Black Walnuts, which come from the eastern black walnut tree, (Juglans nigra) produce nuts that have a strong outer shell which makes harvesting the nutmeat in large pieces difficult. Current processing techniques for these nuts rely on compression or cracker techniques that exert high compressive force in order to crack the shells. This compressive force results in a crushing action which fractures the shell and nutmeat into many randomly shaped small pieces. The natural fault lines of the nutshell do not allow for optimally opening the nutshell cavity to expose large nutmeat kernels.
There are two nutmeat cavities within the nutshell separated by an internal partition between these two cavities. The natural fault lines cross these cavities in an adverse manner and cause the nutshell and nutmeat to fracture into small pieces during the conventional cracking process. Nutmeat pieces that are large are more desirable and small nutmeat pieces.
This invention is a method for obtaining large kernels of nutmeat from Black Walnuts by firstly sawing two substantially parallel cuts on both ends of the Black Walnut with a special apparatus and secondly, using tensional force to pry the nut open utilizing the sawn groves as the fault lines for separating the nut shell and thereby exposing large kernels of the nutmeat. The tensional force is applied in two places which results in the nut shell being separated into three pieces. The three pieces are described as two being the sides of the nut shell and one comprising mainly of the internal partition of the nut shell.
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The special apparatus has two Nut Grippers attached to a pivoting swing-arm assembly. The Nut Grippers are of elastomeric material which grip and hold the nut for sawing. The nut is oriented by placing the internal-partition of the nut parallel to the sawing blades.
The nut has three distinctive areas on the outer nutshell that are indicators for the orientation of the internal partition of the nut. By identifying these indicators, one can easily orient the nut for proper placement in the Nut Gripper of the special apparatus. The proper placement is achieved when the internal partition is substantially parallel to the sawing blades. The first two of these indicators are the two ends of the nut. The ends of the nut can be identified as the point in which the surface grain pattern on the outside of the nutshell comes to a point on each end. There is also a small crack area, on most nuts but not all, on the bottom of the nut that crosses the bottom point. The third indicator is the nut thickness—when holding the nut, by the ends previously described, by ones thumb on one nut-end-point and forefinger on the other nut-end-point the nut can be rotated with the axis of rotation passing through the nut-ends. When rotating the nut as described, the nut is observed has having two different areas of diametrical thickness—one being narrow thickness which is associated with the flatter sides of the nut. The proper placement of the nut into the nut grippers is achieved when the narrow diametrical sides of the nut are parallel to the rubber nut grippers and the axis, otherwise described as an imaginary line that passes through the nut end-points is perpendicular to the guide pin of the Swing Arm Assembly of the special apparatus. The placement of the nut in the Nut Grippers as described will have the nut's internal partition parallel to the sawing blades and the internal partition will be centered between the two Sawing Blades. The nut can be placed in the Nut Grippers with either the top end-point up or the bottom end-point up as long as the imaginary line that passes through the nut end-points is perpendicular to the guide pin.
The nut oriented as described and held by the Nut Grippers is then presented for sawing two grooves on one end of the nut and then rotated by means of the Swing Arm Assembly for sawing two grooves on the opposite end of the nut. There are two sawing blades spaced apart by a spacer which controls both the spacing of the sawing blades and is of sufficient diameter to limit the depth of the sawn grooves. The space between the two saw blades can be from 0.10 to 0.50 inches and preferably 0.250 inches which results in corresponding sawn grooves on the nutshell. The width of the grooves is determined by the width of the saw blades and the resulting sawn grooves are 0.01 to 0.200 inches wide and preferably 0.06 inches wide.
Proper orientation of the nut to the nut grippers is achieved when the two sawn grooves are substantially parallel to and on each side of the nut shell's internal partition. The depth of the sawn grooves is 0.125 inches to 0.750 inches deep and optimally 0.450 inches deep at the ends of the nut. The saw blades configuration can either be a band saw that produces a straight cut or a radial saw that produces a radial cut with preference of a radial saw that is 2.0 inches to 8.0 inches in diameter and optimally 4.375 inches in diameter.
The nut is removed from the nut grippers and thus removed from the special apparatus after the sawn grooves are accomplished.
After the nut, with the aforementioned sawn grooves, is removed from the special apparatus, the nutshell is separated into three pieces firstly by applying tensional force in one sawn groove by means of inserting a blade shaped hand-tool into the sawn groove and prying. A typical 5-in-1 painter's tool is one type of hand tool that works well for this purpose. This hand-tool is also known as a 6-in-1 painter's tool and either of these hand-tools can be found at most hardware stores. Other hand-tools with a blade used for prying can be used. This tensional force is done in two places on the nut shell which causes the nutshell to separate into three pieces. The two tensional forces can occur one after the other or they can be done simultaneously. Optionally, the tensional force may come from wedging by the insertion of 1 to 4 wedges into the sawn grooves with sufficient force to and separate the nutshell into the three pieces described.
While the present apparatus invention is conceive for low volume use, also, conceived is a higher volume apparatus or machine in which the nut is automatically oriented and gripped and then transported to groove-sawing stations that would cut the grooves in each end and optionally on the sides of the nut and then is passed on to a nutshell fracturing station in which the nutshell would be separated into three pieces. While the speed of this machine is improved the concept of sawing groove substantially parallel to and on each side of the nut's internal partition is maintained in order to cause the nut to be opened for exposure of large nutmeat pieces.
While the present invention is conceived for two grooves sawn into each end of the nut also conceived is these grooves sawn on the sides of the nut as extension of the sawn grooves or separately sawn grooves. These grooves could extend fully around the nut or partially. The sawn grooves on the side of the nut would be of a similar spacing and parallel to the internal partition of the nut as the sawn grooves on the end. The depth of the grooves on the side-nut area is less than the end nut area because the internal nutmeat is closer to the outside of the nut in the side-nut area. The depth of cut in the side-nut area is 0.020 to 0.400 inches and preferably 0.125 inches.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62030760 | Jul 2014 | US |