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Robotics & Automation CNC Machining

Built for motion-critical assemblies: precision CNC machining for robotic arm joints, tight tolerance CNC machining for harmonic drives, and 5-axis CNC machining for robotic end-effectors—with DFM-first collaboration and inspection-ready deliverables.

STEP / IGES / SLDPRT / PDF accepted

ISO_1-Batnon

ISO 9001

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Material traceability

CMM_1-Batnon

CMM reporting

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Revision Control

Why CNC Machining Powers Robotics & Automation

In an industry where every micron matters, our precision CNC machining delivers the repeatability, lightweight strength, and complex geometries required for robotic arms, cobots, end-of-arm tooling, and manipulators. We help OEMs reduce weight, increase speed, and achieve 24/7 reliability.

Unmatched Precision for Motion Control

±0.00019″/0.005mm tolerances on joints and harmonic drive housings ensure zero backlash and perfect repeatability in collaborative robots.

Lightweight Materials Expertise

Titanium, magnesium alloys, and high-strength aluminum for robotic arms that move faster while consuming less energy.

From Prototype to Production

Rapid prototyping CNC machining accelerates your cobot development from concept to deployment in days, not weeks.

Engineering Pain Points We Solve for Robotics & Automation

Robotics performance is often limited by small geometric errors that accumulate across the kinematic chain. Manufacturing decisions—especially around datums, fits, and inspection—show up as positioning error, vibration, or drift.

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Motion-critical interfaces

Actuator housings, bearing seats, and gearbox interfaces where concentricity and alignment control matter.

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Backlash & repeatability risk

Parts that influence backlash sensitivity: joint housings, bearing preload features, and mounting stack-ups.

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DFM-first iteration

Tool access, thin walls, deep pockets, and realistic tolerance strategy before committing to production fixtures.

Our CNC Machining Capabilities for Robotics

Precision CNC Machining Services

We deliver unmatched accuracy and tight tolerances in every component.

Precision CNC Machining Services

Tailored solutions engineered precisely to your unique specifications.

Precision CNC Machining Services

Rapid, high-quality prototypes that accelerate your product development.

What we machine for robotics & industrial automation equipment

custom CNC parts for industrial automation equipment and CNC machining for automated guided vehicle (AGV) components.

1.Joint housings & actuator housings - Batnon

Joint housings & actuator housings

Focus: bearing fits, alignment features, and stable datum references for repeatability.

2.EOAT end-effector components - Batnon

EOAT / end-effector components

Supports searches like 5-axis CNC machining for robotic end-effectors and custom gripper parts.

3. Sensor housings & mounts - Batnon

Sensor housings & mounts

Precision bores, alignment features, and rigidity for optical, vision, LiDAR, and force/torque sensors.

SubsystemCommon machined partsWhat to specifyRisk if missed
Motion joints & actuatorsActuator housings, bearing seats, gearbox / harmonic drive housingsDatum scheme, bearing/shaft fits (ISO 286), GD&T for coaxiality and positionStack-up drift, backlash sensitivity, vibration, accelerated wear
EOAT (end-of-arm tooling)Gripper fingers/jaws, tool changers, adaptersInterface datums, tool access, surface protection zones (masking notes)Mis-pick, inconsistent grip, collision risk
Industrial automation hardwarePrecision brackets, rails/gantry components, fixture platesFlatness/parallelism, hole patterns, assembly sequence notesAssembly rework, line downtime, calibration instability

high precision robotic components, robotic joint precision machining, tight tolerance automation components.

Robotics machining procurement workflow (DFM → Inspection → Handoff)

A practical sequence you can reuse internally. It aligns with how leading platforms describe machining as part of robotics manufacturing strategy, and it reduces ambiguity when you outsource motion-critical parts.

1. Upload CAD + 2D drawing
2. Identify motion-critical interfaces
bearing seats, gear alignment, EOAT datum
3. DFM Gate
access, wall thickness, tool reach
4. Tolerance strategy
GD&T + datum scheme
5. Process plan
setups, fixturing, probing
6. First article + inspection
CMM report (optional)
7. Revision loop
change log + re-quote
8. Production handoff
fixture + QC plan

Robotics & automation CNC machining workflow — from CAD upload to production handoff (fixture + QC plan).

Prototype CNC machining for robotics R&D projects

Use prototypes to validate fits and interfaces early, then freeze datums and CTQ features before volume. If you need speed claims, keep them until operations confirms.

Production handoff checklist

Freeze revision, confirm inspection sampling plan, then decide on fixture strategy (soft jaws / dedicated fixtures) based on volume and repeatability.

Prototype Lead Times & Capabilities

Standard Prototype

Lead Time: 5–7 business days

Simple to moderate geometries, aluminum/plastics. Includes basic DFM feedback and first‑article report.

1–10 parts

No MOQ

Expedited Service

Lead Time: 3–5 business days

Priority scheduling for urgent design validation or critical path projects. Additional fee applies.

