Xiaomi Humanoid Robot Completes 3-Hour Factory Trial With 90.2% Installation Success
Xiaomi's humanoid robot has successfully completed a three-hour continuous autonomous operation at an automotive manufacturing facility, achieving a 90.2% success rate in self-tapping nut installation while meeting 76-second production cycle requirements.
Xiaomi's humanoid robot has taken its first step into large-scale automotive manufacturing, completing a rigorous three-hour "internship" at a live production facility. According to an official announcement from Xiaomi Technology on March 2, the robot successfully operated a self-tapping nut loading station for continuous autonomous runs, achieving a 90.2% bilateral simultaneous installation success rate while maintaining the production line's fastest cycle time of 76 seconds.
The trial placed the robot at a critical station handling automotive structural components. Tasked with automating the installation of self-tapping nuts onto vehicle rear floor parts produced through integrated die-casting, the system demonstrated precise coordination with existing factory infrastructure. The robot continuously retrieved nuts from an automatic feeding mechanism, positioned them onto specialized fixtures, and synchronized with slide conveyors and automatic positioning systems to complete the tightening process.
Engineers highlighted several technical complexities that made the task particularly challenging. The installation process required exact alignment between the nut's internal key structure and the positioning pin axis, complicated by inconsistent grip orientations and magnetic pull forces from the pin's attraction. These variables demanded sophisticated real-time adjustments to ensure reliable component fitting.
Xiaomi identified this deployment as the company's initial move toward scalable humanoid robot applications in automotive production environments. The validation tests represent a significant milestone in transitioning humanoid robotics from laboratory settings to active manufacturing floors.
The company confirmed that deployment and verification efforts are currently underway at multiple additional workstations, with further progress updates scheduled for future release as the program advances toward broader industrial integration.