TREE FRUIT OR NUT HARVESTER TO MINIMIZE MACHINE PASSES IN THE ORCHARD

20210015044 ยท 2021-01-21

    Inventors

    Cpc classification

    International classification

    Abstract

    The present invention relates to a harvesting machine comprising a shaking mechanism operable to shake fruit or nuts from a tree or bush; a deflection plate for directing the fruit or nuts to an area away from the base of the tree or bush; and a device for moving fruit or nuts from the base of the tree or bush to the area away from the base of the tree or bush. The deflection plate may be positioned at an angle of between 0 to about 75 relative to the horizontal.

    Claims

    1. A harvesting machine comprising: a. a shaking mechanism operable to shake fruit or nuts from a tree or bush; b. a deflection plate for directing said fruit or nuts to an area away from the base of said tree or bush; and c. a device for moving fruit or nuts from the base of the tree or bush to said area away from the base of said tree or bush.

    2. The machine of claim 1, wherein said deflection plate is positioned at an angle of between 0 to about 75 relative to the horizontal.

    3. The machine of claim 2, wherein said deflection plate comprises a slot for positioning around a trunk or center of said tree or bush.

    4. The machine of claim 1, further comprising a blowing mechanism for directing said fruit or nuts away from row in which said tree or bush is positioned.

    5. The machine of claim 1, wherein said device for moving said fruit or nuts from the base of the tree or bush is a brush having a plane of rotation that is substantially parallel to the horizontal

    6. The machine of claim 6, where is said brush has a portion operable to contact the ground near the base of the tree or bush while said shaking mechanism is engaged with said tree or bush.

    7. A harvesting machine comprising: a. a shaking mechanism operable to shake fruit or nuts from a tree or bush; and b. a deflection plate for directing said fruit or nuts to an area away from the base of said tree or bush.

    8. The machine of claim 7, further comprising a device for moving fruit or nuts from the base of the tree or bush to said area away from the base of said tree or bush.

    9. The machine of claim 7, wherein said deflection plate is positioned at an angle of between 0 to about 75 relative to the horizontal.

    10. The machine of claim 9, wherein said deflection plate comprises a slot for positioning around a trunk or center of said tree or bush.

    11. The machine of claim 7, further comprising a blowing mechanism for directing said fruit or nuts away from row in which said tree or bush is positioned.

    12. The machine of claim 8, wherein said device for moving said fruit or nuts from the base of the tree or bush is a brush having a plane of rotation that is substantially parallel to the horizontal

    13. The machine of claim 12, where is said brush has a portion operable to contact the ground near the base of the tree or bush while said shaking mechanism is engaged with said tree or bush.

    14. A method of harvesting comprising: a. attaching a shaking mechanism operable to shake fruit or nuts from a tree or bush; b. positioning a deflection plate for directing said fruit or nuts to an area away from the base of said tree or bush; c. activating said shaking mechanism to vibrate said tree or bush; and d. activating a mechanism for moving said fruit or nuts away from the base of the tree or bush to said area away from the base of said tree or bush.

    15. The method of claim 14, wherein said deflection plate is positioned at an angle of between 0 to about 75 relative to the horizontal.

    16. The method of claim 15, wherein said deflection plate comprises a slot for positioning around a trunk or center of said tree or bush.

    17. The method of claim 14, further comprising blowing said fruit or nuts away from row in which said tree or bush is positioned using a blowing mechanism.

    18. The method of claim 14, wherein said mechanism for moving said fruit or nuts from the base of the tree or bush is a brush having a plane of rotation that is substantially parallel to the horizontal

    19. The method of claim 19, where is said brush has a portion operable to contact the ground near the base of the tree or bush while said shaking mechanism is engaged with said tree or bush.

    Description

    DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

    [0013] A clear understanding of the key features of the invention summarized above may be had by reference to the appended drawings, which illustrate the method and system of the invention, although it will be understood that such drawings depict preferred embodiments of the invention and, therefore, are not to be considered as limiting its scope with regard to other embodiments which the invention is capable of contemplating. Accordingly:

    [0014] FIG. 1 is an illustration of a typical planted orchard and the area that is being considered as the tree row 102.

    [0015] FIG. 2 is an illustration showing the first pass a conventional sweeper 109 will make in the sweeping operation. The first part of the windrow 104 is being created with this first pass which includes sweeping and blowing. The carpet of nuts 103 left by a conventional harvester.

