Sickle Cutter System Operable with Pointed Guards and Stub Guards
20170027104 ยท 2017-02-02
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A sickle cutting apparatus includes double finger knife guards where the ledger surface of each guard finger has a width at an imaginary line joining the apexes between the rear edges of the blades which is greater than a spacing at the imaginary line between the first side edge of the ledger surface of each guard finger and the second side edge of the ledger surface of each next adjacent guard finger. The first and second side edges of the ledger surfaces of each of the guard fingers extend to a position behind the imaginary line so as to be free from any trash bar connecting each to the next in front of said imaginary line. The hold down fingers are all individually adjustable so that the double hold-down have two adjustment screws which can be individually operated causing flexing of the bridge between the double fingers.
Claims
1. A sickle cutting apparatus comprising: a plurality of stationary knife guards arranged to be mounted along a cutter bar; a sickle bar mounted in transversely extending position and arranged to be driven for reciprocating movement relative to said knife guards; the sickle bar having a plurality of knife blades mounted thereon for movement therewith; each of the knife blades having a cutting surface for passing across the knife guards; each of the knife blades having on first and second sides first and second side cutting edges; the knife blades being arranged side by side with the first side edge of each blade and the second side edge of each next adjacent blade converging to first apex between the blades and the second side edge of each blade and the first side edge of each next adjacent blade converging to second apex between the blades; the first and second apexes of the blades lying on a common imaginary line in front of and parallel to the sickle bar such that the first and second apexes reciprocate along said imaginary line with said movement of the sickle bar; each knife guard comprising: a base portion arranged to be mounted on the cutter bar; at least one guard finger mounted on the base portion so that the guard fingers are arranged in a row along the cutter bar; each guard finger having an upwardly facing ledger surface with opposed first and second side edges thereof arranged to provide first and second shearing edges which cooperate with said side cutting edges of said knife blades so that a cutting action of the cutting apparatus is provide only by the cooperation of the first and second shearing edges with said side cutting edges of said knife blades; and a plurality of hold-down members arranged to be mounted along the cutter bar; each hold-down member comprising at least one hold-down finger thereon arranged to extend forwardly from the cutter bar to a position adjacent the knife blades in front of the sickle bar; the ledger surface of each guard finger at the imaginary line having a width between the first and second side edges thereof which is greater than a spacing at the imaginary line between the first side edge of the ledger surface of each guard finger and the second side edge of the ledger surface of each next adjacent guard finger; wherein the first and second side edges of the ledger surfaces of each of the guard fingers extend to a position behind said imaginary line; and wherein the ledger surfaces of each of the guard fingers are free from any connection each to the next in front of said imaginary line.
2. The apparatus according to claim 1 wherein said first and second apexes as they reciprocate along said imaginary line depart from the side edge of the ledger surface of each respective guard finger and are free from contact with any support surface of the guard fingers until the apexes reach the second side edge of the respective next adjacent guard finger.
3. The apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the ledger surface of each guard finger at the imaginary line has a width between the first and second side edges thereof which is more than twice the spacing at the imaginary line between the first side edge of the ledger surface of each guard finger and the second side edge of the ledger surface of each next adjacent guard finger.
4. The apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the spacing at the imaginary line between the first side edge of the ledger surface of each guard finger and the second side edge of the ledger surface of each next adjacent guard finger is less than 0.75 inch.
5. The apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the spacing at the imaginary line between the first side edge of the ledger surface of each guard finger and the second side edge of the ledger surface of each next adjacent guard finger is of the order of or less than 0.5 inch.
6. The apparatus according to claim 1 wherein each guard finger has a support member extending from the ledger surface to the base member and wherein the ledger surface of each guard finger at the imaginary line has a width between the first and second side edges thereof which is greater than a width of the support member.
7. The apparatus according to claim 1 wherein each of the guard fingers comprises a pointed guard finger with a pointed front tip thereof in front of a front tip of the knife blades.