Rush option

Dedicated support

Complex / Multi‑Axis

Lead Time: 7–10 business days

5‑axis, magnesium, titanium, deep cavities, or tight tolerances (±0.005mm). Full CMM inspection.

5‑axis capability

Full documentation

Prototype → Production Continuity

The prototype you approve is machined exactly the same way as your production run — same programs, same tooling, same inspection standards. No re‑qualification, no surprises.

Same Toolpaths

We use production‑intent CNC programs from the first prototype. No “quick‑and‑dirty” paths that need re‑writing later.

Same Workholding

Fixtures and soft jaws are designed for scalability, so your first part and your 10,000th part are clamped identically.

Same Documentation

CMM reports, FAIRs, and material certs are generated from the same inspection plan, ensuring continuity from prototype through production.

DFM Gate for Robotics Parts (Avoid Hidden Failure Modes)

micro-precision CNC machining for robotic sensor housings and aluminum CNC machining for robotic structural links.

Tool access

Deep pockets, internal corners, and long reach features increase deflection risk and inspection time.

Thin-wall behavior

Wall thickness decisions impact chatter, distortion, and whether functional fits remain stable after finishing.

Datum clarity

Without a datum scheme, “tight tolerances” are ambiguous—CMM interpretation varies and stack-up becomes guesswork.

Iterate Fast with DFM & Revision Management

Free DFM Review

Every prototype quote includes a detailed Design for Manufacturability analysis. We flag potential issues — thin walls, sharp internal corners, deep pockets — and suggest fixes before machining starts.

at no cost

Revision Management

Design changes happen. Submit your revised CAD with marked changes; we provide a delta‑quote and fast re‑run. We don’t treat every iteration as a new project.

Delta pricing

5–7 day re‑run

Prototype‑Optimized Toolpaths

We use high‑speed machining (HSM) and trochoidal milling to reduce cycle times and tool wear — essential for rapid iteration.

35% faster machining

DFM checkpointWhat engineers often doBetter for roboticsWhy it matters
Deep pocketsMaximize depth “because CAD allows it”Keep depth-to-tool ratio reasonable; split into ops or redesign accessReduces tool deflection and improves bearing seat integrity
Internal cornersCall out sharp corners for “perfect fit”Add radius or use relief geometry (dog-bone) where neededAvoids costly secondary processes and prevents assembly hacks
Tolerances everywhereApply tight bands to all dimsApply tightness only to CTQ interfaces; relax non-critical dimsControls cost and inspection effort without sacrificing performance

Material Selection for Robotics CNC Machining

MaterialWhere it shows up in roboticsWhy engineers choose itNotes
Aluminum 6061 / 7075Arm links, housings, brackets, EOAT bodiesHigh stiffness-to-weight, machinability, common finishing options7075 often used when higher strength is needed; verify finish constraints.
Stainless steel (304/316/17-4PH)Wear parts, shafts, fastener interfaces, harsh environmentsStrength + corrosion resistance; useful around fluids/cleaning cyclesSpecify passivation requirements when needed.
Titanium (Grade 5)High-end lightweight, medical/field roboticsStrength-to-weight and corrosion resistance in demanding environmentsCost and machinability considerations—DFM early.
Carbon steel (1018, 1045, A36)Structural frames, base plates, high-load brackets, counterweightsLow cost, high strength, weldability, good dampingRequires coating (zinc, paint) for corrosion protection; not for wet environments.
Copper & Brass (C110, C360, C464)Electrical contacts, bushings, heat sinks, pneumatic fittingsExcellent conductivity (thermal/electrical), machinability, corrosion resistanceBrass is often used for decorative or low-friction components.
Magnesium (AZ31B, AZ91D)Ultra-lightweight arms, drone components, portable roboticsHighest strength-to-weight ratio among common metals, good dampingFlammability risk during machining; requires special coolant and permits.
POM / Delrin, NylonGears, bushings, housings, insulation partsLow friction, dimensional stability, lower massVerify moisture/creep behavior for your duty cycle.
PEEKHigh-temp, chemical exposure, insulating applicationsThermal and chemical resistance in aggressive environmentsUse only when needed; cost is higher.
Inconel (625, 718)Extreme high-temperature components, chemical exposureMaintains strength at high temperatures, excellent corrosion resistanceVery difficult to machine; plan for longer lead times and higher cost.
KovarGlass-to-metal seals in sensors, hermetic connectors, laser housingsMatches thermal expansion of glass and ceramicsEssential for vacuum and high-reliability applications.

Component Map for Robotics & Automation

CNC is most reliable and effective way where geometry control drives system performance: joints, drivetrains, EOAT interfaces, and precision mounts.

