High‑throughput shop robots
A social post reported G2 robots running at Longcheer electronics achieved about 310 units per hour with a 99% task success rate while operating continuously. (x.com)
AgiBot said its G2 robots are now running continuously on Longcheer tablet lines in Nanchang, China, at up to 310 units an hour. (youtube.com) The company said the robots handle loading and unloading at multimedia integrated testing stations, where they pick up tablets, place them into fixtures with millimeter-level accuracy, and sort finished or defective units. AgiBot listed a 19- to 20-second cycle time, a 99%-plus task success rate, and line integration in 36 hours. (youtube.com) A multimedia integrated testing station is a checkpoint on an electronics line where devices are placed into jigs for automated tests. AgiBot said G2 is working beside high-speed conveyors and human operators on Longcheer’s live production floor rather than in a lab demo. (humanoidsdaily.com) Longcheer is a contract manufacturer and design house for consumer electronics, and the company says it is the world’s largest smartphone original design manufacturer by 2024 shipments. That makes the deployment notable because the robots are being inserted into a factory system built for high volume and frequent model changes. (longcheer.com) Those model changes are one reason electronics assembly is hard to automate with fixed machinery. Humanoids Daily, in a sponsored article published with AgiBot, said short product cycles and small-batch, multi-model production make traditional automation expensive to reconfigure. (humanoidsdaily.com) Consulting firm Bain wrote in September 2025 that most humanoid robot deployments were still early-stage and worked best in tightly controlled settings. Bain said handling, battery life, and reliance on human supervision remained major limits even as industrial sites looked like the first realistic market. (bain.com) AgiBot has been pushing this factory case for months. On March 30, 2026, the company said it had produced its 10,000th humanoid robot and that the Longcheer project had moved from validation into scaled production, with plans to add hundreds more units. (aijourn.com) The numbers in this deployment still come from AgiBot’s own materials, including its April 14 video and partner-backed coverage, not from Longcheer production disclosures or an independent audit. For now, the clearest takeaway is narrower: one of China’s biggest electronics manufacturers is letting mobile humanoid robots do repetitive test-station work on a live line. (youtube.com)