Everything we make is downstream of one stubborn part. We call it the Bro Drive, and the entire company exists because it does something it has no business doing: a motor the size of a soda can that hauls a full robot straight up a dead-vertical conductor, in the rain, for ten years, sealed.
The problem nobody wanted to solve
Riding a power line sounds simple until you hit the geometry. Conductors aren't flat. They sag, they climb, they jump vertically at every tower, and they're slick with aluminum oxide and rain. A robot light enough to perch on a wire is, by definition, too light to muscle up a vertical section — unless its motor punches way above its weight.
Off-the-shelf drives gave us a brutal choice: enough torque, but heavy and hot and unsealed; or light and sealed, but it'd stall on the first vertical jumper and slide back down the span. Neither ships a product. So we built our own.
What makes it absurd
The Bro Drive is a sealed, high-pole-count motor wrapped around a strain-wave gearset. Translation: a lot of poles for low-speed grunt, and a gear reduction that trades speed we don't need for torque we desperately do. It moves slow. It does not care. It will climb a vertical strand all day.
| Spec | What it means up on the line |
|---|---|
| Torque density | Hauls the whole bro up a vertical jumper without slipping |
| Sealed to IP67 | Rain, dust, road salt, fog — none of it gets in |
| Low-speed design | No gearbox scream, no overheating on a slow climb |
| Single sealed unit | Nothing to service hanging off an energized conductor |
Why "Bro Drive"
Because it's the one in the crew that's secretly carrying everyone. Quiet, unbothered, absurdly strong, never taps out. Everything Scooter Bro does — reading splices, shedding ice off a span, hunting faults across miles of conductor — rides on the same drive. One robot, one set of shoulders, the whole job.
The honest part
We don't publish a torque number to win a spec-sheet argument. We publish it because a real one matters: a drive that stalls halfway up a jumper isn't a weaker robot, it's a robot stuck on a live wire fifty feet up. The Bro Drive doesn't stall. That's the entire pitch, and we measured it on the ugliest spans we could find.
It's not a scooter. It's a bro on the wire — and this is the part that makes the bro. Request a demo.



