Talk:Wolf Robotics

April 2014
I'm having a hard time verifying this claim: "Its robotic-grade welding positioners have a load capacity of up to 100,000 kg[3] (220,462 lbs), which are among the strongest ever built"

My goal is to find a chart or something similar listing the load capacities of welding positioners.

NickInFoCo (talk) 02:26, 26 April 2014 (UTC)

Edit request
The following sentence in the leading section is cumbersome, providing a little too much detail:


 * Industries it serves include “energy, oil and gas, mining and structural steel”,[5] as well as defense, transportation, fabrication,[6] off-road,[3] "NASA technologies",[2] “construction and agricultural applications”.[7]

After tallying industries mentioned in References 2-7, I propose culling the list down to the three most-mentioned. To be concise, they could be appended to the following sentence, thus:


 * By 2014, it had installed over 8,400 robotic systems[6] for mining, construction, agriculture, and other industries[2][3][4][5][7].

20:29, 30 April 2014 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Hertzfeldt (talk • contribs)
 * Thanks! That seems sensible to me - I've made the change. - Bilby (talk) 04:26, 21 May 2014 (UTC)

Edit Request: combine & trim last three sections
A couple of the references in the "Certifications & Awards" section have questionable encyclopedic value, the "Accomplishments" section is rather small, and all the references in the "Further Reading" section relate to political interest in the company. The content of these sections might flow better if it were all combined into the Accomplishments section, and trimmed down in a manner similar to this:


 * Its robotic-grade welding positioners have a load capacity of up to 100,000 kg[3] (220,462 lbs), which are among the strongest in the industry[citation needed]. It introduced robotics to the process of submerged arc welding.[15] As one of the first four companies to be certified by the Robotic Industries Association[11] as a robotic integrator, it is also one of six organizations recognized by the American Welding Society as an approved testing center for the Certified Robotic Arc Welding (CRAW) program. The company is visible in the state of Colorado[ref: Associated Press][ref: Office of Gov. John Hickenlooper].

Hertzfeldt (talk) 17:36, 27 May 2014 (UTC)


 * Caveats on proceeding with edit request: 1. Last sentence ("visible") is meaningless, omit; 2. Put citations and citation needed tags at end of supported sentence, after the punctuation. 3. The term "positioner" is jargon, is there a better term? – S. Rich (talk) 17:53, 9 September 2014 (UTC)