8. The apparatus according to claim 1 wherein some of the guard fingers each comprise a pointed guard finger with a pointed front tip thereof in front of a front tip of the knife blades and some of the guard fingers arranged intermediate the pointed guard fingers comprise stub guard fingers with a front tip thereof behind a front tip of the knife blades.
9. The apparatus according to claim 1 wherein at least some of the hold-down members include a hold down ledge arranged above a rear edge of a base of the knife blade.
10. The apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the hold-down fingers extend to a position closely adjacent a front tip of the knife blade.
11. The apparatus according to claim 1 wherein: each hold-down member comprises a base mounting member arranged to be attached to the cutter bar; each hold-down member comprises two hold-down fingers thereon carried on the base mounting member arranged to be at positions spaced longitudinally of the cutter bar so as to be cantilevered forwardly from the cutter bar to a position of a front tip of each hold-down finger located at a sellable spacing in front of the sickle bar above the ledger surface of a respective one of the guard fingers; each of the base mounting members is arranged to be attached to the cutter bar by at least two threaded fasteners passing through the cutter bar and through the base mounting member which can be adjusted to tighten the base mounting member onto the cutter bar; the threaded fasteners have axes of the threaded fasteners lying at spaced positions along an imaginary line longitudinally of the cutter bar; each of said hold-down fingers is arranged to be adjustable on the cutter bar to change said settable spacing thereof; each of said hold-down fingers is pivotal relative to the cutter bar about a fulcrum extending longitudinally of the cutter bar and located at a position forwardly of said imaginary line; each of the two hold-down fingers includes a respective adjustment screw for individual adjustment of each of the hold-down fingers by extension of the respective adjustment screw, where each of the adjustment screws is located at a position rearwardly of said imaginary line; and the two hold-down fingers are connected by an arrangement which is which is shaped and arranged to provide lateral strength between the two hold-down fingers and to be sufficiently flexible to allow twisting thereof to provide said individual adjustments by allowing each of the hold-down fingers to be adjusted independently of the other.
12. The apparatus according to claim 11 wherein said fulcrum and said adjustment screws are located relative to said imaginary line such that said hold-down fingers are adjustable by extension of said respective adjustment screw to reduce said settable spacing without adjustment of said threaded fasteners.
13. The apparatus according to claim 11 wherein the fulcrum is arranged at a position spaced forward of said imaginary line by a distance less than a radius of the threaded fasteners.
14. The apparatus according to claim 11 wherein the fulcrum is located such that there is slight sliding movement of the fulcrum rearwardly when the adjustment screw is extended.
15. The apparatus according to claim 11 wherein the fulcrum comprises an apex of a rib along the base mounting member arranged longitudinally of the cutter bar.
16. The apparatus according to claim 11 wherein the hold-down member including the hold-down fingers and the base mounting member comprises an integral member with a bottom surface including the fulcrum arranged to directly contact an upper surface of the cutter bar with no intervening elements.
17. The apparatus according to claim 11 wherein the threaded fasteners each include a shoulder engaging an upper surface of the hold-down member and wherein the upper surface includes a curved surface at least forwardly of the imaginary apex line to allow rotation of the hold-down member on said shoulder during said extension of the adjustment screw.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0114] In
[0115] The cutting device 10 further includes a cutter bar 12 attached to the frame structure 11. Thus the frame structure 11 in the part as shown comprises a guard bar 13 to which is attached a plurality of knife guards 14. The guard bar 13 is attached to the frame structure which supports the guard bar in fixed position across the front edge of the frame for a cutting action of the crop cutting device on the standing crop.
[0116] Each knife guard 14 includes three guard fingers 14A arranged ma triple guard but guards can be arranged with a single finger, pair of fingers or triples. As shown the guard bar forms a triple guard construction with three fingers where a series of such guards are mounted on the guard bar 13 at spaced positions along the length of the guard bar.
