The invention relates generally to an agricultural product delivery system for applying particulate material such as seed, fertilizer, herbicide, or insecticide to a field, and more particularly an agricultural product delivery applicator with an improved arrangement and control of hydraulic motors for metering product of a multiple-chamber product delivery system.
Agricultural product delivery applicators (or systems) are known to utilize various mechanisms, including mechanical and pneumatic systems, to assist in the movement and delivery of particulate material or product. Example product that can be delivered include fertilizer, seed, insecticide, or herbicide. The product can move from a product bin through an interior passage provided by a series of elongate tubes, which extend from the product supply chamber to a product applicator. The applicator places the product on or in growing medium, such as soil. Such agricultural product delivery systems are commonly employed in planters, air drills, fertilizer and pesticide applicators, and a variety of other agricultural implements.
Agricultural application implements that employ an agricultural product delivery applicator are known to have the product supply bin associated with a metering system. The product is metered from the bin into a set of distribution channels for application to the soil. A pneumatic source, such as a fan or blower, provides air to convey and distribute material through the distribution channels.
The bin may comprise of a plurality of chambers (e.g., four chambers) and the metering system may comprise multiple sets of metering devises (e.g., four sets), each having a metering wheel (e.g., five metering wheels for each set of metering devices). For one example, a largest chamber uses a set of five-by-twenty inch metering wheels to control the application rate of a first product; a second largest chamber uses a set of five-by-twelve inch metering wheels to control application rate of a second product; and a last two smallest chambers each use a set of five-by-four inch metering wheels to control the application rate of third and fourth products. The torque required to turn each metering wheel is proportional to its size.
When attaching a hydraulic motor to each meter wheel, the obvious initial design would be to select identical metering motors on each metering wheel and run them in parallel; but this is wildly inefficient. The differing torques make for different pressures, but all would be supplied by the maximum needed pressure from one pump. Thus, the lower-torque systems generate lots of heat by throttling oil from the pressure needed for the highest-torque part of the system. A parallel system also requires large amounts of oil to run everything in parallel.
One could also select identical metering motors and run the motors for each chamber in series. However, if one motor is running at a high application rate and another at a low application rate, energy is wasted bypassing oil past the motors that are running at the slow rate. This system also requires high pressure to run everything in series.
One could also try sizing motors individually so that the peak pressure required for all of them at max speed is identical. But this requires unique motors for each size of chamber, and some of the sizes required don't operate well over an entire speed range of operation. Thus, this solution is both uneconomical and technically inadequate. A yet different solution is desired.
in one aspect, the invention provides a more efficient solution, from both a cost and heat/energy perspective. Continuing the above example, the invention can use two different sizes of motors (e.g., two different displacements) between the twenty-inch metering wheels and the twelve-inch metering wheels. The motor size from the twelve-inch metering wheels is then used for the four-inch metering wheels as well; but low torque required relative to the size of the twelve-inch metering wheel means that the motors for each of the four-inch metering wheels can be operated in series. This results in efficient load sharing, good efficiency, and an economical reuse of motor sizes. In a more detailed implementation, the series arrangement includes a bypass control in each of the four-inch valve banks, because the two may not require the same amount of flow. If the first four-inch valve bank in series requires less flow than the second, then the difference will flow over the bypass control. The inclusion of a load sense network can help that the bypassing flow will run at the minimum pressure needed to keep all the metering motors controlled by each valve bank running at their desired speeds.
In another aspect, the invention provides a metering system operably connected between a supply compartment of an agricultural product delivery applicator and a conveying system of the applicator. The applicator includes a bin having a first chamber to hold a first product, a second chamber to hold a second product, and a third chamber to hold a third product. The metering system comprises a hydraulic circuit, a first set of metering devices operably connecting the first chamber and the conveying system, a second set of metering devices operably connecting the second chamber and the conveying system, and a third set of metering devices operably connecting the third chamber and the conveying system. The first set of metering devices includes a first metering wheel and a first hydraulic motor operating the first metering wheel. The second set of metering devices includes a second metering wheel and a second hydraulic motor operating the second metering wheel. The second set of metering devices is hydraulically coupled in series with the first set of metering devices. The third metering device includes a third metering wheel and a third hydraulic motor operating the third metering wheel. The third set of metering devices is hydraulically coupled in parallel with the series coupled first set of metering devices and second set of metering devices. It is also envisioned that each of the first, second, and third set of metering devices includes a plurality of metering wheels and a plurality of hydraulic motors. Further, the bin can have a fourth compartment and the metering system can have a fourth set of metering devices.
In yet another aspect, the invention provides an agricultural delivery applicator having the metering system.
Numerous additional objects, aspects, and advantages of the present invention will be made apparent from the following detailed description taken together with the drawing figures.
Preferred exemplary embodiments of the invention are illustrated in the accompanying drawings in which like reference numerals represent like parts throughout. In the drawings:
An agricultural application implement 10 (or simply implement 10) incorporating aspects of the invention is shown in
The applicator 15 includes left and right laterally extending booms 30 and 35, respectively, extending from a mid-implement location 40. Left and right are referred to herein as viewed by the operator housed in the operator cab 45. The mid-implement location 40 refers to a mounting of the booms 30 and 35 between the front and rear axles 50 and 55, respectively, of the transport unit 20. The laterally extending booms 30 and 35 include a support structure (not shown for simplicity) and can be pivoted to a stowed position close to the implement 10 for storage or transport. Each boom 30 and 35 includes a plurality of boom conduits or tubes (discussed further below) terminating at respective outboard ends in in the applicator 15. The outboard ends of the booms 30 and 35 include a spreading outlet or nozzle. In the exemplary embodiment shown, boom 35 includes twelve outlets 60.
