IoT · Internet of Things
Your equipment warns you before it breaks.
Connected sensors on your equipment: fuel, temperature, vibration, power. The data arrives on its own. And the alerts, before the problem. That's how 220 km of the Chaco aqueduct are monitored.
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What we measure
Fuel: consumption, levels, and alerts on your generators, in real time. You know how much is there, how much is used, and how much is left.
Cold chain: constant temperature and traceability for sensitive goods. The evidence regulations require, generated on its own.
Critical assets: sensors on machines and equipment for predictive maintenance. The failure announces itself before it happens.
Your first sensors are reporting in 4 weeks or less.
Remote control
You don't just watch: you operate. Valves, pumps, and systems are controlled from a central platform, without sending anyone on site.
How we work
A sensor that measures wrong is worse than none: it gives you false confidence.
So we start small: the first sensors are installed, calibrated, and checked against real measurements before scaling up.
The proposal lists every step: survey, installation, calibration, platform live. Check any quote against that list.
Success stories
The Chaco aqueduct's sensors and valves are monitored and controlled across 220 km. We built the automation, from Puerto Casado to Loma Plata.