Information
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Patent Grant
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6199638
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Patent Number
6,199,638
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Date Filed
Monday, November 22, 199925 years ago
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Date Issued
Tuesday, March 13, 200123 years ago
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Inventors
-
-
Examiners
Agents
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CPC
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US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 056 149
- 056 255
- 056 503
- 056 159
- 056 DIG 14
- 056 DIG 22
- 172 439
- 172 47
- 172 450
- 172 451
- 172 786
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International Classifications
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Abstract
A device for mechanically establishing the lowest point a three-point tractor hitch can sink to. The device comprises a modified chain which is attached at both ends to the towed implement near where the lift arms are attached to the implement. The chain's middle portion is draped over and adjustably attached to the top link, with the result that as the lift arms are lowered the chain draws taut and prevents the lift arms from sinking any lower.
Description
BACKGROUND
1. Field of Invention
This invention relates to the field of tractor hitches. More specifically, the invention comprises a device which adjustably sets the lowest point of travel for a conventional three-point agricultural hitch. The device is useful for maintaining an agricultural implement at the desired lowest point of travel without putting pressure on the hydraulic pump commonly used to adjust the height of such hitches.
2. Description of Prior Art
Three-point tractor hitches have been in common use for several decades. U.S. Pat. No. 4,071,105 to Von Allworden (1978) is a typical example. Similar configurations are disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 2,685,160 to Kuhary et.al. (1954), U.S. Pat. No. 2,828,968 to Engler (1958), and U.S. Pat. No. 2,462,588 to Wondra (1947). The basic three-point configuration has changed little since its inception.
Turning to
FIG. 1
, the prior art three-point hitch will be explained. Tractor
10
has a pair of rocker arms
12
, which rotate on a common shaft as hydraulic pressure is applied. When rocker arms
12
rotate upward, they pull lift links
16
with them. Lift links
16
, in turn, pull lift arms
14
up with them. Lift arms
14
are pivotally connected to the underside of tractor
10
(illustrated in other views).
Many different agricultural implements may be attached to the hitching system. In the particular example illustrated in
FIG. 1
, mower
22
is attached. Mower
22
has A-frame
20
rigidly attached to its forward portion. A-frame
20
has two lift pins
24
rigidly attached thereto. Lift arms
14
have holes sized to slip over and engage lift pins
24
.
Top link
18
is pivotally attached to tractor
10
as shown. The opposite end of top link
18
is pivotally attached to the upper portion of A-frame
24
. The purpose of top link
18
is to keep mower
22
roughly level as it is raised and lowered (via the well-known operation of a 4-bar mechanism). Those skilled in the art will easily realize how the illustrated device functions. Rocker arms
12
are forcibly rotated by hydraulic power. If they are raised, then mower
22
is raised. Likewise, when they drop, mower
22
drops. Top link
18
is typically just a steel bar with an adjustment mechanism used to vary its length. The particular top link
18
illustrated in
FIG. 1
is a new version, incorporating features of the present invention. However, it also provides the normal functions of a conventional top link.
Operator controls (not shown) are provided to allow the driver to adjust the height of the implement. It is very important to maintain a fixed height off the ground during many agricultural operations. The importance of this is obvious for mowing. It is also very important if the towed implement is a spraying rig—such as the type used for fertilizer and pesticides. The prior art operator controls often have an adjustable lower stop. The operator can set this stop to provide the correct height for the activity he is conducting. The height is hopefully maintained by hydraulic pressure holding rocker arms
12
in the set position. One must realize, however, that most agricultural implements are quite heavy.
In actual practice, this method of height maintenance has a serious shortcoming. The hydraulic pressure provided to position rocker arms
12
is supplied by a pump powered off the tractor's engine. The pressure is regulated by one or more control valves—usually of the proportional type. As the control valves wear with age, they often leak. This fact means that the height adjustment will creep downward. Over twenty or thirty minutes of operation, the operator will look back and realize that the implement has sunk six inches lower. He must then raise and lower the implement to reset the system. On older systems, he may have to reset the height every two or three minutes.
Even with new pumps and valves, height variations occur. On a cold morning, the hydraulic fluid circulating in the system starts with a much higher viscosity. As the fluid warms, its viscosity diminishes. Thus, an initial height adjustment will tend to sink as the system comes up to normal operating temperature. Significant differences in ambient temperature can cause the same phenomenon. A height setting made on a cold day will not bring the implement to the same position on a hot day.
