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candersen10
Gold Member
- Joined
- Mar 27, 2007
- Messages
- 311
- Location
- Phoenixville, PA
- Tractor
- Cat 262c, NH TN75, JD 6430 premium, JD 5325, Kubota BX2200, Ford 1710HC, JD 333E, JD3720, Farmall 504, Farmall 404.
One more video:


If its like apples, they dont pick them when its pouring, but they want to get right back out as soon as it stops raining. There is a reason most farmers are going to 4wd for their orchard tractors.View attachment 529740
Updated chassis now to address some of the issues mentioned in the thread about mud/ruts etc.
Here is what the table grape fields look like - we've been assuming we can get by in these fields with 2WD because they don't pick when it is pouring rain etc., and the cart will only need to carry up to about 300 pounds of berries at the max.
View attachment 529741
If its like apples, they dont pick them when its pouring, but they want to get right back out as soon as it stops raining. There is a reason most farmers are going to 4wd for their orchard tractors.
Aaron Z
Here's a link that shows a bunch of video of hand picking in the types of fields we are aiming to run pilots in this spring: http://agrbt.com/images/Video/in field operations.mp4
Agree that a 4WD unit should be something we add eventually. Just not certain per the uses shown there that we absolutely have to have it today in our first prototypes?
We'll aim to test in the mud some this week and share video to see what people here think.
if you've got heavier lug grippy tires, you might do fine with 2wd. You are trying to prove the concept first. Of course 2wd is only one wheel driven, while 4wd is only two in basic rendition, so with electric motors, it only means one more motor. ?
Boy those grapes look nice. Bet it smells nice in there.
I can't help thinking that if you're really serious about using this in an ag application, you simply must stop diddling around with that front caster. No one is going to take that thing serious (at even close to your price point) until you have 4 proper tires on it. Not necessarily "4wd", but a tire at each corner no matter what, even if the front 2 are just steering casters. At least then you would have a tire at each corner for stability over terrain. That 3 wheel thing just says "I'm stuck" even while sitting still. And I would lean towards 4wd as being your only "ag" option, unless it's upgrading to full tracks.
Now for an INDOOR application, warehouse, etc, with concrete floors and smooth solid rubber tires, sure, go ahead and offer a 3 wheeled "caster" variant. Make it a wholly separate "indoor model" if you want. Call it the "Lil' Burro" if you want. Light duty frame, small capacity, and that caster, may not be bad cruising down a warehouse isle, or down a large office corridor. Still don't know about that 5 hr run time. Should be able to run 8 hrs. Most settings have employees that run at least an 8 hr shift, so more "efficient" to have someone stop to plug it in at the end of their "day".
I would also, for an "ag" application, raise the weight capacity to at least 500 lbs, offer it with a powered dump bed option, and maybe a few modular bed designs that can be interchanged on the same basic chassis. Also, just start out with the bigger battery capacity, 10 hrs min run time, 12 would be better.
Then maybe add a "Burro Grande" with 1000 lbs capacity, tracks, 12 hr run time, trailer hitch for a small garden trailer, also powered dump bed.
But honestly, 3 wheels (one of them a small center caster), a 250 lb capacity, and a 5 hr run time? For 5k? In an outdoor ag environment? I just don't see this going anywhere.


