1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to systems and methods for unloading agricultural material from a farm implement, such as a grain cart, into a bin or container.
2. Description of the Related Art
Farm implements with storage bins configured to transport grain or seed and load containers or bins with the transported material, such as grain carts, typically include a conveyor with a chute at the discharge end. The auger or conveyor is positioned on the grain cart such that it may be used to discharge material into a container or bin next to the grain cart. The chute is typically fixed in a downward facing position so that the material discharged from the auger or conveyor is directed downwardly into the bin or container. The problem with this system is that all of the discharged material is directed to the same location in the bin or container, which may cause the material in the bin to be unevenly distributed. The uneven distribution of material can put undue strain on the frame of the container or semi-trailer in which it is loaded, cause overflow of material prior to using the full capacity of the grain cart and/or container and increase likelihood of roll over. Also, the uneven distribution of material can cause overloading of container and/or uneven loading of the axles, which may cause stress on roadways or weight tickets from the Department of Transportation. To change the position the material is discharged, the vehicle towing the implement, such as a tractor, must continually move forward in short intervals. Repositioning the grain cart and tractor relative to the storage bin wastes time and fuel. This constant starting and stopping puts a large amount of wear and tear on the clutch of the vehicle.
In accordance with a first aspect of the present invention, an apparatus for conveying material into a container comprises a conveyor including a first end configured to receive material and a second end configured to discharge material and a chute including a first end pivotably coupled to the second end of the conveyor for rotation about a first axis of rotation and a second end configured to discharge material. The chute is pivotable relative to the second end of the conveyor about a first axis of rotation and the second end of the chute (an opening) is oriented to discharge at an angle relative to the axis of rotation such that the second end of the chute is moveable in a first plane. The second end of the chute may be oriented to discharge at an angle between 0 and 90 degrees relative to the axis of rotation.
In another aspect of the present invention, the apparatus also includes a first cylinder configured to pivot the chute about the first axis of rotation.
In another aspect of the present invention, the first axis is approximately parallel to a longitudinal axis of the conveyor.
In another aspect of the present invention, the first end of the chute is pivotable relative to the second end of the conveyor about a second axis of rotation such that the second end of the chute is moveable in a second plane. The first axis of rotation may be approximately orthogonal to the second axis of rotation, and the first plane may be approximately orthogonal to the second plane.
In another aspect of the present invention, the apparatus includes a second cylinder configured to pivot the chute about the second axis of rotation.
In another aspect of the present invention, the apparatus also includes a scale configured to measure the amount of material discharged by the apparatus and a controller configured to pivot the chute about the first axis of rotation when a target amount of material has been discharged. The target amount of material may be a pre-determined amount of material and the apparatus includes an input for an operator to enter the pre-determined amount.
In another aspect of the present invention, the first end of the chute is pivotable relative to the second end of the conveyor relative to a second axis of rotation such that the second end of the chute is moveable in a second plane, and wherein the controller is configured to pivot the chute about the second axis of rotation when a second target amount of material has been discharged.
In another aspect of the present invention, a method for discharging material evenly in a container comprises the steps of discharging material from a chute and positioning a chute such that the material is discharged in a first direction into a container. The method also includes the steps of measuring an amount of material discharged from the chute and, when a target amount of material has been discharged from the chute, positioning the chute such that the material is discharged in a second direction into the container.
In another aspect of the present invention, the step of positioning the chute such that the material is discharged in a second direction comprises pivoting the chute about a first axis of rotation.
In another aspect of the present invention, the method further comprises the step of pivoting the chute about a second axis of rotation when a second target amount of material has been discharged from the chute such that the material is discharged from the chute in a direction different than the first or second direction.
In another aspect of the present invention, the method further comprises the step of stopping the chute from discharging material when a third target amount of material has been discharged. The step of stopping the chute from discharging may include shutting the container door to stop the flow of grain from the grain cart bin to the conveyor.
In another aspect of the present invention, the method further comprises the steps of providing a cylinder coupled to the chute and adjusting the length of the cylinder to pivot the chute about the first axis of rotation.
In another aspect of the present invention, the method further comprises the steps of providing a second cylinder coupled the chute and adjusting the length of the second cylinder to pivot the chute about the second axis of rotation.
In another aspect of the present invention, a method of creating an automatic chute unload routine for a mobile farm implement including a bin to store material and a chute moveable between a plurality of positions and configured to discharge material stored in the bin comprises the steps of recording a first position of the chute and a weight of the material stored in the bin and discharging material from the bin out of the chute. The method also includes the steps of monitoring weight of the bin and determining a first amount of material discharged from the bin and, when the chute is moved to a second position, recording the second position and the first amount of material discharged from the bin. The method further includes the steps of monitoring the weight of the bin and determining a second amount of material discharged from the bin and, when material stops being discharged from the chute, recording the second amount of material discharged from the bin.
