The invention relates generally to agricultural machines having application booms mounted thereon and, in particular, to a system for receiving user selectable input through a control interface of the agricultural vehicle, the user selectable input indicating a speed for folding or unfolding sections of an application boom.
Various types of agricultural vehicles (e.g., sprayers, floaters, applicators, collectively referred to herein as applicators) are employed to deliver fertilizer, pesticides, herbicides, or other products to the surface of a field. Such agricultural vehicles typically include an application boom configured to facilitate product delivery over wide swaths of soil. The application boom typically can be folded inward, toward the vehicle when the boom is not in use, so as to maximize space savings, and unfolded outward, away from the vehicle, when desirable to use the boom for field operations such as spraying.
Modern agricultural vehicles can include an integrated primary system/machine controller for controlling electronic functions of the vehicle, such as steering, hydraulic, electrical, cooling, suspension and driveline control, flow from product/rinse tanks, system calibrations and the like. The system can also provide an ISOBUS for adding electronic equipment, such as a virtual terminal (VT), to communicate with the system/machine controller as desired. ISOBUS is an international standard that ensures compatibility and connectivity between displays, tractors, and implements, regardless of manufacturer. ISOBUS can be implemented, for example, according to ISO 11783, known as tractors and machinery for agriculture and forestry, serial control and communications data network, a communication protocol based on the SAE J1939 protocol. One example of electronic equipment connected to an ISOBUS of an agricultural vehicle is a VT which may provide boom control through an ISO boom control module associated with the boom.
However, sometimes a VT is not active in the system, whether due to availability, cost, failure of the VT or otherwise. It is nevertheless desirable to control aspects of the agricultural vehicle, particularly with respect to the boom, without requiring a VT. A need therefore exists to provide a system for controlling a boom which eliminates one or more of the foregoing disadvantages.
According to an aspect of the invention, boom control of an agricultural vehicle can be integrated with an on-board machine controller of the vehicle so that an operator can provide input through a user interface of the machine controller without requiring an ISOBUS interface or VT. In one aspect, an electronic system can integrate ISO controls with an on-board display connected to the machine controller by an integral CAN bus to give an operator the ability to control boom speeds, auto fold the boom and make standard adjustments, without an ISOBUS or VT. In one aspect, using CAN communication on an additional CAN bus, the on-board controller can execute to ensure a Graphical User Interface (GUI) of the on-board display communicates operator intentions to an ISO boom control module associated with the boom. This can allow avoiding the requirement of a VT while still providing VT functionality.
Specifically, then, one aspect of the invention can provide a system for controlling an application boom mounted to an agricultural vehicle. The system can include: an application boom configured to deliver agricultural product to a field, the application boom having multiple actuators configured to fold and unfold the boom relative to the agricultural vehicle; a machine controller of the agricultural vehicle, the machine controller having a control interface configured to receive user selectable input, the machine controller being in communication with the actuators, the machine controller having a processor executing a program stored in a non-transient medium operable to: receive, through the control interface, user selectable input indicating a speed for folding or unfolding the boom relative to the agricultural vehicle; and control the actuators to fold or unfold the boom at the speed indicated by the user selectable input.
Other aspects, objects, features, and advantages of the invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the following detailed description and accompanying drawings. It should be understood, however, that the detailed description and specific examples, while indicating preferred embodiments of the present invention, are given by way of illustration and not of limitation. Many changes and modifications may be made within the scope of the present invention without departing from the spirit thereof, and the invention includes all such modifications.
Preferred exemplary embodiments of the invention are illustrated in the accompanying drawings in which like reference numerals represent like parts throughout.
Referring now to the drawings and specifically to
The sprayer 10 includes a frame or chassis 15 having front and back ends 20 and 25, respectively. The chassis 15 provides structural support for various assemblies, systems, and components of the sprayer 10. These various assemblies, systems, and components can include an operator cab 35 in a forward position toward the front end 20 of the chassis 15. An engine 40 and a hydraulic system 45 are shown in a rearward position toward the back end 25 of the chassis 15, The hydraulic system 45 receives power from the engine 40 and includes at least one hydraulic pump which can be in a hydrostat arrangement. The hydraulic pump(s) provide hydraulic pressure for operating hydraulic components within the hydraulic system 45. For sprayers with hydrostatic drives, hydraulic motors are operably connected to the hydraulic pump(s) for rotating wheels 50 of the sprayer 10. In mechanical drive applications, a mechanical transmission receives power from the engine 40 and delivers power for rotating the wheels 50 by way of power-transmitting driveline components. Example power-transmitting driveline components include drive shafts, differentials, and other gear sets in portal, drop boxes, or other housings.
