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AI Transportation

Driverless Electric Robot Tractors are Here, Powered by NVIDIA AI Chips (theverge.com) 82

NVIDIA is proud of its role in the first commercially available smart tractor (which began rolling off the production line Thursday). Monarch Tractor's MK-V "combines electrification, automation, and data analysis to help farmers reduce their carbon footprint, improve field safety, streamline farming operations, and increase their bottom lines," according to NVIDIA's blog.

NVIDIA's been touting the ability to accelerate machine learning applications with its low-power Jetson boards (each with a system on a chip integrating an ARM-architecture CPU) , and they write that the new tractor "cuts energy costs and diesel emissions, while also helping reduce harmful herbicides, which are expensive and deplete the soil." Mark Schwager, former Tesla Gigafactory chief, is president; Zachary Omohundro, a robotics Ph.D. from Carnegie Mellon, is CTO; Praveen Penmetsa, CEO of Monarch Tractor, is an autonomy and mobility engineer. Penmetsa likens the revolutionary new tractor to paradigm shifts in PCs and smartphones, enablers of world-changing applications. Monarch's role, he said, is as the hub to enable smart implements — precision sprayers, harvesters and more — for computer vision applications to help automate farming....

Tapping into six NVIDIA Jetson Xavier NX SOMs (system on modules), Monarch's Founder Series MK-V tractors are essentially roving robots packing supercomputing. Monarch has harnessed Jetson to deliver tractors that can safely traverse rows within agriculture fields using only cameras. "This is important in certain agriculture environments because there may be no GPS signal," said Penmetsa. "It's also crucial for safety as the Monarch is intended for totally driverless operation."The Founder Series MK-V runs two 3D cameras and six standard cameras.

In one pilot test a tractor lowered energy costs (compared to a diesel tractor) by $2,600 a year, according to NVIDIA's blog post. And the tractor collects and analyzes crop data daily, so hopes are high for the system. Monarch has already raised more than $110 million in funding, reports the Verge: Many tractors out in farming fields have semiautonomous modes but largely require a driver to be seated. They also mostly run on diesel gas, so the MK-V, with its fully electric design and driver-optional smarts, is claiming it's the first production model of its kind.
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Driverless Electric Robot Tractors are Here, Powered by NVIDIA AI Chips

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  • by gurps_npc ( 621217 ) on Sunday December 04, 2022 @01:43PM (#63101586) Homepage

    The estimated $2k+ savings was diesel tractor with a man driving vs a purely electric tractor with an AI driving.

    The savings were almost certainly about the cost of fuel vs electricity, not the AI's effectiveness

    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      The estimated $2k+ savings

      TFS said "energy costs". The article actually said "annual expenses". So it's not really clear on whether the savings includes putting a human operator out of work or not.

      However, autonomous diesel tractors exist. As do all the other "smart" features attributed to the Monarch Tractor. They were not so clear on whether the cost analysis accounted for the equipment down time during charging.

    • The cost savings comes primarily from getting rid of the man driving... he's the expensive part of the equation they are trying to optimize.
      • If you click through to the actual pilot program they specifically state the $2k saving was calculated based entirely upon how much diesel fuel was used versus how much of the battery was drained.

        The calculation was entirely the cost of diesel fuel vs electricity, nothing more.

    • Price vs operations (Score:4, Informative)

      by DanielRavenNest ( 107550 ) on Sunday December 04, 2022 @03:36PM (#63101840)

      The price ($68,000) is double that of a John Deere compact tractor with the same rating (40HP). At $2,600 savings per year, it would take 13 years to make up the difference. Sounds like you want to work the heck out of it to get a payback in a reasonable time.

      • Probably however after 5 years or maybe just 3 you will need a new battery costing $40k probably.
        • thats ignorant myth spreading - post a link to back up your claim - here'e one to refute that myth Stats from Tesla (Model S and Model X) claims a battery capacity retention of roughly 90% after 200,000 miles [electrek.co]
          • Equipment duty cycle has a profound and not always predictable effect on machine reliability and longevity. Farm equipment is often used heavily over a brief period and then left dormant for months; Teslas are used lightly but regularly. It is hard to say whether the electric car experience offers accurate insight to farm equipment reliability.

            There is along history of experienced engine manufacturers trying and failing to build reliable railroad locomotive power units. Designs that work well in other

          • How long does your phone battery last, or your laptop battery. Note that in my post I said probably. It really depends on the battery build quality and the battery exact type. LiFEPO4 should be good for 3000 cycles (near 10 years.) Are they using Tesla batteries? if not what use is your link? I am not posting ignorant myth spreading I have had a lot of experience with batteries and battery technology, it is difficult to get batteries to last a long time when they are at high rates of discharge and charge (a
      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Depends if it means you can employ fewer people.

