April 2026 – our RX‑01 electric multifunctional Corn Thresher just left the warehouse. Destination: Oman.
Not a press release. Just a fact. But here's why this particular shipment matters for Middle Eastern agriculture.
What's actually going to Oman?
Model RX‑01. Fully electric. No diesel, no petrol – which matters because Oman is pushing clean energy policies. You can't run a noisy, smoking engine near a village mosque and expect a warm welcome.
Power & performance: 7.5 to 11 kW motor – adjustable, not fixed. Why? Because corn needs more torque than lentils. A good operator knows this. Our machine lets you dial it.
Threshing rotor: 1000 mm long, 480 mm diameter. Speed range: 550–620 rpm. Here's the insider bit: lower rpm for grains that crack easily (rice, sorghum), higher for maize. Get it wrong, and you'll turn the crop into flour.
Design details that actually matter on a farm:
Dimensions: 2,460 × 810 × 1,650 mm. Weight: 560 kg. Compact enough for a 20‑foot container. Low centre of gravity – you can tow it behind a tractor without it tipping on uneven ground. Full metal casing. Heat‑resistant, dust‑proof. The desert eats cheap plastic panels in one season. This won't.
Smart interface – because the sun is brutal.
One‑button crop mode switching. The screen is anti‑glare – you can still read it at noon in July. Plus physical buttons as a backup. No touchscreen that ghosts in the heat. Dual redundancy. Works even with dusty gloves.
Tough bearings – IP54 rated. Dust‑proof, water‑resistant. In the desert, there's no "water", but there's windblown sand. Sand gets into cheap bearings and grinds them down in weeks. These won't.
Why Oman? And why now?
The Omani Ministry of Agriculture just made "increasing post‑harvest mechanisation" a priority. On the ground, most farmers still thresh by hand or with makeshift tools. Grain loss is high. Efficiency is low.
The RX‑01 fills a gap: mid‑to‑high‑end electric threshing gear that actually exists, not just a brochure. It's a practical path to reduce post‑harvest loss and modernise their grain processing.
What the local partner gets:
Remote technical support. Arabic manuals – not Google-translated garbage. And a local warehouse for critical spare parts. Because a downed machine during harvest season is a disaster. We've seen it happen.
Bottom line: This isn't a "milestone". It's a machine that works in real heat, real dust, real fields. And it's finally on its way.












