AGIBOT G2 on factory line

AGIBOT G2 was spotlighted in a consumer‑electronics factory deployment at Longcheer, running around the clock and reportedly hitting 310 units per hour with over 99% success. The post presents this as a large‑scale embodied AI deployment in manufacturing. (x.com/pushkersoni72/status/2044269241042645386)

Embodied artificial intelligence means a robot is not just generating text or images; it is using cameras, sensors, and motors to handle physical work on a factory line. On April 15, 2026, AGIBOT said its G2 robots were put into live tablet production at Longcheer Technology in Nanchang, China. (prnewswire.com) AGIBOT and Longcheer said multiple G2 units are now working alongside human operators in a consumer-electronics precision-manufacturing line, not in a lab test or trade-show demo. The companies described the setup as round-the-clock production in a real factory environment. (prnewswire.com) The companies reported throughput of up to 310 units an hour, cycle times of about 19 to 20 seconds, and a success rate above 99 percent. CnTechPost, citing the company event, reported one G2 completed 2,283 tasks in an eight-hour run with zero errors. (interestingengineering.com) (cntechpost.com) Longcheer is not a small pilot customer. The company says it is the world’s largest smartphone original design manufacturer by 2024 shipments and the world’s second-largest consumer-electronics original design manufacturer, which puts the robot deployment inside a high-volume contract-manufacturing business. (longcheer.com) (hkexnews.hk) That matters because factory robotics usually succeed first in fixed, repetitive jobs with custom machinery, while humanoid or general-purpose robots have struggled to prove they can keep up with production speed, uptime, and quality targets. AGIBOT and Longcheer are presenting this installation as evidence that a more flexible robot can now meet those factory metrics. (prnewswire.com) (roboticstomorrow.com) The work itself is narrower than the phrase “humanoid robot on the line” can imply. Reports on the deployment say the G2 units are handling loading, unloading, sorting, circuit-board handling, testing support, and defect separation at multimedia-integrated testing stations. (interestingengineering.com) (theaiinsider.tech) AGIBOT also said the line was integrated within 36 hours after arriving on site, while Longcheer executive Li Long said the broader path from joint development to mass-production use took four months. Those timelines suggest the selling point is not just robot dexterity, but how quickly a factory can fit the system into existing processes. (interestingengineering.com) (rockingrobots.com) The biggest caveat is that nearly all of the detailed performance claims now in circulation come from AGIBOT and Longcheer, amplified through press-release pickups and event coverage. Independent factory data on costs, maintenance, labor substitution, and performance over months of production has not yet been published. (prnewswire.com) (tmcnet.com) Even so, the companies are already talking about expansion. CnTechPost reported the deployment is expected to grow to 100 units by the third quarter of 2026, extending into industries including automotive. (cntechpost.com) For now, the clearest fact is simple: AGIBOT’s G2 has moved from staged demos into a live Longcheer tablet factory, and the next test is whether those 310-units-an-hour and 99-percent-plus claims still hold after months on the clock. (prnewswire.com) (interestingengineering.com)

Get your own daily briefing

Scout delivers personalized news, insights, and conversations tailored to your role and industry.

Download on the App Store

Shared from Scout - Be the smartest in the room.