall: 8 / Stand number: 8C77
Ocado Intelligent Automation (OIA), part of Ocado Group, will introduce its new pallet-moving autonomous mobile robot (AMR) named Porter AMR as part of the Ocado Mobile Robot System (OMRS) offering to the European logistics community at LogiMAT 2025. The company will also showcase the Ocado Storage and Retrieval System (OSRS) and Chuck AMR at LogiMAT for the first time.
Increase Case Picking Productivity and Point-to-Point Moves
The Porter AMR automates inventory movement and navigates the warehouse without any infrastructure changes or heavy manual labor required. With a payload capacity of 3,300 pounds (1,500 kilograms) and built-in sensor systems to recognize pallets, Porter AMR picks and places open or closed pallets directly from the floor. Warehouses and distribution centers can use Porter to fully automate tasks such as cross-dock, putaway and inventory moves as well as collaborative tasks including case picking and replenishment.
Upscaling nearly a decade of automation technology from the company’s Chuck AMR offering, OIA’s patented system-directed software intelligently orchestrates each Porter unit, or a whole fleet of them, and identifies the optimal route for it to take while preventing bottlenecks.
The Porter autonomous pallet-moving robot is the latest addition to OIA’s family of autonomous mobile robots that includes Chuck, a configurable AMR for order picking and putting away. Chuck AMR will be on display at LogiMAT.
See OSRS in Action at LogiMAT For the First Time
Located at booth #8C77, OIA’s OSRS will be operating in real-time, simulating inventory retrieval and putaway just like it would in a warehouse for healthcare, retail apparel and footwear, consumer packaged goods, and third-party logistics industries.
Come by the booth to see the system composed of robots, a grid structure, and robotic pick arms to simulate order fulfillment. See how its Warehouse Execution System (WES) commands the lightweight bots to travel on top of the OSRS grid, automating and accelerating bin fetching. Using artificial intelligence and sensors, the robotic pick arms mounted on top of the grid pick up products from the bins without prior knowledge of what they contain. Deep reinforcement learning trains the robotic pick arms to handle new, potentially delicate items.
The OSRS grid structure supports market-leading bin storage capacity and density in multiple configurations to maximize space utilization. The bins, made from galvanized steel or plastic, accommodate multiple item sets of different sizes, shapes and those that need to be temperature controlled, or kept secure.
Experience the solutions from Ocado Intelligent Automation in hall 8, booth #8C77. Visit https://ocadointelligentautomation.com/....