In another aspect of the present invention, the method also comprises the steps of, when the chute is moved to a third position, recording the third position and the second amount of material discharged from the bin. The method further comprises the steps of monitoring the weight of the bin and determining a third amount of material discharged from the bin, and, when material stops being discharged from the chute, recording the third amount of material discharged from the bin.
While the present invention may be embodied in many different forms, a number of illustrative embodiments are described herein with the understanding that the present disclosure is to be considered as providing examples and not intended to limit the invention to the preferred embodiments described and/or illustrated herein.
The present invention is directed to an automated method and system of unloading material from a farm implement having a conveyor, such as a grain cart or seed tender, by controlling the position of a chute at the end of a conveyor discharging material from the implement into a hopper, container, or bin next to the implement. The method includes monitoring the weight of material discharged from the implement and adjusting the position of the chute when target weights are reached. While the present invention is described herein with reference to a grain cart having a auger type conveyor with a chute at a discharge end, it may be used on any type of farm implement having a conveyor with a chute or spout, including without limitation auger, belt, or pneumatic conveyors.
As the weight of material discharged is monitored, a determination is made whether a target weight has been reached at step 108, and, if it has not been reached, the position of the chute will be maintained and the weight of material discharged will continue to be monitored. If it is determined that the target weight has been reached at step 108, the position of the chute will be changed at step 110 to the next position, e.g., to a second position oriented toward a front of the hopper if the chute was in a first position, or to a third position if the chute was in a second position. In one embodiment, changing to the second position in step 110 is performed by rotating the chute about a first axis of rotation extending along a longitudinal axis of the chute and parallel to or offset from the longitudinal axis of the conveyor. In an embodiment, changing to the third position in step 110 is performed by rotating one end of the chute about a second axis of rotation perpendicular to the first axis of rotation. After the position of the chute has been changed, the process between steps 106 and 110 is repeated until all desired positions of the chute have been used 112. For example, if there are four positions of the chute to be used, after moving the chute from the first position to the second position, steps 106 through 110 will be repeated when moving from the second position to the third position and the third position to the fourth position. After the final position, e.g., a fifth position in five position operation, the system will determine whether another hopper needs to be filled at step 114.
If there are no additional hoppers, the cycle is ended at step 116. If there are additional hoppers, a new cycle is commenced and the first step is positioning the conveyor of the grain cart in the center of the second hopper length-wise at step 120. The cycle then follows the same steps discussed above with respect to controlling the position of the chute based on weight 122, 124, 126 and 128, i.e., monitoring the weight unloaded, determining if a target weight has been reached, changing the chute position to a next position, and repeating the steps until all desired chute positions have been used. The above method may be controlled by software or firmware instructions running on a control system or node on the grain cart, the tractor, and/or on a portable or handheld controller. The control system may include one or more computer processors or microcontrollers and one or more memory devices to store the software and other data. In an embodiment, the control system is in communication with sensors (e.g., weight and chute position sensors) and chute control devices (e.g., hydraulic cylinders, linear actuators, belts and pulleys, or servo motors) on the cart.
As shown in
The containers 300 may be towable containers or hoppers coupled to a vehicle, and may include a first container 302 and a second container 302. The containers 300 may be oriented along a longitudinal axis I2. The farm implement 200 is preferably positioned such that the longitudinal axis of the conveyor I1 is approximately perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the containers I2 and the conveyor discharge 208 is at the approximate center of the container 302 or 304 being filled.
In
In an embodiment of the present invention, the chute 210 may pivot around a second axis of rotation that is approximately orthogonal to the first axis of rotation, as shown in
The chute 210 may be moved along the first axis of rotation or the second axis of rotation by a hydraulic cylinder 610. The hydraulic cylinder 610 may be controlled remotely by an operator or automatically by a node or handheld controller. In an embodiment of the present invention, the farm implement 200 may include two hydraulic cylinders, and a first hydraulic cylinder is configured to pivot the chute 210 about a first axis of rotation and a second hydraulic cylinder is configured to pivot the chute 210 about a second axis of rotation. The hydraulic cylinders may be positioned with a first end attached to the conveyor 204 and a second end attached to chute. The positioning of the hydraulic cylinders may be seen, for example, in Brent Avalanche Grain Carts 96 Series (e.g., Model Nos. 1196, 1396, 1596 and 2096). In another embodiment of the present invention, the chutes may be rotated about the first axis of rotation or second axis of rotation by any actuation device, such as linear motors, hydraulic motors, pulleys and cables, servo motors, pneumatic cylinders, belt and chain drive and gear drive. The hydraulic cylinders, or any other actuation device, may be powered by the towing implement's power system or by a separate power system onboard the farm implement. The node may control the power supply to the actuation device to control the position of the chute 210.
