The present invention relates to a harvester system, and, more particularly, to a bidirectional harvesting method and apparatus.
A grain harvesting combine includes a header, which cuts the crop and feeds it into a threshing rotor. The threshing rotor rotates within a perforated housing, performing a threshing operation of the grain from the crop directed there in to. Once the grain is threshed it falls through perforations in the housing onto a grain pan. From the grain pan the grain falls through a set of upper and lower sieves that are known as the cleaning shoe. The sieves are vibrating or oscillating causing clean grain to fall through for the purposes of collection of the grain and the removal of the chaff or other debris. The cleaning fan blows air through the sieves to discharge chaff toward the rear of the combine. Crop residue such as straw from the threshing section proceeds through a straw chopper and out the rear of the combine.
The clean grain is gathered into a clean grain reservoir and when the reservoir is full the operator interfaces with an operator of a grain hauling vehicle to transfer the grain from the reservoir to the grain hauling vehicle. As shown in
If the harvester is stationary a skilled operator can back a vehicle to position it so that it can receive the grain from the harvester. A great deal of skill is required to back a straight truck in coordination with a harvesting machine as is demonstrated at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P91KAKD7tpc
Considerable skill is needed to back the vehicle up to a stationary harvester if the grain hauling vehicle is a tractor/grain cart combination. Even more skill is required if the grain hauling vehicle is a tractor/wagon combination. It is virtually impossible for an operator of any skill level to controllably back a grain hauling vehicle if the vehicle is a tractor with two grain containers connected in series. It is simply impossible for an operator to coordinate the backing of a tractor and a towed vehicle relative to a discharge auger of a harvester as the harvester is harvesting grain at a normal operating speed. The high speeds of both the harvester and the carts would require split second adjustments and when added to varying field conditions such as ruts and moisture, as well as poor visibility and limited ability to judge distance between the leading cart and header are but a few reasons why this is impossible to achieve using the prior art.
Automatic car parking systems are known where the car has no hitched element and the parking spot is in a fixed location. Also it is known to have a truck tractor and trailer system that backs up the rig to a stationary dock.
An example of a harvesting vehicle that uses a material receiving vehicle a substantial amount of the time can be seen at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xR2GAjHvuD4. This illustrates a cane harvesting process, where billets are transferred to the material receiving vehicle during the entire harvesting process. One of the problems with the prior art harvesting process is that there is a delay required each time a material receiving vehicle is filled and another one takes it place, requiring the empty vehicle to replace the filled material receiving vehicle as can be seen at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9jEgNZp9Aoc&feature=related, which shows the harvesting delay of switching material receiving carts. Another problem encountered is the need to turn a harvester around to continue the harvesting operation.
What is needed in the art is a method and apparatus to efficiently continue the harvesting operation when arriving at the ends of rows or swaths.
The invention in one form is directed to a bidirectional material source vehicle including a base unit and at least one material gathering device. The base unit is movable in a first travel direction and a generally opposite second travel direction. The at least one material gathering device is carried by the base unit. The at least one material gathering device is positioned at a first end of the base unit when the base unit is traveling in the first travel direction, and is positioned at a second end of the base unit when the base unit is traveling in the second travel direction.
The invention in another form is directed to a bidirectional material source vehicle including a base unit and at least one material gathering device. The base unit is movable in a first travel direction and a generally opposite second travel direction. The base unit includes a first interface device associated with a first end of the base unit and a second interface device associated with a second end of the base unit. The at least one material gathering device is connectable to the first interface device when the base unit is traveling in the first travel direction and connectable to the second interface device when the base unit is traveling in the second travel direction.
The above-mentioned and other features and advantages of this invention, and the manner of attaining them, will become more apparent and the invention will be better understood by reference to the following description of an embodiment of the invention taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
Corresponding reference characters indicate corresponding parts throughout the several views. The exemplifications set out herein illustrate one embodiment of the invention and such exemplifications are not to be construed as limiting the scope of the invention in any manner.
Referring now to the drawings, and more particularly to
As illustrated in
Now, additionally referring to
Vehicle 20 is connected to towed material container 22 by a tongue 38. Tongue 38 is pivotally connected to vehicle 20 and may be rigidly connected to towed material container 22. Tongue 38 also represents, for the purpose of discussion, a connection of a power transfer device and a communication link. The power transfer device may be in the form of hydraulic lines that allow the power plant of vehicle 20 to provide power to towed material container 22. It is also contemplated that power can be transferred by other connections such as electrical or pneumatic. The communication link allows communicative controller 30 to send control signals to towed material container 22 so that the backing of material receiving vehicle 18 can be accomplished in coordination with material source vehicle 12. Further, it is also contemplated that tongue 38 may be articulated and/or slid along a portion of towed material containers 22 and 24 as a way of effecting the steering control needed during the backing of material receiving vehicle 18.
