POWERING THE FUTURE OF ROBOTICS
We're cable assembly specialists dedicated to the robotics industry. Our mission is to be the trusted wiring partner for companies building the next generation of robots.
Our Story
Founded by engineers who saw the gap between generic cable suppliers and the specialized needs of robotics companies, we set out to create a company that truly understands the demands of robotic systems. Every cable we make is designed to survive millions of flex cycles, extreme torsion, and the harsh environments where robots operate.
A wire harness is an organized bundle of wires, terminals, and protective coverings that routes electrical power and signals through a machine in a controlled way. Cable assembly refers to a terminated cable set that may carry power, signal, data, or combined circuits between fixed and moving robot subsystems.
That distinction matters in robotics because buyers often need both: a motion-rated cable assembly for a moving axis and a harness architecture that keeps routing, labeling, shielding, and service access consistent across the full machine.
How The Team Positions Its Work
This comparison helps buyers separate simple build-shop scope from the engineering and launch support described across the site.
| Area | Buyer Concern | How Robotics Cable Assembly Responds |
|---|---|---|
| Prototype quoting | Ambiguous scope creates re-quotes | Engineering review before quote to flag connector, routing, and flex-life gaps |
| Workmanship control | Variation between sample and production | Documented process flow, test planning, and repeatable build instructions |
| Robot motion risk | Abrasion, torsion, and bend-radius failures | Application-driven cable selection and route-fit review |
| Production scale-up | Prototype success does not always transfer to volume | Launch support focused on validation, traceability, and standardized assemblies |
Our Mission
“To be the nervous system of next-generation robots—delivering cable assemblies that enable innovation, not limit it.”
Robotics-First
We only serve the robotics industry. This focus means we understand your challenges better than any generalist supplier.
Speed Without Compromise
Rapid prototyping and fast production without sacrificing quality. Because your development timeline matters.
Engineering Partnership
We're not just suppliers—we're engineering partners who help optimize your cable designs for performance and cost.
Confidentiality First
Your IP is safe with us. We sign NDAs and maintain strict information barriers between competitive projects.
Our Team
A blend of cable assembly veterans and robotics enthusiasts who understand both the manufacturing craft and the end application.
Our Manufacturing Facility
State-of-the-art equipment and clean manufacturing environment ensure the highest quality cable assemblies.

Manufacturing Line

Production Area

Terminal Crimping Station

Manufacturing Equipment

Production Machinery

Tube Cutting Equipment

Production Line

Packing Area
Industries We Serve
Our cable assemblies power robots across diverse industries. From commercial cleaning to cutting-edge humanoid robots.
Authoritative Industry References
These independent references help buyers align the terminology on this site with widely used manufacturing, quality, and interconnect concepts.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does Hommer Zhao's team focus on?
The team focuses on custom wire harness and cable assembly programs for robotics OEMs that need prototype speed, repeatable manufacturing, and engineering review before volume release.
What is the difference between a wire harness and a cable assembly?
A wire harness is a bundled and organized set of conductors routed for a machine, while a cable assembly usually refers to a terminated cable set built for power, signal, data, or hybrid transmission.
Why do robotics buyers ask for engineering review first?
Routing space, flex life, shielding, connector orientation, and test scope can change both field reliability and price, so review before quotation removes expensive assumptions.
Which quality systems matter most for this work?
Buyers typically look for documented workmanship standards, process control, and traceability practices aligned with references such as IPC, ISO 9001, and IATF 16949 when automotive requirements apply.
Can the company support both prototype and production demand?
Yes. The site content is structured around sample builds, design-for-manufacturing review, test planning, and repeat-volume production support for OEM programs.
Ready to Work Together?
Let's discuss how we can support your robotics cable assembly needs.