The known devices for setting the height of an agricultural implement are therefore limited in that they:
1. Do not maintain a fixed position above the ground, instead letting the implement creep downward;
2. Do not maintain a fixed position as the hydraulic system heats up under cold conditions; and
3. Do not determine the same position under varying ambient conditions.
OBJECTS AND ADVANTAGES
Accordingly, several objects and advantages of the present invention are:
1. To maintain the implement in a fixed position above the ground;
2. To maintain said fixed position despite varying viscosity of the hydraulic fluid in the system; and
3. To maintain said fixed position despite varying ambient conditions.
DRAWING FIGURES
FIG. 1
is an isometric view, showing a tractor with an attached mower.
FIG. 2
is a close-up view of the three-point hitch shown in FIG.
1
.
FIG. 3
is an isometric view of the novel top link used in the present invention.
FIG. 4
is an isometric view of the height maintaining link used in the present invention.
FIG. 5
is a side elevation view, showing the tractor and mower with the mower in a lowered position.
FIG. 6
is a side elevation view, showing the tractor and mower with the mower in a raised position.
FIG. 7
is an isometric view showing the rear of the tractor with the mower in a lowered position.
FIG. 8
is an isometric view showing the rear of the tractor with the mower in a raised position.
FIG. 9
is an isometric view showing the rear of the tractor with the chain assembly shifted to a new position.
|
Reference Numerals in Drawings
|
|
|
10
tractor
|
12
rocker arm
|
14
lift arm
|
16
lift link
|
18
top link
|
20
A-frame
|
22
mower
|
24
lift pin
|
26
top pin
|
28
top link pivot
|
30
height maintaining link
|
32
lower attach point
|
34
adjustment bracket
|
36
adjustment notches
|
38
mounting pin hole
|
40
lower attach bracket
|
42
chain
|
44
top link strap
|
46
lift arm pivot
|
48
gearbox
|
50
PTO shaft
|
|
DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
FIG. 1
illustrates tractor
10
with mower
22
attached to its three-point hitch, the operation of which has been explained previously.
FIG. 2
provides a closer view of the novel aspects of the invention. Height maintaining link
30
is attached to mower
22
at two lower attach points
32
. The middle portion of height maintaining link
30
passes over top link
18
. Top link
18
is conventional, with the exception of adjustment bracket
34
, which is provided to adjustably attach height maintaining link
30
to top link
18
.
FIG. 3
illustrates top link
18
in greater detail. Top link
18
has two mounting pin holes
38
, which allow it to be attached to the tractor and the implement, as in the prior art. The forward portion of top link
18
is attached to tractor
10
at top link pivot
28
(shown in FIG.
2
). The rear portion of top link
18
is attached to A-frame
20
at top pin
26
(also in FIG.
2
). Adjustment bracket
34
is comprised of two steel plates welded to the sides of top link
18
as shown. Adjustment bracket
34
has a plurality of adjustment notches
36
, which allow an operator to alter the point at which height maintaining link
30
is attached to top link
18
.
FIG. 4
illustrates height maintaining link
30
in greater detail. Lower attach brackets
40
are provided to enable the user to easily attach height maintaining link
30
to lower attach points
32
. Lower attach brackets
40
are provided with through holes so that conventional bolts may be used for attachment. Height maintaining link
30
also has top link strap
44
, which is designed to engage adjustment notches
36
of adjustment bracket
34
. In between lower attach brackets
40
and top link strap
44
are two lengths of chain
42
. A sturdy cable could be substituted for chain
42
. In fact, height maintaining link
30
could be made as a solid piece. However, the use of chain
42
has been found particularly effective, as will be explained in the following.
FIGS. 5 and 6
illustrate the operation of the invention. The tires of tractor
10
are shown removed so that the reader may fully see the interaction of the present invention with the prior art three-point hitch. In
FIG. 5
, mower
22
is in a lowered position, appropriate for cutting operations. In
FIG. 6
, mower
22
has been raised by the previously explained operation of rocker arms
12
. As also previously explained, the operation of top link
18
has tended to keep mower
22
roughly level.
Those skilled in the art will realize that tractor
10
, lift arms
14
, and top link
18
comprise a classic 4-bar linkage. By observing the positional differences between FIG.
5
and
FIG. 6
, the reader may easily comprehend the operation of height maintaining link
30
. In
FIG. 5
, height maintaining link
30
is pulled into one of the adjustment notches
36
on top link
18
. It is placed under tension and it prevents lift arms
14
from going any lower. In
FIG. 6
, lift arms
14
have been raised considerably. The reader will note that height maintaining link
30
is lifted well out of adjustment notches
36
. In reality, of course, the chain portion of height maintaining link
30
will go slack and height maintaining link
30
will remain in its original adjustment notch
36
, held in place by its own weight. However, by illustrating height maintaining link
30
as rigid, the reader will easily comprehend that lifting the implement, as shown in
FIG. 6
, removes tension from height maintaining link
30
. Likewise, lowering the implement to the position shown in
FIG. 5
places height maintaining link
30
in tension, thereby preventing the implement from going any lower.
