MossRoad
Super Moderator
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2001
- Messages
- 57,412
- Location
- South Bend, Indiana (near)
- Tractor
- Power Trac PT425 2001 Model Year
Hello, I am working to build a robot for farmers to replace some of those tasks where you'd otherwise jump in and out of a tractor, or have to tow around a wagon. Here is a video of an early prototype: Augean Robotics (AGR) Following Cart Prototype - YouTube.
What do people think about this? The product is a robotic cart that follows the user, and can also return to a specified point on command. On my orchard, it would be very useful for harvesting apples, and also for spreading mulch (as shown in the video) and in other tasks where I'd otherwise be jumping into/out of a skid steer to spread small bits of material or collect objects.
The cart will be built out of aluminum so will not corrode, and should weigh about 100 pounds and be able to carry 250 pounds or so (at least several bushels of apples).
Any thoughts or feedback on the idea? What might you pay for something like this? Any applications people can think of?
OK. You asked, so don't everyone else flame me.
$4,500.00 is WAY too expensive for a cart to follow me around that I have to load and unload by hand. In the time it took you to use a shovel to fill that cart with wood chips for apple trees, I would have scooped a heaping bucket of chips(about 4 times more material than in that bin), and drove out to the trees at 8mph, shook the bucket a bit at each tree to drop a pile of chips, and been on my way back before you were leaving the pile. So right there, its going to take 4 more times the trips with that than my tractor bucket. In all honesty, I could probably do a hundred trees in the time it would take you to make one trip. I'm not bragging about the speed of my tractor, abilities, skill, blah, blah. I'm being completely honest. I don't see a use for it for the price if I have to load it and unload it by hand and only move at a walking speed. Of course, that's just the example I saw it used for. Maybe there's other applications? Maybe someone with physical limitations could use something like that. But my guess is for that price, they could buy a garden tractor for less than $2000 and a Rubbermaid cart for $500 to tow behind it and mow their lawn with it as well. If they're physically unable to push something like a bike wheel garden cart, they're probably also physically unable to shovel material into and out of it, and walk to and from the destination. If they're physically able to shovel and walk, then they're physically able to drive a small garden tractor with a cart behind it.
I personally wouldn't pay for such a product for personal use. I have my tractor with a bucket or forks for carrying really heavy stuff. That prototype is more than half the cost of my tractor new in 2001. I also bought new two sizes of buckets, a 60" finish mower, a 48" brush cutter, a 60" power angle snow plow, teeth for my small bucket, loading ramps for my pickup truck, and truck delivery from Virginia to Indiana for about the price of just your cart. I have a dump trailer for towing behind the tractor that was about $400. I use that for harvesting quantities too large to carry in a plastic sack or hauling weeds from the flower beds to the compost pile. I have a bike-wheel garden cart that I can haul 50 pieces of firewood across our property with very, very little effort. You can pick those up for about $125. I just couldn't see a use for it for my needs.
Commercial use? Maybe a market there, but a hard sell at that price.
I hope you find a market for it. I like to see people succeed. Not trying to be a downer. Its just too expensive.