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AI robot can change your tires in half the time | Collector
AI robot can change your tires in half the time
Axios

AI robot can change your tires in half the time

AI is coming for one of America's dirtiest jobs: changing tires . Why it matters: Demand for tire service is accelerating, in part because EV tires need more frequent replacement — just as service shops struggle to hire technicians . Changing tires is noisy, back-breaking work. And nobody wants to spend half their day waiting for a tire rotation. Automation is the answer , says Andy Chalofsky, a serial tire entrepreneur whose family has been in the tire business for four generations. Driving the news: His latest company, Automated Tire Inc., developed SmartBay, a robotic system that can inspect vehicles, swap tires and balance wheels with minimal human help. Instead of relying on fixed routines, the AI-powered system adapts to each vehicle, collecting and analyzing data along the way. That data can generate real-time insights that can be shared across ATI's network of customers including dealerships and auto service shops. How it works: The SmartBay system, which fits a standard 12-foot service bay, enables a single technician to manage up to three bays simultaneously. While tire service takes about 75 minutes when performed by a human, a robot can do it in as little as 30 minutes, says Chalofsky. That means a technician could handle up to 24 tires an hour, compared to four tires in an hour and 15 minutes today. Follow the money: ATI leases the system to dealerships and tire shops for $4,900 per month — about $60,000 a year — less than what it costs to hire an experienced technician, and with triple the efficiency. Zoom out: Chalofsky knows tires. He built Traction Tire, a wholesale tire distributor near Philadelphia, into a $100 million business before selling to a private equity firm in 2018. He also built an online tire marketplace, SimpleTire, that grew to nearly $1 billion in sales before it was acquired by Dealer Tire, a portfolio company of Bain Capital. What's next: His previous companies improved wholesale and retail tire distribution. Now installation is due for an overhaul, he says. "It's been a guy with a hammer banging your car, caveman style," he said. Meanwhile, customers are stuck in a noisy, smelly auto shop for hours. "I thought, "There has to be a better way."

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