Actuator housings

  • monolithic CNC
  • Sealed bearing interfaces
  • Motor mounting flanges

Motion joints & actuators

  • Gearbox / harmonic drive housings
  • Bearing seats & preload spacers
  • Gripper fingers & jaws

End-of-arm tooling (EOAT)

  • Tool changers
  • Mounting plates & adapters
  • Sensor housings
  • Optical mounts
  • Calibration fixtures

Chassis & mobility

  • Wheel hubs
  • Chassis brackets
  • Rail/gantry components

RFQ Readiness Checklist

• 3D Model – STEP (.stp), IGES (.igs), or SolidWorks (.sldprt)
• 2D Drawing (PDF) – Critical dimensions, tolerances, GD&T, surface finish
• Material Specification – Exact alloy (e.g., 6061-T6 vs 7075)
• Finish Requirements – Anodize (Type II/III), Bead Blast, As-Machined, etc.
• Special Processes – Heat treatment, plating, passivation, welding, or secondary operations
• Inspection Level – CoC, Standard Report, CMM, or FAI
• Quantity – Prototype (1–10) or production (100–10k+)
• Special Instructions – Edge breaks, thread class, cosmetic zones, packaging needs
• Target Lead Time – Standard or expedited (rush orders)
• DFM Feedback Request – Request for design optimization or cost reduction

Please provide all core information when submitting your RFQ to receive an accurate, fast quote.

Case: 28% Scrap Rate Eliminated on Robotic Actuator Housings

Alex Rivera,

Product Design Lead, Apex Motion Controls

Banton case robotics and automation 1

Challenge:

Robotic actuator housings had severe bore misalignment that caused bearing binding and 28% scrap rate. Every misaligned part meant rework, delayed robot arm assembly, missed customer deadlines, and thousands in lost revenue — the kind of problem that kept Marcus up at night.

Banton case robotics and automation 2

Our Solution:

We moved Marcus’s team from 3-axis to 5-axis CNC machining with in-process probing. This eliminated two setups and gave us full control over concentricity and bore alignment on every part.

Banton case robotics and automation 3

Results:

  • Scrap rate dropped from 28% → 2% 

  • Concentricity held at 0.005mm

  • 800 precision parts delivered in just 9 days

Banton case robotics and automation 4

Impact:

  • Marcus met his robot launch deadline with weeks to spare

  • Field failures dropped to near zero

  • Project completed happily and on budget

Your CNC Machining Questions, Answered

No MOQ, ISO9001 certified, and precision down to ±0.005mm/0.00019in –
everything you need to know before your first quote.

Motion-critical interfaces—actuator housings, bearing seats, gearbox interfaces—and EOAT mounting components are common CNC candidates. CNC is most valuable when you need predictable geometry control and inspection documentation.

Start with function: bearing fits, gear alignment, and sensor datums. Use GD&T and a datum scheme so inspection interpretation is consistent. Tighten only CTQ features; relax the rest. Baseline tiers:

Inspection documents can be provided based on your drawing requirements (dimensional reports, CMM reports).

We support CNC machining services for collaborative robot (cobot) parts across prototyping and production planning. Production readiness typically requires revision control, fixture strategy, and a QC plan for CTQ features.

STEP/IGES (or native CAD), a 2D drawing with GD&T/tolerance notes, material + finish, quantity, and CTQ features. For sensor mounts, explicitly define datums and alignment surfaces.

For critical robotic components such as actuator housings, bearing seats, and shaft interfaces, we can achieve tolerances down to:

  • ±0.005mm (±0.00019") on critical features
  • Concentricity and positional accuracy controlled to ≤0.01mm

More importantly, we don’t just control individual part tolerances —
we help optimize tolerance stack across assemblies, which is often the real cause of misalignment in robotics systems.

Yes — this is one of the most common issues we solve for robotics and automation customers.

Even when all parts are within tolerance, assemblies can still fail due to tolerance accumulation across interfaces.

We help by:

  • Redefining datum structures across parts
  • Tightening only critical alignment features
  • Suggesting design-for-assembly improvements

This typically reduces system deviation from 0.2mm → <0.05mm and eliminates rework during assembly.

Turn Your Design Into Reality — Fast & Accurately

Upload your CAD. Get a fast online quote in 12h. 

STEP / IGES / SLDPRT / PDF accepted

CNC parts for Robotics & Automation

Batnon provides robotics & automation CNC machining focused on motion-critical assemblies such as actuator housings, bearing seats, gearbox interfaces, and EOAT adapters. Engineering outcomes depend on a clear datum scheme, realistic tolerance strategy, and inspection planning for CTQ features. Our workflow uses a DFM gate (tool access, thin walls, deep pockets) followed by a process plan (setups, fixturing, probing) and optional inspection reporting. For tolerance tier baselines, use the RivCut tolerance guide; Batnon-specific capabilities must be confirmed via [VERIFY] during RFQ.

Entities / terms for retrieval
Robotics CNC machining; industrial automation CNC manufacturing; custom machined robot parts
End-of-arm tooling (EOAT); gripper fingers; tool changer; mounting plate adapters
Harmonic drive housing; gearbox alignment; bearing seat fit; preload spacers
GD&T; datum reference frame; CTQ (critical-to-quality) features; tolerance stack-up
CMM report; first article inspection (FAI); revision control; production handoff QC plan

Send Your Requirement, Get Fast Quote

Email: sales@batnon.com

Whatsapp: +86 136 6262 0926