The pneumatic conveying system 25 also includes a laterally extending offset boom 80. The offset boom 80, which may also be referred to as a secondary boom, is mounted at a rearward location 85. The rearward location 85 refers to a mount of the offset boom 80 behind the rear axis 55. The offset boom includes six rear outlets 90. The offset boom 80 in combination with the booms 30 and 35 provide complete coverage across the width of applicator 15.
The shown transport unit 20 is self-propelled by an engine in an engine compartment 100 and includes the operator cab 45. For the shown construction, a bin 105 includes compartments (or chambers) 110, 112, 114 and 116 for carrying particulate material to be distributed to and disbursed by the applicator 15. One or more of the compartments, e.g., compartments 110 and 116, can supply micro-nutrients or other materials and can include a cover, respectively. The supply of particulate material in compartments 110-116 can be replenished periodically.
Before proceeding further, some aspects of the applicator 15 can be a matter of design choice to someone skilled in the art. For example, the number, arrangement, and design of the compartments 110-116 and outlets 60 and 90 can vary. The applicator 15 is illustrative of the types of equipment on which the pneumatic conveying system 100 can be used; however, it should be understood that the pneumatic conveying system 100 may, of course, be employed in conjunction with other agricultural equipment such as tillage, seeding, or planting devices and is useful in distributing particulate material other than fertilizer.
The shown construction includes compartments 110-116 of the bin 105 being disposed above portions of the pneumatic conveying system 25.
To collect and drive the particulate material along the delivery lines 120, 125 and 127, are one or more pressurized air flow sources. For the shown construction, blowers 170 and 175 are operably connected to the plenums 130 and 135. The air flow from the blowers 170 and 175 is directed from the blowers 170 and 175 into the plenums 130 and 135, then the supply lines 150, 155, and 157, through the distributor assemblies 140, 145, and 147, into the distribution lines 160, 165, and 167, and out the outlets 60 and 90. As the airflow passes through the supply lines 150, 155, and 157, a metering system 180 (
Referring now to
In the exemplary embodiment of
Each metering device 200 includes a metering wheel 215, a motor 220, and a shaft 225 connecting each metering wheel 215 to its respective motor 220. Further discussion regarding exemplary metering wheels 215 can be found in US Patent Application Publication No. 2019/0021215 A1, the content of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The shown motors 220 in
The shown construction uses two different sizes of motors 220 between the twenty-inch metering wheels 215B and the twelve-inch metering wheels 215C. The motor size for the twelve-inch metering wheels 2154 can then used for the four-inch metering wheels 215A and 215D as well. However, the low torque required for the four-inch metering wheels 215A and 215D relative to the size of the twelve-inch metering wheels 215C allows the motors for each of the four-inch metering wheels 215A and 215D to be operated in series. This results in efficient load sharing, good efficiency, and an economical reuse of motor sizes. The shown construction also helps reduce cost, reduce oil, and reduce heat compared to other possible solutions such as solutions disclosed in the background section above. The shown construction is also modular. Any combination of the chambers (with appropriate metering wheels, motors, and valve banks) may be used with good efficiency. The configuration of a modular arrangement that mixes series and parallel architecture through the use of load sensing and bypass valves to give efficient performance at a reasonable cost, hydraulic pressure, and hydraulic flow.
Each controller 335-360 also includes a conditioning circuit 385 that interfaces sensor signals and/or other input (e.g., external communication) to the controller 335-360. Conditioning circuit 385 filters and buffers the signals to eliminate noise, and may include sample-and-hold sub-circuits as well as analog-to-digital converters for processing analog sensor signals.
In addition, each controller 335-360 includes a driver circuit 390 that controls the application of power to actuators and/or other output (e.g., external communication). The processor 370, memory 375, conditioning circuit 385, driver circuit 390, and communications processor 380 are all coupled together by control/data/address bus 395 within each controller 335-360.
The memory 375 can include a RAM and a ROM. The RAM is used to store working variables required by the processor 370. The ROM contains programmed instructions that control the operation of the processor 370. It is envisioned that one or more elements (e.g., the processor 370 and the memory 375) can be combined as is well known in the art.
As a more detailed example, the hydraulic controller 315 receives inputs from the Product Delivery Controller as to the desired application rate of each product. The desired application rate may be a function of items such as inputs entered in the I/O Controller, ground speed and location provided by the Positioning Controller, and engine speed provided by the Engine Controller. The hydraulics controller commands the pump and hydraulic valves to power the metering motors so that the metering wheels can turn at a rate that supplies each product according to its desired application rate. The hydraulics controller also monitors the performance of the hydraulic system. If limitations of the system design or errors in the system prevent the hydraulics from delivering each product at its desired application rate, the hydraulics controller will communicate that to the Product Delivery Controller, which will notify the operator via the Communication Controller and make any other adjustments to the behavior of the machine that are necessary.
Although the best mode contemplated by the inventors of carrying out the present invention is disclosed above, practice of the above invention is not limited thereto. It will be manifest that various additions, modifications, and rearrangements of the features of the present invention may be made without deviating from the spirit and the scope of the underlying inventive concept.
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