Diesel‑compatible
Drop‑in alongside existing gensets and a right‑sized battery pack. Cut fuel use now—no rewiring the world.
SunDog is a portable, sun‑tracking solar concentrator designed to work with diesel and batteries. In harsh places where uptime matters, SunDog reduces fuel burn and emissions—quietly, reliably. This is a peek, not the full reveal.
We're engaging with recognized frameworks, engineering advisors, and pilot opportunities to ensure SunDog meets and exceeds industrial standards worldwide.
Drop‑in alongside existing gensets and a right‑sized battery pack. Cut fuel use now—no rewiring the world.
Concentrator optics + tracking deliver more energy per square foot than traditional static panels.
Portable, serviceable, and engineered for real‑world abuse in oil & gas, mining, telecom, military, and remote communities.
We’re holding back the details while we finish testing and certifications. For now, a few redacted glimpses.
Reduce diesel runtime on pumps and controls while maintaining reliability.
Reliable, deployable solar power for forward bases, surveillance units, and off-grid missions — engineered for endurance and rapid setup.
Keep towers and field equipment online with hybrid PV‑battery setups.
Think of SunDog as a high‑efficiency PV engine that pairs with:
We’ll share full specs post‑NDA for qualified partners.
Experience Forged in the Field. Vision Focused on the Future.
Behind SunDog II is a leadership team that's seen every side of power — from oilfields and factories to boardrooms and startups. Together, they bridge a century of experience in engineering, manufacturing, and commercialization — and they're rewriting how energy gets delivered to the edge of civilization.
50 years of global sales, marketing, and manufacturing leadership across gas, retail, automotive, and telecom.
40 years in oil & gas, chemical, and process engineering — designing, testing, and certifying systems that survive where others fail.
25 years leading high-growth startups and scaling global tech teams.
This isn't a typical startup. It's a collision of deep engineering and modern commercialization — a team that's lived the old energy world and is quietly building the new one.