[0117] The knife guards can comprise a stub guard as shown in
[0118] In the embodiment shown in
[0119] Each pair of guards thus includes two guard elements each defined by an upper portion or hold-down finger 16 and a lower portion or guard finger 15 and the guard elements are shown in
[0120] The trash bar may form a continuous bar member extending along the lower guard portion 15 in front of the bar 24 to prevent any crop reaching that area. However the trash bar may be formed by any part of the system which prevents the crop from moving rearwardly beyond the rear end of the cutting edges of the blades.
[0121] There may be a single sickle bar 24 driven from one end or in some cases there are two sickle bars driven from opposite ends and meeting in the middle. The sickle bar or bars 24 are driven by the reciprocating drive (not shown but conventional) such that the bar 24 reciprocates back and forth.
[0122] In some cases the bar 24 reciprocates by a distance S1 equal to the space between the nose of one guard fingers 15 and that of the next along the guard bar 13 so that the blades 23 reciprocate from a position with the center line of the knife 23 aligned with the center line of the first guard finger to a position aligned with the next guard finger and back to the first. In other cases, the reciprocation stroke may be as shown at S2 a multiple of, typically double, the distance between the guards so that the knife moves from a first guard finger across a second to a third and back to the first. This arrangement reduces the available reciprocation rate due to increased acceleration forces but reduces the number of reversals.
[0123] Each sickle bar comprises the support bar member 24 and the plurality of blades indicated at 23. As shown the blades are formed in pairs mounted on a common base, but individual blades may be provided or in some cases the blades may have more than two on the same base.
[0124] Each of the blades forms a generally triangular-shaped member which has a rear end or base 23A bolted to the bar and converges from the rear end to a front end 23B. Each of the blades has a top surface 23D and a bottom surface 23E. Each of the blades has a side edge 23F and a second side edge 23G. The sides edges are beveled from the top surface down to the bottom surface 23E so that a sharp edge is formed at the bottom surface at each of the side edges. The blades are also serrated at each cutting edge with grooves extending parallel to the bars 24 that is at right angles to a center line 23H.
[0125] The hold-down finger 16 acts to hold the blades downwardly into engagement with the top ledger surface 15A of the bottom portion 15. The bottom portion 15 has two side edges of the ledger surface 15A as best shown in
[0126] In these guards, the hold-down finger 16 acts to prevent the pair of blades 23A from moving away from the ledger surface 15A by contacting the upper surface 23D of the blade and holding the blade in contact with or closely adjacent the ledger surface 15A of the bottom portion where the cutting action occurs. The hold-down finger 16 therefore as shown in
[0127] The mounting and adjustment arrangements for the bottom portion 15 and the hold-down finger 16 can vary in accordance with a number of different designs readily available to a person skilled in the art. It suffice to say that the hold-down portion 16 is adjustable so that the gap between the bottom surface of the hold-down portion and the ledger surface of the bottom portion 15 can be adjusted to allow the sliding action of the blades while holding the blades in the required position.
[0128] The disclosures of the following documents of the present Applicants may be referred to for details of the construction not provided herein. These show various conventional details of the sickle knife system which can be used in the arrangement herein but are not described as they are known to persons skilled in the art.
[0129] U.S. Pat. No. 7,328,565 (Snider) issued Feb. 12, 2008;
[0130] U.S. Pat. No. 4,894,979 (Lohrentz) issued Jan. 23, 1990
[0131] U.S. Pat. No. 4,909,026 (Molzahn) issued Mar. 20, 1990.
[0132] U.S. Pat. No. 6,962,040 (Talbot) issued Nov. 8, 2005.
[0133] US Published application 2013/0192188 (Talbot) published Aug. 1, 2013.