FIGS. 7 and 8
illustrate the identical positions of mower
22
, seen from the rear.
FIG. 7
represents the lowered position. The reader will observe that top link strap
44
is securely engaged within adjustment bracket
34
of top link
18
. Chains
42
are under tension and mower
22
cannot go any lower.
FIG. 8
represents the raised position. Height maintaining link
30
is once again illustrated as rigid, with the result that it appears to have lifted well out of adjustment bracket
34
. The reader can visually appreciate the fact that it is no longer under tension and does not prevent the raising of the implement. In reality, top link strap
44
would remain engaged within adjustment bracket
34
by its own weight, and chains
42
would go slack.
FIG. 8
is also useful for illustrating how the operator can easily adjust the height set by height maintaining link
30
. When mower
22
is raised as shown, the operator can reach back from the seated position, grasp top link strap
44
, and lift it to the position shown. Turning now to
FIG. 9
, the operator can pull top link strap
44
forward and place it in a more forward adjustment notch
36
. This alteration will result in a higher minimum height for mower
22
. As shown in
FIG. 9
, mower
22
can only descend slightly before chains
42
come into tension and arrest its movement downward.
In the preferred embodiment, top link
18
and height maintaining link
30
are made of mild steel. It would be possible to make these items from many different materials. However, as strength is more important than weight savings in agricultural operations, steel is a good choice.
Those skilled in the art will realize that height maintaining link
30
could be made from a single length of chain. The chain could be attached on either end at lower attach points
32
, and then passed over top link
18
. The more complex version of height maintaining link
30
, as presented, is a refinement of this basic concept. The incorporation of top link strap
44
makes the device function more smoothly.
Likewise, those skilled in the art will realize that a single length of chain could simply be attached to one point of the implement and one point of the top link. While this alternative embodiment is within the present invention, it has practical limitations that should be appreciated. Turning back to
FIG. 9
, this limitation will be explained. PTO shaft
50
is located on the rear of tractor
10
. The purpose of this shaft is to provide rotary power to towed implements. Mower
22
receives this rotary power in gearbox
48
. Ordinarily, there is a drive shaft (“PTO shaft”) connecting PTO shaft
50
and gearbox
48
. For purposes of visual simplicity, this drive shaft has not been shown in the figures. However, the reader may easily observe that the preferred embodiment of height maintaining link
30
avoids interfering with this drive shaft. A single length of chain would have difficulty achieving the same result.
SUMMARY, RAMIFICATIONS, AND SCOPE
Accordingly, the reader will appreciate that the proposed invention maintains the height of a towed implement on a conventional three-point hitch. The invention has further advantages in that it maintains the fixed height despite varying viscosity of the hydraulic fluid in the system, and it maintains the fixed height despite varying ambient conditions.
Although the preceding description contains significant detail, it should not be construed as limiting the scope of the invention but rather as providing illustrations of the preferred embodiment of the invention. For example, many different types of tensile members could be substituted in place of chains
42
, many different adjustment methods could be provided on top link
18
, etc. Thus, the scope of the invention should be fixed by the following claims, rather than by the examples given.
Claims
- 1. A device for mechanically fixing the minimum height off the ground of an agricultural implement attached to a pair of lift arms and a top link of a tractor, comprising:a height maintaining link, being substantially inelastic when placed under tension, having a first end and a second end, with said first end being attached to said implement in close proximity to said lift arms, and with said second end being attached to said top link, so that as said lift arms are lowered said height maintaining link comes under tension and prevents said lift arms from descending further.
- 2. A device as recited in claim 1, wherein said height maintaining link comprises a chain.
- 3. A device as recited in claim 1, wherein said top link includes an adjustment bracket, having a plurality of adjustment notches, sized and shaped to engage said height maintaining link, so that the point at which said second end of said height maintaining link attaches to said top link may be easily adjusted.
- 4. A device as recited in claim 1, wherein said height maintaining link comprises:a. a first lower bracket, including attachment means for attaching said first lower bracket to said implement proximate to the point where said lift arms are attached to said implement; b. a first chain, having a first end and a second end, with said first end being attached to said first lower bracket; c. a top link strap, having a first end, a middle portion, and a second end, with said first end being attached to said second end of said first chain; d. a second chain, having a first end and a second end, with said first end being attached to said second end of said top link strap; and e. a second lower bracket, including attachment means for attaching said second lower bracket to said implement proximate to the point where said lift arms are attached to said implement, with said second lower bracket being attached to said second end of said second chain.
US Referenced Citations (6)