    [0016] FIG. 3 is an illustration showing the second pass a conventional sweeper 109 will make in the sweeping operation, this is a sweeping and blowing pass. The first part of the swept windrow 104 is being created on the other side of the tree row with this second pass.

    [0017] FIG. 4 is an illustration showing the third pass, sweeping only, which a conventional sweeper 109 will make. This pass will complete one of the two swept windrows 104.

    [0018] FIG. 5 is an illustration showing the fourth and final pass a conventional sweeper 109 will make in the sweeping operation. This sweeping only pass will complete the second of the two swept windrows 104.

    [0019] FIG. 6 is an illustration summarizing the four separate sweeper passes used to create 2 separate windrows 104 in two adjacent rows. The four passes include a first pass 1 in a first row to sweep fruit or nuts in reach of a sweeper head and brush into a windrow 104a and blow fruit or nuts out of the reach of the brushes into an adjacent row, a second pass 2 in a second row to sweep fruit or nuts in reach of a sweeper head and brush into a second windrow 104b and blow fruit or nuts out of reach of the brushes into the adjacent row, a third pass 3 to sweep fruit or nuts in the second row into windrow 104b, and a fourth pass 4 to sweep fruit or nuts in the first row into the windrow 104a.

    [0020] FIG. 7 is a picture of what is referred to as a swept windrow 104. This is typically what is left after a sweeper pushes the nuts while on the ground into a long row in between the tree rows.

    [0021] FIG. 8 is an illustration of the method and system of this invention showing a simplified end view of the harvester in the position to shake or vibrate the tree. The harvester 100 in this picture has a canopy 107 of the machine which is used to deflect the tree fruit or nuts away from the tree row 102. The attached blower 101 moves the fruit in the tree row 102 that were there prior to the harvester shaking the tree. As a result, a deflected windrow 108, is created from deflecting and blowing the tree fruit or nuts. The deflected windrow 108 is not necessarily as tight and organized as a swept windrow 104, but its relative position to the tree row 102 allows it to either be picked up or swept with less passes. The red arrows in the illustration depict the travel of the fruit from the tree to the deflected windrow 108 and from the ground to the deflected windrow 108 via the blower 101.

    [0022] FIG. 9 is an illustration of the method and system of this invention showing a simplified isometric view of the harvester in the position to shake or vibrate the tree. The harvester 100 in this picture has a canopy 107 on the machine which is used to deflect the tree fruit or nuts away from the tree row 102. The resulting deflected windrow 108 is shown in its progression as a result of the system of this invention. The deflected windrow 108 is not only being developed by the deflected nuts off of the canopy 107 but also the blower 101 moving windfall fruit off of the tree row 102.

    [0023] FIG. 10 is an illustration of the front view of the method and system of this invention with the addition of a mechanical tree row cleaner, 105, and the windrowing device, 106. This tree row cleaner could be a rotary brush 105 located on the machine as shown. This rotary brush 105 would be used to move the nuts away from the tree row 102. The windrowing device 106 could be a sweeper head which would create the resulting swept windrow 104 as shown. The carpet of tree fruit 103 is the result of the harvester 100 displacing the tree fruit from its host.

    [0024] FIG. 11 is a rear view of the same system shown in FIG. 10 with a depiction of the deflected windrow 108 being created on the opposite side of the harvester 100. The blower 101, is also assisting in creating the deflected windrow 108, by blowing windfall off of the tree row 102.

    DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

    [0025] Referring to FIG. 3, the harvester 100 is shown in the normal position to shake or vibrate the tree. The harvester 100 is considered any machine or device used to displace the tree fruit or nuts from its host. The tree row 102 has tree fruit or nuts 103 on it that have either fallen from the tree due to natural occurrences from things like wind or rain or from the process of shaking the tree. In order to be picked up the tree fruit or nuts 103 need to be moved out from under the tree 102 and into the center of the windrow 104. In this case a tree row 102 can vary in different sizes and shapes, and may be flat. In essence the tree row 102 would be the strip of soil where the tree grows and in between each tree down the tree row.

    [0026] A deflection plate 107 above the harvester 100 would assist in reducing or eliminating the need for additional sweeping passes. The deflection plate 107 may be angled such that tree fruit or nuts shaken a tree or bush may be deflected out of the tree line and into the adjacent access path where the fruit or nuts can be easily accessed by a windrowing machine. By manipulating the location of the tree fruit or nuts after it has been displaced from its host but before it reaches the ground, the need to move the nuts out of the tree row 102 by mechanical or air pressure mechanism is reduced. As a result, with a reduction in ground engagement needed to move the tree fruit or nuts 103, the dust created in the sweeping/blowing operation is also reduced.

