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by iliabara
1419 days ago
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Hello,
Great question, I haven't seen enough technical details on their system to be able to answer definitely. However, from what I've read of their approach, it's fairly similar to the way we do things. Perhaps this means there's no reason for Rio Tinto to use us, and that's totally fine. There are 1000s of other, much smaller mining companies that can benefit from the same tech, likely at a cheaper price than what Rio Tinto spent developing their own version. Also, from our experience, these sort of approaches bake in assumptions on particular vehicle types/characteristics. So even in Rio's case, perhaps they have other smaller models, or other types of equipment they haven't automated. In this case, we'd be happy to integrate with their existing command and control software stack. |
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[1] https://www.riotinto.com/en/about/innovation/automation
Some of their talent date back to sheep shearing robots in the early 1980s.
In the same geographic region (W.Australia) there are related automata projects such as self recharging drone clouds about tractors, agri-bots (visual identification + weed spraying), integrated geophysical air survey, etc.
I was somewhat curious as to your awareness of all this (eg: Rio's plans for a full automated "bottom up" $64 billion copper mine in the US (should it go ahead)).
Also, while we're here, do you have any in house mining | industry experience driving tractors, dump trucks, ship loading, etc. yourselves?