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The present invention relates generally to agricultural equipment, and more specifically to a mounting for a rotor for use in combination with a pickup portion of a baler or the like to increase baling capacity and prevent plugging of the input of a baler.
Balers are used for many different crops. Most balers are used to bale hay. Hay is usually classified as any type of grass or legume, such as alfalfa, that is fed to livestock such as cows and horses.
Balers also bale straw, which is of course the part of the plant above ground that is left after grain such as wheat, oats, barley or the like are harvested, for example, which a combine harvester. A primary use for straw is for bedding for animals. Straw is also commonly used as mulch for gardens or the like.
A third category of crop material which is baled using a baler is a stiff stalk crop, such as corn stover including corn stalks which are typically baled after the corn is removed from the stalk, such as with a combine harvester which saves only the corn kernels or with a corn picker, which saves only the corn while it is still on a cob. It is this third category of crop material which is the most problematic to bale, primarily because of the stiff long pieces of plant stalk. Corn stalks are commonly used as feed for animals, such as cattle, or can be used as a raw material for making a bio-fuel, such as ethanol.
When baling corn stalks, the flow of material is not always a steady flow. Because the corn stalks do not fold together like hay and straw material, sometimes the corn stalks do not flow easily into the baler pickup. This causes the cornstalks to pile up in front of the pickup as the baler is towed through a field, causing a large pile of corn stalks to be pushed along in front of the baler pickup instead of evenly entering the baler. This requires the operator to stop the baler, reorganize the pile of cornstalks in front of the pickup of the baler and resume the baling operation. Additionally, these cornstalks can plug up the pickup of the baler so that the baler can no longer be used until such plug of material is removed, or at a minimum repositioned. This problem can occur numerous times during the process of baling a field and happens most often when the crop comprises cornstalks.
When the pickup of a baler becomes plugged with crop, the operator has a few options. Some operators will wait for the pickup to clear itself which is very damaging to the pickup; some will shake the pickup with a hydraulic lift, which is damaging to the pickup itself, some will increase and decrease the revolutions per minute of the controls of the baler which can damage the drive line and the tractor, and the most desperate operators will get out of their tractor and cab and try to clear the plug by hand. All of these methods take valuable time. Some of the methods cost money in repairs because they damage the equipment. And whenever the operator is out of the cab of the tractor, safety can be an issue.
Another problem with using a baler to bale a crop is that if the crop does not enter the pickup evenly, the bale will not be formed evenly, which devalues the bales produced and the negatively impacts the perception of quality of the baler itself because even, consistent bales are desired. This is especially true when the bales being made are large round bales. Also, uneven entry of the crop also causes extra stress on the baler, in particular of the pickup portion of the baler. This can cause premature wear and or premature failure of the components thereof.
The speed of baling is controlled to a great degree by how fast the operator can drive through the field and pickup the crop. Usually it is the pickup portion of the baler that is the limiting factor as to the speed that the baler can be towed during operation because once the crop is in the baling chamber the baler can usually handle a high capacity of crop. So although a faster pickup of the crop will increase the efficiency of the baler, operators soon learn the maximum speed that they can tow the baler for a particular crop under particular conditions and they will try to operate at such maximum speed whenever possible. Pushing beyond that optimum speed for such crop and conditions will typically cause plugging of the pickup. In general, the maximum baling speed for certain crops under the conditions existing at the time is proportional to the amount of crop material that enters evenly through the pickup portion of the baler. For certain crops, such as alfalfa, the more the crop “slips” in the pickup portion of the baler the more likely that there will be leaf shatter and leaf loss, decreasing the value of the crop. So to the extent that a pickup of a baler can be made to minimize this slippage of the crop with respect to the pickup, it will be more efficient and more of a valuable feature of such a baler.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,680,092 to Anstey et al., which is incorporated herein by reference, shows one quite complex way to mount a wind guard to a baler for allowing the wind guard to float up and down in response to the amount of flow of crop through the pickup of the baler. A simpler way to do this would be preferred if possible.
Accordingly, there is a need for a baler apparatus that overcomes the aforementioned problems with the pickup portion of balers for baling crop materials. Because existing prior art pickup systems have built in limitations as to how quickly an even flow of the crop can be moved from the ground to the baling chamber, it is desired to overcome those limitations to create a more efficient baler by creating an even flow of crop materials through the pickup portion to the baling chamber from the instant the crop materials first enter the pickup portion of the baler and consistently maintain that flow of crop materials during the use of the baler.