In operation, the farm implement 200 is positioned such that the conveyor discharge 208 is over the approximate center of a first container 302. Preferably, the longitudinal axis of the conveyor I1 is approximately perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the container I2. The chute 210 is positioned in a first position P1 and the system commences material discharge from the chute 210. The weight discharged from the farm implement 210 is monitored by a weigh system, and, when a first target weight is reached, the chute 210 is pivoted from the first position to a second position P2. The chute 210 may continue to discharge material while pivoting to the second position P2 or the system may cease discharging material after the first target weight is reached and restart material discharge after the chute 210 is placed in the second position P2. The system will monitor the weight of material discharged in the second position P2 until a second target weight is reached. If there are more than two positions, e.g., at P1 and P2 the chute 210 is rotated about the second axis of rotation into positions PA and PB, then the system will continue moving the chute 210 into the desired positions until the target weight is reached for each position. The range of motion of the chute 210 along the first axis of rotation is approximately 40° to 90°, and the range of motion of the chute along the second axis of rotation is approximately the same. Preferably, the chute 210 has a range of motion between 50° and 70°, and most preferably 66° to 68°. After the target weight has been reached at all desired positions, the farm implement 200 will move to the next container, if there is a next container. At the second container 304, the conveyor discharge 208 will again be centered and the process described above will be repeated. The system will continue moving to containers and repeating the chute control process until all of the required containers have been filled.
In the embodiment illustrated in
The controller 900 may be a mobile phone (e.g., iPhone®), a tablet computer (e.g., iPad®), or any other handheld control device. The controller 900 may include a transceiver 1101 for communicating with a mobile farm implement, a display 1104 and auxiliary input device 1105 (e.g., a keyboard) for communicating with a user of the controller 900; a processor 1103 and memory 1107 for executing modules that implement various functionality of the control device; and a storage device 1106 for storing data, instructions, and other information. In an embodiment, the modules may include an operating system 1110 (e.g., iOS®) that provides a platform on which another module, such as control module 1120, executes. For example, the operating system 1110 may allow the control module 1120 to be downloaded as an application and to execute on the controller 900. In an embodiment, the memory 1107 may provide temporary storage for the modules while they are being executed, while the storage device 1106 may provide long-term, non-volatile storage for the modules. The components of the controller 900 may be located inside a housing of the device, or may be externally attached to the housing of the controller 900.
Mobile farm implements such as the tractor 1200 and the grain cart 1300 may interact with the controller 900 by, for instance, sending sensor information to the controller 900 or executing commands received from the controller 900. For example, the grain cart 1300 may provide information about a container 1301, a conveyor belt 1302, or an auger 1303, and may execute commands related to these components.
For the container 1301, a load cell sensor 1310 may measure a weight or volume of agricultural material held by the container 1301, while a container door controller 320 may be configured to open or close a door of the container 1301.
For the conveyor belt 1302, a conveyor belt sensor 1312 may measure a belt speed of the conveyor belt 1302, while a conveyor belt controller 1321 may control the belt speed, tension, or any other property of the conveyor belt 1302.
For the auger 1303, an auger sensor 1314 may measure a position or rotational speed of the auger 1303 or the chute 210, while an auger arm controller 1322 or a conveyor spout controller 1323 may control movement of the conveyor arm or conveyor spout, respectively. If either the conveyor belt 1302 or the auger 1303 is actuated by another power source such as a power takeoff, then a power takeoff sensor 1313 may measure the rotational speed of the power takeoff (e.g., the PTO RPM).
The tractor 1200 may, in an embodiment, likewise have a sensor 1201 for measuring a property of the tractor 1200, such as speed of a power takeoff or an Implement Input Shaft (IIS) or Implement Input Driveline (IID) 1211 used to provide actuation power to the grain cart 1300. In an embodiment, it may have a controller 1205 for controlling a component (e.g., steering component, transmission component, etc.) on the tractor.
Operations 5010 through 5040 involve preparing the chute to enter a control mode, which then automates movement of the chute. Operations 5010 through 5040 moves the chute into a start position and activates the control mode. In an embodiment, if the control mode relies on previously recorded movements of a chute, the start position of the chute in the control mode may match a start position of a chute in a learn mode.
