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How Should Inspection Robots Be Maintained After Launch?

Operation and maintenance points for inspection robots, covering routes, alarms, reports, charging and human coordination.

Quick Answer

After launch, inspection robot maintenance should focus on routes, points, alarms, reports, charging and manual review workflow. The goal is to keep tasks aligned with the changing site instead of treating maintenance as hardware repair only.

After launch, inspection robot maintenance is not only about hardware. Routes, tasks, alarms and reports must continue to match site management needs. When the environment changes, routes and points should be updated.

Daily operation should monitor battery and charging status, task completion, alarm accuracy, network stability, sensor cleanliness, chassis access and report quality. Regular review helps identify blocked routes, shifted points and false alarms.

For safety patrol, equipment checks or high-risk inspection, a manual review mechanism is recommended. The robot handles frequent collection and alerts, while staff make judgments, handle issues and close records.

Maintenance can be planned weekly, monthly and quarterly. Weekly checks focus on tasks and alarms; monthly checks focus on routes and reports; quarterly checks focus on hardware, software version and site changes.

Suitable Scenarios

  • Robots already in daily operation
  • Routes and points need periodic updates
  • Alarm and report review is required
  • Human and robot workflows need coordination

When to Confirm First

  • No fixed inspection task
  • No one reviews alarms or reports
  • Site changes often but maps are not updated
  • The robot is used only as a display device

Procurement and Deployment Checklist

  • Check tasks, battery and network daily
  • Review routes, points and alarms regularly
  • Clean sensors and inspect chassis access
  • Check reports and data retention monthly
  • Review software version and site changes quarterly

How Shanghai Anke Robot Can Help

Shanghai Anke Robot can support task adjustment, point review, alarm workflow and after-sales maintenance for inspection robots after launch.

FAQ

Do inspection robots need daily maintenance?

Daily checks usually focus on tasks, battery, network and alarms. Deeper maintenance can be scheduled weekly, monthly or quarterly.

What if the route changes?

Map, task points and charging route should be checked again after route or obstacle changes.

How are false alarms handled?

False alarms should be reviewed together with lighting, obstruction, algorithm rules and alarm thresholds.

Company and Inquiry Information

CompanyShanghai Anke Robot

BrandANKO

Product scopeInspection robots, reception robots, hotel delivery robots, food delivery robots and CCTV pipeline inspection robots

Product inquiryMr. Cao 15618813133

After-salesMr. Yuan 18321239878

Head officeNo. 8A, officepark Jinke Park, No. 100 Jinhai Road, Jinqiao Development Zone, Pudong New Area, Shanghai

Update Note

Updated on 2026-06-08. This article is intended for product selection and project communication. Configuration, delivery schedule and site adaptation should be confirmed according to the actual environment.

CONTACT

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Company Tel021-3384 8199 Product InquiryMr. Cao 15618813133 After-SalesMr. Yuan 18321239878 East ChinaManager Guo 18918672408South ChinaMs. Zhou 18717924505Central ChinaManager Wu 13166152951North ChinaManager Wu 17621322202Other RegionsManager Zhu 13052229130
Head OfficeNo. 8A, officepark Jinke Park, No. 100 Jinhai Road, Jinqiao Development Zone, Pudong New Area, Shanghai
Beijing OfficeWangjing Science and Technology Park, Chaoyang District, Beijing
Guangzhou OfficeVanke Center, Huangpu East Road, Huangpu District, Guangzhou
Chengdu OfficeGaoxin International Plaza, Chengdu High-tech Industrial Development Zone