An object of the present invention is to provide an apparatus for mounting accessories such as a wind guard or a rotor, powered or un-powered, for assisting a baler pickup to deliver cut crops from the ground to the inlet of a baling chamber of a baler. In the case of an accessory like a baler rotor shaft on which are mounted a plurality of rotor plates, spaced evenly and rigidly affixed to the rotor shaft, the rotor plates rotate with the rotor shaft. This rotor needs to be positioned in a proper position with respect to the pickup of the baler in all positions of the pickup, close enough to urge crop material against the pickup tines and far enough away from the pickup tines to not touch the pickup tines. This spacing in a dynamic sense is not easy to accomplish.
In the case of an accessory like a wind guard, it also needs to be positioned in a proper position with respect to the pickup of the baler in all positions of the pickup, close enough to urge crop material against the pickup tines and far enough away from the pickup tines to not touch the pickup tines.
Other objects, advantages and novel features of the present invention will become apparent from the following detailed description of the invention when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
a is a perspective view of a non-powered baler rotor assembly;
Referring now to the drawings wherein like reference numerals correspond to the same or similar parts throughout the drawings, the present invention is shown as part of a large round baler 300 in
Referring now to the drawings wherein like reference numerals designate identical or similar parts throughout the several views, a preferred embodiment 1 of the present invention is illustrated in
U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/193,447, filed Aug. 18, 2008, U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/196,450, filed Aug. 22, 2008, and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/739,194, filed Apr. 24, 2007, all incorporated herein by reference in their entirety, show powered and un-powered rollers as well as wind guard arrangements to assist a baler pickup to move crop from the ground and into the inlet of a baler.
In
Referring to
The rotor, comprising the rotor plates 120 and the rotor shaft 210 may be hydraulically driven such as by the hydraulic motor 125 in
Looking to
The rotor assembly 110 is shown installed on a large round baler 300 in
In
The rotor assembly 110 is permitted to move fore and aft, as shown in
A view of the rod wind guard 130 alone is shown in
In operation, a baler 300 having a main frame with a front and a rear, a baling chamber 510 having a baling chamber inlet 610 uses a rotary crop pickup device 710 operatively pivotally attached to the main frame along a first pivotal axis (A1) to pick up cut crops from the ground. The rotary crop pickup device 710 is of a type having spaced apart pickup tines 711 that rotate about a rotational axis A7 (
A left side mostly horizontally disposed slot 114L is fixed with respect to the main frame. A right side mostly horizontally disposed slot 114R is fixed with respect to the main frame.
A slider frame (100,
A left side member 101 is pivotally attached to the slider frame about the second axis (A2) and is operatively attached to the rotary crop pickup device along a third axis (A3) as shown in
The accessory attached to the slider frame in
In a preferred embodiment all of the first through seventh axes (A1-A7) are respectively substantially parallel to each other.
When the accessory attached to the slider frame 100 is a rotor with blades 120 thereon the rotor is rotatable about a fifth axis (A5) and rotatable in a direction opposite to the direction of rotation of the rotary crop pickup device 710 for urging crop disposed between the tines 711 of the rotary crop pickup device 710 and the rotor to pass towards the baling chamber 610.
In
The slide blocks 350 on each side of the device 110 shown in
Since the rotor part 101 is operatively pivotally attached along a sixth axis (A6) to the slide frame 100, it is moveable between a lower position close to the rotary crop pickup device 710 and an upper position spaced farther from the rotary crop pickup device 710. Several tension springs 117 are operatively attached at one end thereof to the slider frame 100 and operatively attached at another end thereof to the rotor plate 101 to apply a force tending to help rotate the rotor upwardly about the sixth axis (A6) when the crop passes between the rotor and the rotary crop pickup device. Nuts 118 can be adjusted to adjust the tension on tension springs 117, as is well known in this art.
The stop mechanism 250 associated with the rotor 110 and the slider frame 100 is used to prevent the rotor 110 from pivoting beyond a predetermined angle downwardly about the sixth axis (A6) thereby preventing the rotor blades 120 from contacting the rotary crop pickup device 710.
The above embodiments are the preferred embodiments, but this invention is not limited thereto. It is, therefore, apparent that many modifications and variations of the present invention are possible in light of the above teachings. It is, therefore, to be understood that within the scope of the appended claims, the invention may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described.
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