During the control mode, a determination may be made periodically at operation 5050 as to whether a manual input is received. A manual input may terminate the automation in the control mode (operation 5060). If no manual input is received, the control mode will monitor the weight of the hopper to determine if the maximum weight of the hopper has been reached at operation 5070. If the hopper weight has not been reached, the system may move the chute based on a threshold weight is reached at operation 5080. For example, the control mode determines whether the hopper has reached a weight that would trigger another incremental movement of the chute. In response to determining that the hopper has reached that weight, the control mode moves the chute by an incremental amount at operation 5090. The chute may have a plurality of positions it will move through while loading a hopper, e.g., a left position, a center position and a right position. In an embodiment of the present invention, the chute can move in at least two planes, and the system may move the chute through positions in both planes, e.g., front left, back left, front center, back center, front right and back right. At various periods, such as after each incremental movement, the control mode may determine at operation 5070 whether the hopper weight (e.g., maximum weight) has been reached. If the hopper weight has been reached, the control mode terminates unloading of material into the hopper.
At an operation 5100, a determination is made as to whether there is another hopper into which material can be unloaded. If there is not, the unload cycle is terminated at operation 5110. Otherwise, the control mode may automate another series of incremental movements of the chute at operations 5120 through 5190. Operations 5120 through 5190 are substantially similar to operations 5050 through 5090. In an embodiment of the present invention, a controller or node may run the unload method 5000. The controller may be a handheld device 900 (as discussed above), incorporated into an existing controller on the farm implement or tractor, or it may be a separate unit specifically designed for this operation.
Operations 4510 to operations 4550 involve moving the chute to a start position. The chute may be located at an end of an conveyor, and may be moved in part by moving the conveyor (operation 4510), such as positioning the conveyor over a first hopper. Once an conveyor is placed, the chute may be moved to a start position, such as a center or a side of the hopper (operation 4520). The learn mode function may be enabled, a weight of the hopper being unloaded or of the mobile farm implement into which the chute is discharging material may be recorded (operations 4530 and 4540), and an unload cycle may be started (operation 4550). Operations 4510-4550 may be manual or automatic.
At an operation 4560, a start position of the chute may be recorded. In an embodiment, the start position may be the position of the chute relative to the conveyor or relative to the hopper into which material is being unloaded.
As the hopper begins to be filled, the chute may be moved. At an operation 4570, a determination is made as to whether the hopper weight has changed. If the weight has changed, the method 4500 observes at operation 4590 whether the chute position has changed. The operation may thus learn whether an operator of the mobile farm implement has moved the chute as the hopper is being filled, and may learn a direction or amount of such movement. At an operation 4600, the chute position relative to the recorded weight is recorded if the position of the chute has changed. Operations 4590 to 4600 may thus record how an operator moves the chute as a function of hopper weight during unloading of material into the hopper. Such recorded movement may later be replayed to automate movement of the chute.
Once a target weight of the hopper being filled is reached (4580), the various positions of the chute relative to the weight is recorded 4610 and the cycle is ended and saved for the first hopper 4620. The learn mode operation 4500 may include a step of identifying the hopper being filled, e.g., an identification code for particular hopper volumes or hopper shapes. The user may manually enter this code or the hopper may identify itself (e.g., make and/or model of hopper) by sending a signal to the indicator or controller running the learn mode.
At an operation 4630, a determination may be made as to whether there is another hopper which needs to be loaded by the chute. If there is no other hopper, the unload cycle is terminated at operation 4640. If there is another hopper, another chute learn mode is carried out at operations 4650 through 4710. The operations are substantially similar to operations 4560 through 4610. At an operation 4720, which assumes that no more than two hoppers are being filled, the unload cycle is terminated. In an embodiment of the present invention, there may be more than two hoppers filled and recorded by the learn mode. In an embodiment of the present invention, a controller or indicator may run the learn mode. The controller may be a node on the grain cart, a handheld device 900 (as discussed above), incorporated into an existing controller on the farm implement or tractor, or it may be a separate unit specifically designed for this operation.
From the above it will be appreciated that the weight-based chute control of the present invention allows a chute discharging material to be controlled such that a container receiving the material is evenly filled. It will also be appreciated that various changes can be made to the system without departing from the spirit and scope of the appended claims. For example, the processor may display an alarm when a target weight is reached and an operator may manually adjust the position of chute. In addition, the chute may be rotated by one or more servomotors and the processor may control it with an electrical signal. Additionally, the weight discharged may be determined by measuring the time of discharge and assuming a constant rate of weight discharged, which would allow farm implements without a weight sensor to use the present invention. Also, the system may be able to resume a cycle at a container if the grain cart runs out of material before the container is full. Additionally, the system may move the chute based on time and controlled hydraulic flow rather than relying on the sensors to move the chute between positions. These and other modifications are intended to be encompassed by the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/799,099, filed Mar. 15, 2013, and U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/821,552, filed on May 9, 2013, the entire disclosures of which are incorporated herein in their entirety.
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