[0134] In
[0135] Typically each of the knife blades is generally triangular in shape with straight side edges 23F, 23G. However other shapes of the side edges 23F, 23G in plan such as convex or concave can be used. Thus the side edges 23F, 23G converge to the front apex 23K at an angle of the order of 60 degrees to the direction of reciprocating movement. The two converging side cutting edges 23F, 23G are beveled from the upper surface 23D to the bottom cutting surface 23E to cooperate with the shearing edges of the knife guards. In addition the beveled side edges are serrated with grooves running in a direction longitudinal to the reciprocating direction. In order to maximize the cutting action, the length of the cutting edge is substantially the maximum length extending from the sickle bar 24 at the rear to a position close to the front apex 23K of the blade.
[0136] At the position in the stroke shown in
[0137] Each knife blade has a front point portion in front of the side cutting edges 23F, 23G which front point portion has side edges converging to the front apex 23K, where the apex and the side edges of the front point portion are shaped and arranged such that crop material engaging the front point portion, as the point portion is moved forwardly in the crop, is shed to one or other side of the front point portion for cutting by the side cutting edges and is not pushed forwardly by the front point portion 23K.
[0138] Thus the preferred construction provides a center line spacing between each knife blade and the next is of the order of or equal to 2.0 inches, the radius of curvature of the front pointed portion at the apex is less than 0.25 inch and the side edges of the front portion are arranged relative to a center line of the blade at an angle of the order of 20 degrees.
[0139] As shown in
[0140] This distance S1 is preferably of the order of 2.0 inches. The fore-aft length of a blade has traditionally been in the order of 1.75 inches from the front of the trash bar to the tip of the section, or 2.2 inches from the front edge of the knife back to the tip of the section.
[0141] It is common practice for sickle blades to have the front edge as a transverse straight edge in the order of 0.6 inches wide. The wide tip has the potential for running down crop, thus leaving long uncut stems. In the present invention the blade is designed with a pointed tip or front apex 23K, thus eliminating the problem.
[0142] The guard fingers have the upwardly facing ledger surface 15A with opposed side edges arranged to provide first and second shearing edges. The guard fingers have a downwardly facing ground engaging surface 156 shaped and arranged to provide protection for stone engagement as the fingers slide over the ground. That is each finger has sufficient strength to avoid breakage when impacting stones and obstacles causing the cutter bar to rise if the impact is sufficient and extends over sufficient number of guard fingers to provide the lifting action. This shape of the ground engaging surface is well known to persons skilled in the art and includes a longitudinal rib which is generally triangular in cross-section on the underside of the upper part containing the ledger surface. The base of the rib thus forms an apex which runs over the ground to prevent upward forces from snapping the guard finger at the ledger surface.
[0143] An upstanding transverse shoulder 157 is provided at a front edge of the ledger surface 15A and extends upwardly to a top surface 158 of the finger where the shoulder terminates. Thus there is no tang of conventional shape, that is no portion of the guard extends rearwardly over the ledger surface 15A from the shoulder 157. Above the ledger surface 15A therefore the knife blades of alternate ones of the guard fingers are free from confinement by a conventional tang as used in a conventional pointed guard or by a cooperating upper guard finger of the type used in a stub guard.
[0144] A tip portion 159 in front of the ledger surface extends forwardly from the shoulder 157 and defines a forwardmost generally pointed tip 160 for engaging crop in front of the ledger surface 15A.
[0145] Each knife guard thus includes a base portion 19 mounted on the cutter bar 13 by the two longitudinally spaced bolts 18 each of which has a head 18A engaging a bottom face of the base portion 19. The knife guard further includes three equally spaced guard fingers 15 mounted on the base portion 19 so as to be commonly mounted on the cutter bar at a first equidistant spacing in a row along the cutter bar 13.
[0146] The guard fingers are arranged also to define a first set and second set of guard fingers arranged alternately along the cutter bar so that each guard finger 151 of the first set is located between respective guard fingers 152 of the second set. Thus each triple guard defined by three fingers has either two fingers 151 either side of a finger 152 or has two fingers 152 either side of a finger 151. All of the fingers 151 and 152 are identical but as explained hereinafter, the fingers 151 are left open and have no corresponding hold-down finger, sometimes called an upper guard, whereas each of the fingers 152 cooperates with a respective one of the hold-down fingers 16.
