5 new products that debuted at ProMat

We’re only two days into ProMat 2025, and already there has been an avalanche of news from the show. Between new products, interesting partnerships, and exciting demos, it can be difficult to keep up with it all.

We’ve compiled a list of five new products that debuted at the show. To stay up to date on the newest technologies at the show, follow the rest of our ProMat coverage.

Dane Technologies and Brain Corp collaborate on Dane AiR DC

Dane Technologies and Brain Corp's Dane AiR DC.
Dane Technologies and Brain Corp’s Dane AiR DC provides scalable inventory management. | Source: Dane Technologies

Monday, Dane Technologies, an autonomous mobile robot (AMR) and power assist developer, and Brain Corp, a robotic software provider, launched Dane AiR DC. The companies built this AMR for inventory management tasks within distribution centers and warehouses.

The Dane AiR DC fully automates the inventory process while providing faster cycle counts, greater data accuracy, and lower operating costs, the companies claimed. Its scanning technology uses computer vision, RFID, and barcode scanning on pallets or items in racks up to 38 feet, as well as bulk storage. It boasts 99.5% barcode reading accuracy rate.

The companies said Dane AiR DC can cover 200,000 square feet in under eight hours. The robot has a runtime of 10 hours and takes just four hours to charge. The system is powered by the BrainOS Robotics Platform, which has logged over 20 million autonomous operating hours across more than 40,000 robots.

The companies are showing the new robot in Booth N7544.

Mujin debuts MujinFleet

Mujin Corp., which creates robotics for trailer unloading and loading, introduced MujinFleet, an application of MujinOS, the platform behind its robots.

MujinFleet allows users to set up and configure a variety of mobile robot form factors for any material handling system, Mujins aid. The application works across multiple AMR and automated guided vehicle (AGV) hardware providers and allows those vehicles to operate within one environment.

Leveraging multi-agent path planning, MujinFleet manages the movements and interactions of the overall system autonomously, allowing the users to quickly deploy and operate their fleet of vehicles.

Mujin is showing off this technology at Booth N6733. Additionally, it’s showing demonstrations of its robotic case-picking application, case and pallet storage and retrieval systems, and its robotic picking and palletizing system.

Numina Group introduces its latest generation pick, pack, and ship robotics

Numina Group introduced its One-Touch Parcel Pack & Ship system as well as its AMR Robotic Picking Modules at ProMat.

The One Step Pack & Ship system features a fast, touchless post-pick, all-in-one parcel shipping system. It leverages Garrido’s AMS Jr., an automated in-line packaging system, coupled with Numina Group’s One Step Pack and Ship Scan-Label-Auto-Manifest (SLAM) and Sort Automation system.  

The company is also demonstrating its large-capacity RDS Batchbot AMR Picking Solution, which handles six times the capacity of smaller AMRs to significantly increase pick efficiency and throughput while reducing labor requirements.

The RDS Batchbot also includes Numina’s DS Victory Voice Suit, a pick-by-voice system with wearable computers to enable workers to work hands-free, eyes-forward, for safe and accurate picking. 

Orbbec makes its lidar debut

Orbecc's SL450 lidar.
Orbecc’s SL450 lidar. | Source: Orbecc

Orbbec launched two products at ProMat. First, it launched the Ethernet-enabled Gemini 335Le, a high-reliability stereo vision camera system designed for robots
operating in industrial environments. With this launch and ethernet connectivity, Orbbec’s Gemini 330 Series of depth cameras will now collectively support all three mainstream interfaces, across USB3, GMSL2, and Ethernet.

Additionally, it introduced the Pulsar SL450, a single-line lidar for robotic navigation. The Pulsar SL450 is a high-accuracy, long-range LiDAR using direct Time of Flight (dToF) technology. Featuring a 270° scanning range and ≥45m detection capability, it delivers reliable positioning and navigation for robotics, logistics, security, and 3D reconstruction. It is best suited for warehouse AMRs, autonomous forklifts, and commercial service robots, according to Orbecc.

The Pulsar SL450 offers a high-density point cloud scanning frequency of up to 72 kHz with 0.075° angular resolution for detailed surface detection. It also provides precise environmental perception thanks to its multi-echo design that ensures accurate data feedback, even in foggy or dusty environments.

Yale Relay aims to simplify lift truck deployments

Yale Lift Truck Technologies announced Yale Relay, an overarching platform encompassing all automated lift trucks the company releases going forward. The platform features an intuitive drag-and-drop portal that replaces the complex software coding requirements typically associated with automation.

The new portal enables easy setup and on-the-fly changes without the need for custom programming, allowing warehouses to reduce their dependence on scarce warehouse labor without expensive software engineering resources. Attendees of the show can get hands-on experience with the Yale Relay portal and automated tow tractors at Booth S647.

The portal allows for faster startup than traditional approaches, enabling implementation in as little as a day, Yale claimed. Mapping the facility is as simple as manually operating the lift truck along the desired route dropping waypoints in the portal, and making changes is as simple as selecting a waypoint and dragging it to a new location.

The portal provides cloud-based access that enables easy, efficient management of automated lift trucks across multiple facilities, and reduces the need for on-site interventions with remote monitoring and update capabilities. It is designed with the ability to integrate with other common warehouse systems like facility fire alarms, interactive input boxes, programmable logic controllers, warehouse management systems, and more.


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Written by

Brianna Wessling

Brianna Wessling is an Associate Editor, Robotics, WTWH Media. She joined WTWH Media in November 2021, after graduating from the University of Kansas with degrees in Journalism and English. She covers a wide range of robotics topics, but specializes in women in robotics, autonomous vehicles, and space robotics.

She can be reached at bwessling@wtwhmedia.com