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Automating Australia

Staff writers

Diverseco is providing, installing, and programming collaborative robots in Australian businesses, leveraging its experience across multiple sectors to drive transformative change.

In 1992, two entrepreneurs working out of a home office started selling automated weighing equipment under the name AccuWeigh. Within two years, Brenton Cunningham and Greg Brogan bought their first warehouse space in South Australia, before expanding into WA.


Six acquisitions and 27 years later, the duo have created the merged entity of Diverseco. The company has now pivoted to collaborative robots, colloquially called ‘cobots’ using expertise in sensor technology, and time-based measurement and control. It has installed freight systems which require collecting measurements, billing and barcode data across freight lines, recording accurately at three parcels a second.


“There is a deep skill set developed in passing data through at exactly the right moment,” explains Tim Francis, executive general manager, Automation, Diverseco.


Collaborative robots are different to industrial robots, which have a longer history in manufacturing and logistics. While industrial robots weight hundreds of kilograms, with the potential safety hazards of powerful machinery, needing to be walled off from humans, cobots (collaborative robots) can weigh under 30kg, and are able to operate alongside people on the factory floor.


From ‘dark art’ to open networks

When the technology was newer, different manufacturers made no effort to create open systems. This created a challenge for integrators like Diverseco, who would have to piece the puzzle together between different companies, with each almost speaking a different language. For cobots, the manufacturers of the robotic arms are different to the companies that manufacture the grippers, which are then different to the companies that make small, moving autonomous robots which move produce around a factory floor.


Now, the company can integrate robotic arms, with customised grippers, on top of autonomous mobile robots. In practice, a cobot on wheels can move down an aisle, pick goods up, return to a human operator, and hand them off. 


On the programming side, they are now simple enough to use that a person with the computer skill needed to work a video recorder on a phone would be able to set them up for new tasks within a business, claims Francis.



“They come with a simplistic, almost ‘block’ format of programming. You do not need to be a programmer, and you can easily apply them to different tasks when needed,” he explains.


This article is taken from the recently published digital book

Australia's Nobel Laureates Vol III State of our Innovation Nation: 2021 and Beyond

click here

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