Elmo Motion Control has poured a lot of engineering into shrinking things down without giving up power, and its newest hardware makes that ambition plain. The Israeli firm, based in Petach Tikva, rolled out a fresh Titanium line alongside an expanded Platinum line on June 18, 2026, then put the range in front of visitors at Automate 2026 in Chicago from June 22-25.
The headline act is the Titanium Castanet, a dual-axis servo drive squeezed into a package Elmo describes as matchbox size, complete with functional safety. If you have ever tried to cram motion control into a tight robotic joint or a compact machine cell, that size claim is the kind that makes an engineer look twice.
Sitting beside it, the Titanium Harmonica keeps the dual-axis format but ramps up the output, delivering power up to 50A/100V or 35A/200V, again with functional safety baked in. Between the two, Elmo covers a spread of applications where board space is scarce but torque demands are not.
Coordinating all of that is the Titanium Maestro motion controller. It scales to as many as 256 axes and pushes a 100µs EtherCAT cycle time for 16 axes, which is the sort of determinism you want when synchronizing dozens of motors across a production line without letting timing drift creep in.
The Platinum side of the announcement is where the raw wattage lives. The new Platinum Jori arrives in 30A and 60A variants, serving up to 20/40 kW of continuous power. Elmo leans on silicon carbide (SiC) power stage technology here, the same material shift that has been reshaping EV inverters and industrial power electronics thanks to lower switching losses and better thermal behavior. Functional safety comes as standard.
Rounding out Platinum is the Cymbal, a high-power servo drive rated up to 17kW, once more with functional safety. Taken together, the two lines let integrators pick a drive by power envelope rather than compromising on footprint or safety certification.
Elmo frames the whole rollout around power density, and on paper the numbers back that up. The Titanium units aim at applications where every cubic centimeter counts, while Platinum targets the heavy hitters that need double-digit kilowatts on tap. Both benefit from the SiC and safety features that have become table stakes in modern industrial automation.
The products were announced as available, though Elmo has not detailed shipping specifics beyond that, and no pricing has surfaced yet. For anyone speccing out a new robotic cell or retrofitting an existing line, the mix of matchbox-scale drives and kilowatt-class powerhouses under one roof is worth a close look.