We feature the article regarding the improvements of Dino, one of the Naio’s technologies.

Dino’s beginnings in Salinas

The first season in Salinas introduced local farmers to Dino – our bed straddling robot used for weeding salad crops. Thanks to our partners’ trust (such as Top Flavor Farm, Bonipak and Church Brothers Farms), we were able to weed many acres on their farms and gather precious feedback. We were thus able to identify Dino’s few limitations, and correct them immediately. Several of my French colleagues regularly travelled to California and Arizona to conduct other tests and adapt our robot according to the needs expressed by American farms.  Indeed, there are notable differences between European and American practices – which led us to modify certain aspects of the machine.

Precision adjustments

We started by adjusting Dino’s guiding system over the crop beds. Its itinerary is now perfectly straight and accurate, in compliance with the map it is instructed to follow.   A second team came to improve the tool’s camera guidance – which was another significant advancement for Dino. The third and final team went to Yuma in Arizona, to implement the active tool developed at the end of last year. Other aspects were also adjusted, making the mechanics more reliable, ensuring more compact batteries, making it possible to use new weeding tools, and lastly providing operators with a reliable and secure remote control.

Last season, Dino therefore operated across dozens of hectares of farmland! This year, we have scheduled hundreds more thanks to the arrival of other Dino machines throughout the USA.

Let’s start a new season!

All these improvements mean we now have fully autonomous robots, and we can consider operating several machines at the same time within the same plot of land.

After a very dry winter and a very wet month of March (that came as a huge relief to us all!), we are now ready to launch the next weeding season with our privileged partners – who stand by us as we pursue Dino’s and Naïo’s life on American land.

Source: Naio Technologies