Noria basket and Braun harvesters, 40 years in support of sustainable farming for agriculture

The Noria basket enables the collection and transport of the vines and fruit without ground losses and with no maceration. With 40 years of leadership in the sector, the revolutionary picking system is a productivity benchmark to winemakers.

Source: New Holland

The collaboration between Braun and Noria has now lasted for 40 years and even today the Noria system remains a point of reference for the harvest.

It all began in 1975 when Alexandre Braud launched his first self-propelled grape harvester: the 1020 model. And soon the revolution: the Noria basket transport system applied to the 1014 model.

It was a turning point in the market but above all in the work that was taking small steps towards the complete machinery of the collection system.

The Noria was the first Braud grape harvester innovation to be awarded a gold medal at the SIMA exhibition in 1980, becoming the best-selling grape harvester of all time, with more than 2,000 units shipped in less than four years. Over time, Braud first and then New Holland have continuously improved and refined the Noria system for higher speed, improved productivity and reduced losses. Today, the innovative Noria system continues to surprise the world’s most demanding winegrowers by offering the gentlest treatment of the vine and harvested crop, capable of transforming grown grapes into superb wines.

The machine is equipped with a shaking system that is composed of two sets of rods moving alternatively and giving acceleration to the canopy. As it gives an acceleration everything that is heavier, so fruits from the bunch of grapes, are detached from the canopy and falls to the basket. The basket collects the foods that then are conveyed to the top of the machine to be clean by the training system. Source: New Holland

The Noria system for grape harvesting

Since that time, the proven Noria basket system has conveyed every single grape harvested by a Braud self-propelled grape harvester. With its polyurethane baskets, it ensures total care of the vines and fruit without ground losses.

The genius of this technology is that the Noria replicates what the human picker does: it places a bucket just below the grapes, while gravity does the rest. With a chain speed equal to the machine speed but running in the opposite direction, the flexible baskets have a fixed position around the vine. This prevents damages to the vine stock and creates a perfectly sealed harvesting area.

Simple and effective, the grapes are collected by the Noria endless chain with flexible baskets at the very bottom of the harvesting head are conveyed gently, without loss or maceration, up to the top of the harvesting head, always by the same basket.

Braud grape harvesters are manufactured at the Coex plant in France, which has produced over 16,000 machines to date and has sold in more than 30 countries around the world, placing New Holland in a leading position in this sector globally.

Source: New Holland