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Basics & components — Robotic welding cells FAQ

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Basics & components — Robotic welding cells FAQ

Foundational questions about robotic welding cells: how they work, when they make sense, and how they compare to manual welding.

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Manual welding vs robotic welding: what is the real difference?

Quick answer: Robotic welding isn't just faster — it's repeatable. A skilled welder can produce excellent welds, but no human can keep speed, stick-out, torch angle and parameters identical for 500 parts in a row. That repeatability is the real difference, and it only pays off when your parts and fixturing are consistent enough to take advantage of it.

FactorManual weldingRobotic welding
QualityExcellent with skilled welderConsistent with good fixturing
FlexibilityHigh on variable partsHigh only when programmed for the change
SpeedLimited by operatorHigh on repetitive parts
Arc-on time20-50%70-85% (twin table)
Initial investmentLowHigh
Cost per partHigh on volumeLow on volume
RepeatabilityVariableHigh
Deformation handlingWelder adaptsRequires sequence strategy

The most important number is arc-on time — the percentage of total time the arc is actually depositing metal. Manual welding loses huge time blocks to positioning, fixture changes, cleaning and breaks. A well-designed twin-table robotic cell with the operator loading station B while the robot welds station A reaches 70-85% arc-on time. The productivity multiplier comes from there, not from raw welding speed.

Critical caveat: a robot does not fix a bad input. If your cut tolerances are loose, fixturing is sloppy, or tacking is inconsistent, a robot will reproduce those problems faster and at higher volume. Successful automation requires upstream process control as much as the robot itself.

Many shops run hybrid: a robotic cell for repetitive bread-and-butter parts, manual welders for prototypes, repairs, one-offs and complex assemblies. The two approaches are not mutually exclusive.

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