XTRITON Smart Bionic Painting Robot PG-90E Back in Stock
Demand for Smart Painting Continues to Grow
In January 2026, the XTRITON PG-90E Smart Bionic Painting Robot is back in stock.
This isn’t a new product launch—it reflects a practical industry trend: smart painting has moved from “experimental” to “standard practice.”
The real challenge in automotive painting isn’t applying the paint—it’s maintaining consistent quality over long periods. Spray gun distance, angle, speed, and overlap must all be precise; even a slight deviation can cause uneven coating, color variation, or runs, leading to rework and additional costs. Traditionally, these issues rely on the technician’s experience and stamina, but humans get tired, distracted, and have varying performance levels.
When painting becomes controllable, competitiveness is no longer just a slogan.
The PG-90E excels by using bionic painting to transform tasks that once relied heavily on human feel into programmable and repeatable processes. Spray paths, travel speed, and overlap ratios remain highly consistent, ensuring results no longer depend on “who is painting today or which panel is being sprayed,” but are completed according to the same standardized procedure.
For body and paint shops in actual operation, the impact is immediate. New technicians no longer need to rely on大量scrap parts to gain experience. High-workload operations can consistently deliver quality, while paint consumption, rework rates, and delivery times become predictable and manageable. This doesn’t replace human labor; rather, it preserves and replicates skilled techniques, allowing technicians to focus on more critical judgment and finishing tasks.
It is precisely because the PG-90E is already operating on real production lines that market demand continues to grow. The shipment arriving in January 2026 reflects that the industry is making its choice:
Rather than relying on human labor, it’s better to stabilize the process first
Smart painting isn’t the future—it’s happening now
The PG-90E has proven one thing: when painting becomes controllable, competitiveness is no longer just a slogan。
