Move Up to 1,000 lbs. with this Electric Wheelbarrow!
The Vinergy Ox is helping farmers, landscapers, and construction companies to easily, quickly, and safely move up to 1,000 pounds of material. A wide option of attachments allows users to transport various types of material from mulch to flower pots.
Vinergy’s Latest Prototype, the HQ, is Coming Along Nicely
During our countless visits to grape farms the past few years of engineering, developing, and perfecting the Gopher and now the Gopher iQ, we observed another problem in the industry.
Vinergy at World Ag Expo 2022 in Tulare, CA 2022
Vinergy set up a booth to show off the Gopher iQ, Ox and HQ prototype at World Ag Expo 2022 in Tulare, California. We got to meet some great people and enjoyed our time seeing how the industry is growing. Here’a quick recap of how it went!
An Inside Look into Vinergy Headquarters (HQ Prototype)
Vinergy Headquarters, located at 4832 Rosedale Lane in Bakersfield, California, is always staying busy. Trained designers, engineers, and welders are constantly working on new machines that bridge the gap between manual labor and heavy machinery or making upgrades to existing machines, such as the Ox, Baby Ox, Gopher, Gopher iQ, and the HQ.
Vinergy’s Harvest Model Route is Saving Grape Farmers 30-40% in Time Lost in the Fields!
Traditional harvest methods that require workers to transport fruit with wheelbarrows produce a time loss on average each day of 30-40%.
Vinergy introduces the HQ and Gopher iQ, an innovative system that solves this problem.
Gopher iQ Self-Park Test in the Grape Fields
We ran a few routes to test our Gopher iQ’s new self-parking abilities. We ran the program for the self-autonomous electric grape cart to drive itself down a row of grapes (approximately 8-minute walk back and forth), turn, drive back on the adjacent row, turn again, the park itself in front the indicated endpoint.
We Tested Our New SELF-PARKING Technology for the Gopher iQ
Today, Diangelo and Alejandro were out testing the Gopher iQ’s new self-parking technology. It quickly, easily drove through the cones, turned on its own, and self-parked just as we programmed on the easy-to-use interface.
Power & Motion features the Gopher iQ by Vinergy & Danfoss
Slowly, silently, effortlessly. The autonomous grape cart does not necessarily attract much attention as it drives through the rows at Parminder Brar’s 900-acre family farm in Kern Country, Ca. But it has a big effect.
How Vinergy partnered with Oppy and other companies to advance the grape industry
Innovation paves the way for new success in the industry, with each advancement bolstering the fresh produce sector as a whole. Harnessing the might of leading solutions providers, Oppy is taking the necessary steps to fortify the grape category as it optimizes several key partnerships to drive category innovation.
New technology to increase production and profit for table grape industry and beyond
Covid-19 has slashed the available seasonal labor for specialty crops in the US, including wine grapes.
Many vineyards in California’s fertile wine country rely on seasonal foreign workers to tackle the harvest, but the relevant H-2A visa program faced uncertainty when the pandemic hit.
Vinergy Technology Applications Increase Production and Profit for Table Grape Industry and Beyond
The Vinergy Cart and Vinergy Wheelbarrow from Bakersfield, California startup Vinergy, Inc. are rechargeable electric implements that increase the amount of time grapes can be picked by significantly reducing the most time-consuming, labor-intensive and riskiest part of the harvest: transporting fruit from the vine to the end of the row.
How robotics startup Vinergy is making the grape harvest more efficient
Covid-19 has slashed the available seasonal labor for specialty crops in the US, including wine grapes.
Many vineyards in California’s fertile wine country rely on seasonal foreign workers to tackle the harvest, but the relevant H-2A visa program faced uncertainty when the pandemic hit.
Investment group chooses its first local startups
Two hundred eleven startup businesses made investment pitches. Only 18 were invited to make formal presentations. Of those, just six made the final cut, receiving a combined total of $385,000.
You might say Kern County's first angel-investor group has been selective in its first year of operation.
"We've been pretty pleased with the response and the deal flow that we've seen," said John-Paul “J.P.” Lake, co-managing partner of the organization, Kern Venture Group.