    [0027] The harvester 100 may include additional mechanisms for moving fruit or nuts out of the tree row 102. The deflection plate 107 may be assisted in the movement of the fruit or nuts out of the tree row 102 by additional devices for moving the fruit or nuts 103. The deflection plate 107 may allow some of the fruit or nuts to land in the tree row 102 and some fruit and nuts 103 fall before the harvester 100 engages and shakes the tree or bush. The remaining fruit and nuts 103 may be moved out of the tree row 102 by one or more additional mechanisms. In some embodiments, the harvester 100 may include a blower 101. The blower 101 may be a centrifugal fan blower, rated to deliver an approximate air flow in a range of 1,500 CFM to about 5000 CFM. However, any fan, suited to industrial use with the desired performance characteristics, could be utilized. The blower 101 may be positioned on the harvester 100 such that its air flow is directed across the tree row 102, such that it aids in moving the fruit or nuts into the adjacent access path on the other side of the tree row 102.

    [0028] The harvester 100 may include a brush 105 and/or a sweeping head 106, which may move the tree fruit or nuts that are on the ground in the tree row 102 into a windrow in the access pass down which the harvester 100. The brush 105 and/or sweeping head 106 may be oriented are able to be moved into a windrow in a location where a pick-up machine can pick up the tree fruit or nuts, thus eliminating the need for a separate sweeper. The harvester 100 may include a brush 105 that is angled with respect to the longitudinal axis of the harvester 100 such that the fruit and nuts on the ground are moved toward a central area of the access path to form a windrow 104. The brush 105 may include a revolving set of bars (revolving bar assembly) that are each connected by pivots at each end to two parallel rotating hubs, where each bar includes a descending brush-like set of tines. The hubs may rotate in parallel vertical planes that are oblique to the longitudinal axis of the sweeper. The transfer brush is connected to one of the hubs and rotates with the hub in a third rotational plane that is parallel to the rotational planes of the hubs and may be oblique to the longitudinal axis of the sweeper. The length of each of the revolving bars is oblique to the surface of the hubs. The revolving bars may rotate with the hubs and also orbit around an axis that is oblique relative to the longitudinal axis of the sweeper and rotational planes of the hubs. The revolving bar assembly transfers the nuts toward a windrow as the tine brushes of each bar successively push the nuts in a direction that is parallel to the rotational plane of the hubs. Other forms of brushes may be utilized in the sweeper 100 as well.

    [0029] The sweeping head 106 may have circular shaped brush with radially positioned bristles, and may rotate around axis of the circular shape. The circular brush may be rotatably mounted on an armature that holds the brush at a distance to the body of the harvester 100 and such that the circular brush is adjacent to brush 105. The circular brush may rotate approximately parallel and in close proximity to the ground surface, and may be tilted to contact the ground surface at an outer edge of the circular brush. The circular brush may be operable to collect fruit or nuts 103 from the tree row 102 and transfer them to brush 105. The brush 105 may then transfer the fruit or nuts 103 to a windrow 104, in preparation for a pick-up machine to complete the harvesting operation. The blower 101, brush 105 and/or sweeping head 106 is attached, pulled, pushed or somehow linked to the harvester 100.

    [0030] The scope of the present invention may include any combination of the blower 101, brush 105, and sweeping head 106. The scope of the present invention also includes variations on the blower 101, brush 105, and sweeping head 106 described herein. Any device that moves the tree fruit or nuts with the force of air, mechanical manipulation or the likes thereof off of the tree row 102 once the tree fruit or nut reaches the ground may be substituted for those devices described herein with respect to the blower 101, brush 105, and sweeping head 106.

    [0031] Although the above example refers to the specific embodiments provided in the figures, it is to be appreciated that the present invention encompasses other embodiments that those shown in the figures. It is to be understood that variations and modifications of the present invention may be made without departing from the scope thereof. It is to be appreciated that the features disclosed herein may be used different combinations and permutations with each other, all falling within the scope of the present invention. It is also to be understood that the present invention is not to be limited by the specific embodiments disclosed herein, but only in accordance with the appended claims when read in light of the foregoing specification.