The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Tractor with no driver gets first unveiling

- GEMMA MACKIE

Farm machinery giant John Deere has unveiled its first driverless tractor at the CES technology show in America.

The company says the fully autonomous tractor is ready for large-scale production and will be available later this year.

John Deere says the new machine is a combinatio­n of its 8R tractor, Trusetenab­led chisel plow, GPS guidance system and new advanced technology.

“The autonomous tractor serves a specific purpose – feeding the world,” said John Deere.

“The global population is expected to grow from about eight billion to 10bn people by 2050, increasing the global food demand by 50%.”

It said the new tractor was designed to help farmers feed the population with less land and skilled labour, while tackling the usual challenges of changing weather, soil quality and the presence of weeds and pests.

The new driverless tractor features six pairs of stereo cameras, which enable 360-degree obstacle detection and the calculatio­n of distance.

“Images captured by the cameras are passed through a deep neural network that classifies each pixel in approximat­ely 100 millisecon­ds and determines if the machine continues to move or stops, depending on if an obstacle is detected,” added John Deere.

“The autonomous tractor is also continuous­ly checking its position relative to a geofence, ensuring it is operating where it is supposed to, and is accurate to within less than one inch.”

It said that, to operate the tractor, a farmer simply needs to transport the machine to a field and configure it for autonomous operation and by using the

John Deere Operations Center Mobile it can start the machine by swiping from left to right.

“While the machine is working, the farmer can leave the field to focus on other tasks while monitoring the machine’s status from their mobile device,” added John Deere.

It said its

Operations

Center Mobile gives the farmer access to live video, images, data and metrics of the tractor in operation so they can adjust the speed or depth of the machine.

“In the event of any jobquality anomalies or machine-health issues, farmers will be notified remotely and can make adjustment­s,” added the manufactur­er.

 ?? ?? EMPTY SEAT: John Deere reveals its driverless tractor at the CES technology show.
EMPTY SEAT: John Deere reveals its driverless tractor at the CES technology show.

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