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Robotic Cart Learns On-The-Go
Burro the autonomous cart will not only follow you around, it will also learn and repeat common tasks.
    “The Burro can learn routes and re-run them exactly,” says Charlie Andersen, Augean Robotics. “Most other systems use GPS with RTK base stations, which are expensive, but the only way to get millimeter accuracy. We use a lower cost alternative.”
    The Burro uses computer vision and deep learning. This enables it to navigate safely inside a building, such as a warehouse, as well as under a thick canopy of vegetation.
    When activated and told to follow a person, 2 cameras in front and one on the rear of the Burro identify not only the person, but also the surroundings as it follows. The combination of sensors and machine learning algorithms lock it onto its human, maintaining a set distance behind him and stopping when he does.
    The current design is a 26-in. high, 2-WD, 26 by 48-in. chassis that can carry 300 lbs. The 4-WD option can carry 450 lbs. With a top speed of 5 mph, its 2 lead-acid batteries give it a range of about 4 hrs. or 15 to 20 miles.
    Initial uses of the Burro include travelling up and down vineyard, orchard and berry rows. Once it has learned a route, it can repeat it, picking up or delivering containers to pickers as it goes.
    Augean has tested it with a number of growers and in different situations, including some of the largest fruit and nursery operations. Andersen’s family’s 100-acre fruit and vegetable farm in Pennsylvania has been the firm’s testing grounds.
    “The Burro’s top speed is 5 mph,” notes Andersen. “It also is not moving around crowded streets. We feel safety is quite adequate for the environment we are in.”
    Each path requires only a couple of gigabytes of storage in the on-board computer, depending on how complicated the path is. The current edition of the Burro has about a terabyte of storage available. That may have to increase as the Burro takes on more complicated tasks.
    “The more it runs, the more sophisticated it becomes,” says Andersen. “We have started with a manageable, useful and economical platform. The only question from here is what do our customers want? It may be spraying, spot spraying, mowing, sweeping or more.”
    Andersen expects to have the Burro available for sale by mid 2019 with a price between $10,000 and $11,500. As production increases, that cost is expected to go down. In the meantime, a pilot program will be placing Burros with interested growers at a per-day rate.
    Contact: FARM SHOW Followup, Augean Robotics, 2025 Washington Ave., Philadelphia, Penn. 19146 (ph 610 247-9903; charlie@agrbt.com; www.augeanrobotics.com).


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2019 - Volume #43, Issue #1