    • California is on the cusp of regulating diesel farm equipment emissions. They will otherwise become a major source of ground-level pollution in the state as we switch over to EVs, and have already eliminated most of the real old stinkers. (I still see a lot of them up here in Humboldt, but in more developed counties they are less common. The difference is more marked every time I visit civilization.) This will gradually spread to other states — there are states that are more dependent on agricultural

      • I think battery swapping will have to be a part of the design and built into the equipment operation and cost. Otherwise most heavy agriculture applications can not be electrified.

        Forget the forklift; I see a specialized battery swapper hauled in by an EV pick me up truck. 10 minute coffee/refueling break and back at it.

  • Autonomous tractors have been around for a long time.

  • If Monarch and NVIDIA make a point of allowing owners to repair and update their tractors and software, they'll have a long lineup of customers...many of whom are desperately hoping for a chance to tell John Deere to go f^ck itself with a rusty scythe.

    • Yes, I'm sure they'll open all the controllers in their autonomous vehicle to allow customers to screw them.
  • But it would be cool if it also supported remote operation with a VR headset.

    • by narcc ( 412956 )

      What on earth do you think you'd gain by adding a VR headset?

      • Plants. I'd gain more plants on earth if they added VR capability. I could control and watch the tractor do its thing while I do my thing in my polycule in the Bahamas.

        • by narcc ( 412956 )

          Plants. I'd gain more plants

          What a load of nonsense. Have you thought this through for even a second?

          You don't need VR to "control and watch" a tractor remotely. If anything, VR would make things more difficult and less efficient.

          One more time: What on earth do you think you'd gain by adding a VR headset?

  • by 0xG ( 712423 )

    This is important in certain agriculture environments because there may be no GPS signal

    Curious. Polar-region farming? Very dense tree cover? Underground?

    • by narcc ( 412956 )

      When farming downtown in large cities, the tall buildings can interfere...

      • This is a compact-size tractor (40 HP). They commonly get used for landscape work. A downtown municipal park might well blocked by buildings, but even mowing around office parks might have problems. Midwest field crop tractors run larger, up to 600 HP.

        • Perhaps the plan is just to use more, smaller devices. If you're not paying an operator, then you can have more vehicles, because operators are expensive. Then if you have downtime on a vehicle, production doesn't stop completely. As farming moves ever further into corporate hands (where it mostly is already) they're going to want to eliminate the labor costs.

        • Would they normally use a 600HP crop tractor in a vineyard where this tractor is targeted?
          • No but this is a toy by farm standards. If we are to replace diesel on the farm, this thing is not even close to a solution. It is interesting but until they get serious it is just a sidebar.

    • GPS covers the poles too. So I guess they mean farming in GPS jammed war zones like Ukraine.
  • Monarch's Founder Series MK-V tractors are essentially roving robots packing supercomputing. Monarch has harnessed Jetson to deliver tractors that can safely traverse rows within agriculture fields using only cameras.

    The Cray-2 that I helped administer at NASA LaRC back in the mid '80s just sat there. :-)

    I often encouraged it to get out, get some sunshine, but no. It was happy with its little waterfall -- I mean Fluorinert-fall. Don't think it would have even been interested in farming.

  • Does it have 5G? -Yes I'm ragging on China With their ludicrous Robot 5G enables "Electric" Tractors with a Shell covering a gas Engine.
  • >> agricultural environments may not have GPS signals
    Are they going underground?

  • I biked by a farmer's field, I found they:
    Could plant it in one day
    Could spray herbicide in one day
    Could harvest in one day
    Could till in one day
    So unlike trucking this automation does not save a lot of work and also begs the question
    what is the farmer doing all those other days he's not in the field?
    • hahaha "farmer"

      Look, the farmer still exists today, but he's going away. The number of farmers has been decreasing as the sizes of farms has been increasing [usda.gov]. These farms are still privately owned by farmers, but the trend is towards consolidation. Further, the farmers' activities are very closely controlled. There are requirements placed on them by the conglomerates they sell to — these gigantic farms aren't selling directly, they're not going to the farmer's market, it takes a big company to even han

    • Could plant, Could spray herbicide, Could harvest, Could till in one day

      If they can do each of these 'in a day' then they're probably not doing very well on this income alone.

      what is the farmer doing all those other days he's not in the field?

      Likely working their day job so they can afford their expensive farming hobby.

  • A savings of $2,600/year means it would take over 100 years to recoup the cost of one of these tractors.
    • How long would it take to recoup the cost of an ICE tractor dong the same job?
    • A savings of $2,600/year means the yearly licensing costs will gradually increase until that "savings" figure is in the negative.
      That's when the government mandates kick in to be sure you don't get any funny ideas.

  • Want to REALLY do something impressive? Tractor automation that automatically extracts abandoned Russian armored vehicles and tanks to a Ukrainian refurbishment facility so they can be upgraded and sent out to kill more Russian invaders.

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