Towed material containers 22 and 24 are each illustrated as having two wheels 40, which are ground engaging. Other ground engaging constructs are also contemplated such as more than two wheels and tracked constructs. Wheels 40 may be steerable and be under the control of the control signals sent thereto by communicative controller 30. Additionally, or instead of steerable wheels, wheels 40 can be separately powered to provide traction motive power to towed material containers 22 and 24. The separate powering of wheels 40 allow a skid-steer ability to towed material containers 22 and 24. The power supplied to wheels 40 as well as steering allows communicative controller 30 to send signals that coordinate the backing operation of material receiving vehicle 18. The reference herein to containers 22 and 24 as being “towed” is relative to the normal operation when material receiving vehicle 18 is proceeding in a direction 34, the consistent use of this term is for the purpose of uniformity and it is recognized that when material receiving vehicle 18 is moving in direction 36 that containers 22 and 24 are not being towed by vehicle 20. Vehicle 20 pushes tongue 38 or is pulled by tongue 38. A combination of physical pushing of tongue 38 and steering of wheels 40 and/or the powering of wheels 40 may be undertaken to provide the needed transfer of power along the steered pathway. Containers 22 and 24 may be self powered, such as with an on-board electrical generator. Containers 22 and 24 may also incorporate energy storage devices such as electrical battery, flywheel, pressurized gas chamber, or pressurized hydraulic fluid chamber. As material receiving vehicle 18 is moving in direction 36 communicative controller 30 controls the pathway taken in direction 36, which is substantially parallel with direction 28 as material receiving vehicle 18 approaches material source vehicle 12.
At least some of the power used to steer and/or move wheels 40 may come from an on-board power source or an on-board energy storage device. Power that is transferred to towed material containers 22 and 24 may be in the form of pressurized hydraulic fluid, pressurized gas or electricity.
In
In
Autonomous control of material receiving vehicle 18, coordinated with material source vehicle 12 improves the efficiency of material transfer. Preferably material receiving vehicle 18 has at least one material holding part which is detachable from a primary power source and the primary power source is in the rear relative to the direction of travel.
The problem of moving a grain/forage/cane cart in proximity to a combine/cane harvester is solved by the present invention by having the tractor back the cart in synchronization with the harvester rather than pull the cart. Because this is a virtually impossible task for even the most skilled operator, particularly with the speeds required and the poor visibilities of where the cart is near the combine, the autonomous guidance and safeguarding systems of the present invention are required.
Without limitation material source vehicle 12 could be a self-propelled forage harvester, a sugar cane harvester, a sugar beet harvester, a potato harvester, a hay baler, a cotton harvester, a rice harvester, a cut-to-length timber harvester, a mining machine, or a snow removal machine. Without limitation, material receiving vehicle 18 could be an agricultural tractor and one or more grain carts having one or more axels. In the description of the present invention, an agricultural tractor with one or more grain carts, each cart having one axle has been used. This simplification is for convenience in the description of the present invention, but one of ordinary skill in the art of vehicle trajectory control will be able to extend the invention to other hitch and axle configurations. In a preferred embodiment, wheels 40 of grain carts are powered as explained herein.
Two disadvantages of the prior art approach, as illustrated in
Now additionally referring to
Vehicle 12 can have two material discharge devices 14, which may both move billets from vehicle 12 to material receiving vehicles 18. However, arrangements with a single material discharge device 14 are also possible. Discharge devices 14 may, for example, be in the form of an auger, conveyor or chute for the discharging of material gathered by vehicle 12. The operator of vehicle 12 selects which one of material discharge devices 14 is activated so that a transition from moving the billets to one vehicle system 18 to the other vehicle system 18 can occur as one vehicle system 18 is filled. Once a vehicle system 18 is filled and the operator has switched the flow of billets to the other vehicle system 18, which, as illustrated in
As illustrated in
Alternatively, as illustrated in
While vehicle 12 travels in first travel direction 50 material receiving vehicle 18 has a first orientation as it also travels in first travel direction 50. While vehicle 12 travels in second travel direction 52 material receiving vehicle 18 has a second orientation as it travels in second travel direction 52 with the first orientation being substantially opposite to the second orientation, thereby continuing the coordinated travel path of material receiving vehicle 18 relative to vehicle 12 as the material in rows 46 is harvested in direction 52 by the bidirectional travel of vehicle 12.
The present invention is carried out as a method of gathering material with vehicle 12 by gathering the material in direction 50 with material gathering device 42 and subsequently gathering material in direction 52 with either material gathering device 44, or with material gathering device 42a that has been transitioned to interface device 60, without substantially altering an orientation of base unit 54 of vehicle 12. The present invention also coordinates the travel during material transfer and during direction reversal, without reorientation, of material receiving vehicles 18.
The position, orientation and other state variables associated with vehicles 12 and 18 may be obtained by a variety of sensor combinations and placements that send information to communicative controllers 26 and 30. Sensed data may be combined with known geometry of vehicle elements to calculate positions of edges, wheels, drawbars, etc. as part of the implementation of the present invention.
While this invention has been described with respect to at least one embodiment, the present invention can be further modified within the spirit and scope of this disclosure. This application is therefore intended to cover any variations, uses, or adaptations of the invention using its general principles. Further, this application is intended to cover such departures from the present disclosure as come within known or customary practice in the art to which this invention pertains and which fall within the limits of the appended claims.
This is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/187,109, entitled “MATERIAL TRANSFER SYSTEM”, filed Jul. 20, 2011, which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13187109 | Jul 2011 | US |
Child | 13246213 | US |