Want fries with that? Robot makes French fries faster, better than
humans do
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[October 04, 2022] PASADENA,
Calif. (Reuters) - Fast-food French fries and onion rings are going
high-tech, thanks to a company in Southern California.
Miso Robotics Inc in Pasadena has started rolling out its Flippy 2
robot, which automates the process of deep frying potatoes, onions and
other foods.
A big robotic arm like those in auto plants - directed by cameras and
artificial intelligence - takes frozen French fries and other foods out
of a freezer, dips them into hot oil, then deposits the ready-to-serve
product into a tray.
Flippy 2 can cook several meals with different recipes simultaneously,
reducing the need for catering staff and, says Miso, speed up order
delivery at drive-through windows.
“When an order comes in through the restaurant system, it automatically
spits out the instructions to Flippy," Miso Chief Executive Mike Bell
said in an interview.
" ... It does it faster or more accurately, more reliably and happier
than most humans do it,” Bell added.
Miso said it took five years to develop Flippy and recently made it
commercially available.
The robot's name comes from Flippy, an earlier robot designed to flip
burgers. But once Miso's team finished that machine, they realized there
was a much tighter bottleneck at the fry station, particularly late at
night.
Bell said Flippy 2 makes a splash - at first.
“When we put a robot into a location, the customers that come up and
order, they all take pictures, they take videos, they ask a bunch of
questions. And then the second time they come in, they seem not to even
notice it, just take it for granted," he said.
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The Flippy 2 robot takes fries out of a
vat of oil at a lab of manufacturer Miso Robotics Inc in Pasadena,
California, U.S. September 27, 2022, in this screen grab from a
REUTERS video. Sandra Stojanovic/REUTERS TV via REUTERS
Miso engineers can watch Flippy 2 robots working in real time on a
big screen, enabling them to help troubleshoot any problems that
crop up. A number of restaurant chains have adopted the robotic fry
cook, including Jack in the Box in San Diego, White Castle in the
Midwest and CaliBurger on the West Coast, Bell said.
Bell said three other big U.S. fast-food chains have put Flippy 2 to
work, but says they're hesitant to advertise because of
sensitivities about perceptions that robots are taking jobs away
from humans.
“The task that the humans are most happy to offload are tasks like
the fry station. ... They're delighted to have the help so they can
do other things," Bell said.
Miso Robotics has around 90 engineers, who tinker with prototypes or
work on computer code. One of its next projects is Sippy, a
drink-making robot which will take an order from a customer, pour
drinks, put lids on them, insert a straw and group them together.
Bell said that some day, people will "walk into a restaurant and
look at a robot and say, 'Hey, remember the old days when humans
used to do that kind of thing?’
"And those days ... it's coming. ... It's just a matter of ... how
quick.”
(Reporting by Phil Lavelle and Sandra Stojanovic; editing by
Jonathan Oatis)
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