Whether you’re visiting the Christmas market with friends or enjoying Christmas dinner with family, a good mulled or special wine is a must. To offer people this supposed matter of course even in times of labour shortages, winemakers must increasingly rely on automation during the grape harvest. However, slopes with a gradient of 75% and narrow rows of vines were previously considered impossible to automate. The German company CH engineering GmbH has developed a particularly compact harvesting vehicle for precisely this area of application. It uses a robust energy chain made of high-performance plastic from igus to work reliably even under difficult conditions, minimising maintenance work for winemakers.
The pressure on beverage manufacturers to produce hygienically is increasing: consumer demands for product safety are growing and global standards from authorities such as the FDA are becoming stricter. As a result, the demands on machine and system components are also increasing. To enable machine builders and operators to achieve hygienic, low-maintenance and fail-safe production, igus will be presenting lubrication-free drylin linear and drive technology in hygienic design at BrauBeviale 2024 in Nuremberg (Hall 7, Stand 436), including a design study for a ready-to-install SHT linear axis. This not only fulfils FDA and EU requirements, but also meets the EHEDG guidelines with regard to cleanability.