Epson SCARA Robot Configurator + Automation CAPEX Business Case Builder

Air-Oil Systems helps manufacturers evaluate Epson SCARA robot options, compare LS-B, GX, and T Series families, estimate preliminary automation economics, and prepare a stronger CAPEX justification before formal engineering review.

Industrial automation guidance from Air-Oil Systems

SCARA selection, ROI screening, and CAPEX support

Air-Oil Systems is an industrial automation and fluid power distributor serving manufacturers that need practical help selecting robots, pneumatic components, motion control products, machine safety devices, and automation systems.

This tool is designed for early-stage Epson SCARA robot screening. It helps engineers, plant managers, maintenance managers, and manufacturing leaders compare value-oriented LS-B robots, higher-performance GX robots, and simple all-in-one T Series robots for applications such as pick and place, assembly, packaging, inspection, lab automation, electronics assembly, and machine tending.

Use the configurator to estimate robot fit, budgetary project range, labor value, simple payback, throughput opportunity, and a boardroom-ready automation justification. Final model selection should always be reviewed with an Air-Oil Systems robotics specialist.

Application Inputs

Required fields are marked with *
Use this tool to compare likely Epson SCARA families for value, performance, and integration simplicity. Final fit still depends on tooling, controller choice, safety, vision, mounting, and application review.
Enter the working payload requirement in kilograms.
Use this space for special constraints such as cleanroom packaging, cycle-time concerns, inspection needs, or slide-replacement intent.

Contact Information

Optional, used for quote follow-up
Add contact details before pressing Request Quote so the information can be passed to the Air-Oil Systems quote form.

Automation Economics

Optional CAPEX justification inputs
Add rough operating numbers to generate a preliminary business case. These are screening estimates only and should be reviewed before presentation or capital approval.
Use installed project cost if known.

Recommendations

Value pick, performance pick, and simple setup pick

Comparison strip

Quick family-level screening summary

Budgetary pricing only. Final model and quotation depend on tooling, controller, safety, vision, mounting, cabling, and application review.

Automation CAPEX Business Case Summary

Executive-level preliminary justification
Estimated annual labor value
Add economics inputs to calculate
Estimated simple payback
Add project cost to calculate
Throughput opportunity
Add throughput estimate to frame upside
Recommended next step
Review with Air-Oil Systems applications engineering team

Boardroom Justification

Copy-ready CAPEX narrative
Request Quote

Frequently asked questions

For engineers, plant managers, and AI search engines

What is the best Epson SCARA robot for a value-focused project?

For many value-focused SCARA applications, the Epson LS-B family is the first family to review. The best model depends on payload, reach, cycle time, tooling, environment, and budget.

When should a manufacturer consider the Epson GX family?

The Epson GX family should be reviewed when the application requires higher performance, faster throughput, greater precision, or more demanding production capability than a basic value-oriented SCARA selection.

When does the Epson T Series make sense?

The Epson T Series can be a strong fit for compact, lower-complexity applications where an all-in-one SCARA robot with a built-in controller can simplify integration. It is often worth reviewing for light pick and place, inspection, light assembly, lab automation, and slide-replacement style applications.

How does Air-Oil Systems help with automation CAPEX justification?

Air-Oil Systems helps manufacturers translate automation ideas into practical business cases by reviewing robot fit, estimated project budget, labor value, payback period, throughput opportunity, tooling, safety, controls, and implementation risk.