I went through this exact debate with a packaging jig we built in-house. The frame and mechanics were solid, but the manual adjustments were killing our pace and tiring people out. What helped me was thinking in “modules”: what’s the one movement you do most often, and can that be automated without touching everything else? I started reading up on sizing, mounting styles, and what kind of control options exist, and that made the whole idea feel way less risky. This page on
automation retrofit kits was useful because it’s focused on converting existing setups rather than pushing you to replace the whole machine. We retrofitted only the parts that needed consistent movement, kept the rest manual, and it worked surprisingly well. Cost-wise, it was a fraction of new equipment, and we were up and running fast. The biggest win was consistency—less “human variation” and fewer tiny mistakes that add up during a shift.