A spray-application system 55 is supported by the chassis 15. The spray-application system 55 includes storage containers, such as a rinse tank 60 for storing water or a rinsing solution and a product tank 65 for storing a volume of product for delivery onto an agricultural field with the sprayer 10. The product includes any of a variety of agricultural liquid products, such as various pesticides, herbicides, fungicides, liquid fertilizers, and other liquids including liquid suspensions beneficial for application onto agricultural fields. A product delivery pump can convey product from the product tank 65 through plumbing components to nozzle bodies on an application boom 75. The plumbing components includes a piping system for transport of the product from the tank to the nozzle bodies. The nozzle bodies are spaced from each other along the width of boom 75 for spraying operations of the sprayer 10. Groups or banks of multiple adjacent nozzle bodies define multiple spray sections or segments of the spray system. Spray segments are defined along the boom 75 and selectively deliver product for release onto an agricultural field at locations corresponding to positions of activated spray segments.
The boom 75 is connected to the chassis 15 with a lift arm arrangement or assembly 80. The lift arm assembly 80 is attached to a boom center section 85. The lift arm assembly 80 is configured to move the boom 75 up and down for adjusting the height of application of the product and/or to raise the boom 75 above objects (e.g., agricultural product).
Coupled to the boom center section 85, the boom 75 has multiple interconnected sections or segments that collectively define each of a left and right boom arm, respectively. Left and right for the boom 75 are defined with respect to an operator's view of the boom 75 from the operator cab 35. Left and right boom arms extend in opposite directions from the boom center section 85. The left and right boom arms are mirror identical about a longitudinal axis of the sprayer 10, and thus, only left boom arm 90 is shown and described in further detail. For simplicity,
The left boom arm 90 has multiple segments, including first, second, and third boom arm segments 100, 105, and 110 (
With reference to
The second boom arm segment 105 has an inner end 145 that is connected with hinge 150 to the outer end 155 of the first boom arm segment 100. The hinge 150 is configured to allow for generally rotating the second boom arm segment 105, and consequently third boom arm segment 110, away/toward the first boom arm segment 100 when pivoting the second boom arm segment 105.
With reference to
With reference to
In accordance with the invention, the machine controller 202 can provide a control interface 208 configured to receive user selectable input from a user in the operator cab 35. The control interface 208 can comprise Graphical User Interface (GUI) accessible to the user. The GUI can be part of a Human Machine Interface (HMI) connected to the machine controller 202 through a Controller Area Network (CAN) bus 210. Accordingly, the control interface 208 can be permanently fixed to and integral with the sprayer 10 at the tune of manufacture. This can advantageously allow a more economic and efficient implementation of the control interface 208 in the operator cab 35.
The machine controller 202 can also be in communication a joystick 212 and an armrest 214, each having multiple buttons for supporting the aforementioned various functions of the sprayer 10, among other things. The joystick 212 and/or the armrest 214 can also be connected to the machine controller 202 by separate CAN buses as shown, or by a single, combined CAN bus. The machine controller 202 can also be in communication with a set of actuators 216, including the aforementioned actuators of
In one aspect, the machine controller 202 can include a processor executing a program 218 stored in a non-transient medium 220 operable to: receive, through the control interface 208, user selectable input indicating a speed for folding or unfolding the boom 75 relative to the sprayer 10; and control the set of actuators 216 to fold or unfold the boom at the speed indicated by the user selectable input. As a result, the boom 75 can be controlled by the integrated on-board machine controller 202, via input from the operator through the control interface 208, without requiring the ISOBUS 204 or the VT 206. In other words, the system 200 can integrate such ISO controls via the control interface 208 connected to the machine controller 202 by an integral CAN bus 210 to give the user the ability to control boom speeds, auto fold the boom and make standard adjustments, without the ISOBUS 204 or the VT 206. This can allow avoiding the requirement of a VT while still providing VT functionality.
With additional reference to
Each slider could be configured to be adjusted by the user between minimum and maximum values. A minimum value can correspond to a predetermined minimum speed for folding or unfolding the boom, whereas a maximum value can correspond a maximum predetermined speed for folding or unfolding the boom. As illustrated in
In one aspect, upon command from the user, the machine controller 202 can store the user selectable input as default settings 234 in the non-transient medium 220 (see
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.