Side-by-side comparison of ARC10-1600 (EFORT Intelligent Equipment Co., Ltd.) and PiPER (Agilex) — specs, pricing, Robolist Product Score, and verified deployments. Updated daily.
Optimize comparison for buyer
Optimized for Agriculture buyers. Priority specs lifted to the top and marked with a target.
Manufacturer Country


Verified Deployments


Price Range (USD)


Availability Status


IP Rating (Arm)


Payload


Reach


Degrees of Freedom


Repeatability


Robot Weight


IP Rating (Wrist)


Controller Model


Programming Languages


Teach Pendant Type


ROS-Industrial Support


Internal Cable Routing


Price (USD)


Warranty


Service Network


![]() | ||
|---|---|---|
| Layer 1: Identity & Trust | ||
| Manufacturer Country | China | China |
| Verified Deployments | 0 Deployments | 0 Deployments |
| Layer 2: Operational | ||
| Price Range (USD) (values differ) | $13,206 | $2,499 |
| Availability Status | ACTIVE | ACTIVE |
| Layer 3: Category Specific | ||
| Arm Mechanics | ||
| IP Rating (Arm) (priority for Agriculture buyers) (values differ) | IP65 | — |
| Payload (priority for Agriculture buyers) (values differ) | 10 kg | 1.5 kg |
| Reach (values differ) | 1,640 mm | 626 mm |
| Degrees of Freedom | 6 | 6 |
| Repeatability (values differ) | ±0.05 mm | ±0.1 mm |
| Robot Weight (values differ) | 185 kg | 4.2 kg |
| IP Rating (Wrist) (values differ) | IP67 | — |
| Controller & Programming | ||
| Controller Model (values differ) | Inclus (Contrôleur robot) | Integrated |
| Programming Languages (values differ) | — | Python |
| Teach Pendant Type (values differ) | wired touch | tablet-based |
| Connectivity | ||
| ROS-Industrial Support (values differ) | — | vendor supported |
| End-Effector | ||
| Internal Cable Routing (values differ) | through arm and wrist | — |
| Commercial | ||
| Price (USD) (values differ) | $13,206 | $2,499 |
| Warranty (values differ) | 1 yrs | — |
| Service Network (values differ) | regional | — |
Insufficient data for full comparison
The following fields had no data for any of the selected robots: Year First Available, Battery / Shift Runtime, Path Accuracy, Max TCP Speed, Cycle Time (25/305/25), MTBF, Duty Cycle, Vibration Damping, Safety Category, Dual Check Safety, Safety I/O Pairs, E-Stop Response, Safe Zone Count, Offline Programming, Digital Twin Support, Communication Protocols, IoT / Cloud Platform, Cybersecurity Certs, Predictive Maintenance, Tool Flange Standard, Tool Changer (ISO), Pneumatic Lines, Electrical Lines, Spare Parts Lead Time, Expected Service Life
Frequently asked
ARC10-1600 is made by EFORT Intelligent Equipment Co., Ltd., based in CN. PiPER is made by Agilex, based in CN.
ARC10-1600 is listed at $13,206. PiPER is listed at $2,499.
ARC10-1600 scores 58/100. PiPER scores 54/100. The Product Score blends specs, pricing transparency, verified deployments, and independent media coverage — see methodology for the full breakdown.
ARC10-1600 has a reach of 1640 mm. PiPER has a reach of 626 mm.
Both robots are classified as Industrial Arm on Robolist. Filters and ranking treat them as direct alternatives.
Hardware cost is one input. Industrial Arm TCO also includes integration, training, downtime, and end-of-life. Our breakdown: TCO of a 6-Axis Arm Cell: Hardware, EOAT, Integration, Programming.
Spec sheets only show part of the story. Useful vendor questions cover support, lifecycle, integration cost, and references. We have a buyer-focused checklist: Industrial Arm Vendor Selection: Capability Matrices and Proof Points.
Going deeper — picking the right robot
TCO of a 6-Axis Arm Cell: Hardware, EOAT, Integration, Programming
7 min readIndustrial Arms
Industrial Arm Vendor Selection: Capability Matrices and Proof Points
9 min readIndustrial Arms
Programming Approaches: Teach Pendant, Offline, AI-Assisted — What Each Costs You
8 min readIndustrial Arms
Build vs buy vs lease: which model fits a first deployment
8 min readChoosing Your First Robot
The hidden specs vendors hope you'll miss
10 min readReading the Spec Sheet
ARC10-1600 vs PiPER compares two robots in the industrial-arm category. All data is sourced from manufacturer spec sheets, verified deployments, and third-party filings; see our methodology for how the Robolist Product Score is calculated.