Somabar Cost



Somabar is expected to be available by July 2016 and will be cost you $430 for your personalized bartender. SEE ALSO: Somabar, world’s first robotic bartender tagged in Automated bartending, CES. The price of a finished Somabar after the pre-order period is tentatively set at $699. If you wish to pre-order right now, you can reserve one for $429 plus shipping. By ordering Somabar and completing your check out, you are agreeing to Somabar's Terms of Sale and acknowledge the terms of Somabar's Warranty. $4,845.00 Price add iPad Mini.

One of the most important mantras in building SirMixABot was making a product so painfully simple and easy to make – that we could actually bring it to market. We avoided injection molds, welding processes, or overly complicated motors and PCB assembly. The reason? A quick google search revealed that almost every other automatic bartender or cocktail mixer machine had an inevitable “delay to launch” (This is code for failing to make it to market). We’ll focus on three key competitors here, and the manufacturing techniques that made scaling these cocktail mixer machines prohibitively expensive.

(1) Barbotics Home Bartender:

Cost

The company (since posting loads of updates since 2015) is producing an at-home cocktail mixer machine capable of holding 9 ingredients. The machine does look really good, features some Amazon Alexa integrated features, and even has a sleek compact design. A few manufacturing processes however, may have delayed (or driven up costs) of actually bringing this product to market.

Cost

A couple of manufacturing issues may have made the costs of making the Barbotic bartender prohibitively high:

(1) Multiple Injection Molds:

The robotic bar is a niche product. Injection molds are designed for parts runs of ~10,000 unit volumes. At lower unit runs, the cost per unit savings is much smaller. Furthermore, each separate injection mold typically required both tooling design periods as well as tooling production. At low costs ($10,000 per tool) adding multiple injection molded pieces can easily rocket to $100,000 of setup and tooling costs before a single unit is produced.

(2) Custom PCB Boards

This cocktail mixing machine also add its own custom PCB for communicating with Wifi and driving the individual pump motors. While at multiple unit volumes the unit costs of the PCB’s and hardware declines, designing and producing these PCB’s can often cost $30-50,000. Initial manufacturing (even in small batches) can be cheap (<$40 per unit) but often when designing the board additional EMI research is needed to determine true effects on the processor. Using off the shelf computer and CNC hardware would significantly reduce prototyping expense as well as manufacturing costs.

(2) Somabar Cocktail Mixer Machine:

The Somabar is a very similar concept to the Barbotics robot. Instead of featuring 9 drinks, it features 6 “Pods” where a user has to manually pour the liquor or mixer of their choice into the pod, then insert into the bar. The device then uses a proprietary “mechanical mixer” device which then dispenses premixed cocktails. Unfortunately, you still can’t receive a Somabar, and it looks like the company has pivoted from a home user, to more commercial grade units as of their latest kickstarter comments.

Despite the high entry price of ~ $500 for a unit, it seems delivery is still to be determined judging by the angry kickstarter comments and “no refund” policy outlined here. The company is certainly still alive, but a way off of their “2015” delivery goal.

While Barbotics violated a few rules of the “small batch” manufacturing techniques, the SomaBar violates both these rules and another. With a “precision mechanical mixer” the bar will require custom, large scale, metals manufacturing. Without examining the device in greater detail, it appears SomaBar may have to develop a custom extrusion matched to food-grade Stainless steel.

Bar

Having a mini-bar is great and all, but if you drink as much as Don Draper, you probably get tired of having to mix your cocktails every time you get the hankering for a bloody screwdriver, followed by a lime gin fizz, before being topped off by a Florida sunshine. Yeah, you drink a lot. And you’re exactly the kind of fellow who will appreciate the convenience the Somabar can bring your way.

A super-fast cocktail-mixing appliance, it lets you enjoy any drink in its arsenal in just five seconds. Yup, take that Monsieur Robot Bartender. Simply place a glass under the dispenser, choose a cocktail from the accompanying smartphone app, and wait the few seconds it takes to mix and make its way to the glass. Seriously, that’s almost as fast as opening the fridge door and pulling out a can of beer.

How does it mix drinks so fast? Somabar is equipped with a proprietary static mixing technology that uses principles of “fluid dynamics, kinetic energy, and turbulence created by static vanes.” Yes, we don’t understand what any of those mean, either, but it’s that technology that enables the device to mix ingredients thoroughly in such a short amount of time. Oh yeah, it self-cleans the mixing chamber, too, flushing it with water after each drink is dispensed, so cocktail tastes don’t mix between uses.

Soma Bar Costa Rica

To prepare Somabar for use, you will need to transfer spirits from their bottles to a Soma Pod, a cone-shaped container that can plug onto designated compartments in the appliance. It can hold six Soma Pods at a time (so up to six different spirits, three on each side), along with a smaller container for bitters set up on top. The device can mix any of 200 cocktails in its database.

A Kickstarter campaign is currently running for Somabar. Pledges to reserve a unit starts at $399.

Electronic Bartender Machine