Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Enervibe is an energy harvesting technology company based in Airport City, Israel. Its core offering is kinetic energy harvesters that convert motion into electricity, applied in the Enertire™ smart tire data management system. It is closer to a “hardware IoT + fleet data platform” solution than a traditional software developer tool.
The solution consists of self-powered wireless tire sensors, one central receiving/transmitting unit per vehicle, and a cloud dashboard or TSP platform integration. The sensors are powered by tire motion and collect data such as tire pressure, temperature, weight, mileage, and more, while providing alerts for low pressure, high temperature, blowouts, overloads, or uneven load distribution. According to the official website, it can help fleets improve fuel efficiency, extend tire life, and reduce downtime. On the hardware side, the company discloses specifications for its electromagnetic energy harvester: 6–14 grams, 5–20 mW power generation, 23 mm diameter and 10 mm height, up to 200G shock resistance, and an operating temperature range of -40 to 125°C.
For developers and platform providers, the key points are that it supports in-vehicle BLE communication, the RS232 protocol, and a cloud API. It can be integrated into telematics service provider platforms and offers white-label capabilities. However, the official website does not publicly provide API documentation, SDKs, authentication methods, data models, or sample code. Pricing is also not disclosed and requires applying for a pilot or a one-on-one consultation.
Its advantage is clear differentiation: compared with battery-powered sensors, the self-powered approach can theoretically generate and transmit data more frequently. It also clearly separates commercial use cases for fleets, tire manufacturers, and TSPs. The downside is that the publicly available information is relatively marketing-oriented and lacks developer documentation, SLAs, deployment architecture, self-hosting options, and compliance details. The website also contains repeated paragraphs and placeholder recruitment copy, so the overall rigor of the information is limited.
It is suitable for large commercial fleets, tire manufacturers, connected vehicle service providers, and OEMs looking to build smart tire data services. If you are simply looking for a general-purpose API, SDK, or cloud development platform, it is not a strong fit. Access from mainland China cannot be determined from the main content, and hardware delivery, after-sales support, and cross-border data capabilities need to be confirmed separately.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on enervibe.co official site.
enervibe.co is an Israel Auto provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach enervibe.co directly.