[0147] Thus there are provided a plurality of hold-down members 161 and 162 mounted along the cutter bar. Each hold-down member 161, 162 has at least one hold-down finger 16 thereon extending forwardly from the cutter bar 13 to a position adjacent the knife blades at the ledger surfaces 15A in front of the sickle bar 24.
[0148] Thus the hold-down members 161 have a single central finger 16 mounted on a mounting base 163 and the hold-down members 162 have two separate spaced fingers 16 mounted on a mounting base 163. These are arranged on the mounting bases so that the hold-down fingers are arranged in a row at a second equidistant spacing along the cutter bar where the second equidistant spacing of the hold-down fingers 16 is double that of the first equidistant spacing of the guard fingers 15. The result of this is that the hold-down fingers 16 are arranged on the alternate guard fingers 152 leaving the guard fingers 151 open and free from a hold-down. Thus each hold-down finger 16 located in alignment with and at a spacing above a respective one of the second set 152 of guard fingers for holding down a respective one of the knife blades 23A onto the ledger surface 15A of the respective one of the second set 152 of guard fingers.
[0149] As explained previously the guard fingers 151 and 152 are pointed guards but have no conventional tang over the knife blade on the ledger surface thereof which would typically define a slot so that the knife blade 23A on the ledger surface 15A thereof is held down only by the respective guard finger 16.
[0150] Thus the guard fingers 151 of the first set each include no element at all, that is not a tang and not a hold -down over the knife blade on the ledger surface 15A so that the knife blade 23A on the ledger surface 15A of the fingers 151 is not held down at all except for the residual effect of the hold-down finger 16 over the adjacent guard finger 152.
[0151] The guard fingers 151 and 152 are identical in other respects so that particularly the length and width of the ledger surfaces 15A of the guard fingers 151 is equal to a length and width of the ledger surfaces of the second set of guard fingers.
[0152] In
[0153] Each triple knife guard is associated with a respective one of the hold-down members 161, 162 and is mounted on the cutter bar 13 commonly therewith by the pair of bolts 18. The bolts 18 are spaced apart along the cutter bar so as to engage into holes through the cutter bar aligned with holes in the base 163 of the hold-down member 161 and with corresponding holes in the base member 19 of the guard member. Similarly the hold-down member 162 is bolted by two bolts 18 onto the cutter bar 13 in association with the underlying guard member.
[0154] As shown in
[0155] As best shown in
[0156] As shown in
[0157] In
[0158] The stub guards 115 and the pointed guards 15 are arranged such that a user can select either the stub guards 115 or the pointed guards 15 to be mounted on the cutter bar 13 depending on cutting conditions at the choice of the user. That is the dimensions of the base portion 19 are identical in both cases to match with the holes in the cutter bar and with the bolts 18 therein. Thus the user can select all stub guards for cutting so that the blade projects beyond the guard and hold-down fingers in the conventional cutting action. Alternatively the user can select all pointed guards if the cutting conditions and the crop to be cut dictate such guards.
[0159] In an optional arrangement shown in
[0160] Also the stub guards 115, the pointed guards 15 and the hold-down members 16 are arranged such that the hold-down members 16 cooperate with the stub guards 115 when selected and with the pointed guards 15 when selected. That is the dimension of the hold-down members is arranged so that they overlie the ledger surface of both the stub guards when used and with the pointed guards when used. Also the pointed guards have no conventional tang so that the ledger surface of the pointed guard is presented upwardly to cooperate with the hold-down finger.
[0161] As best shown in
[0162] In order to provide this adjustment, each of the hold-down fingers 16 is pivotal relative to the cutter bar about a fulcrum 47 defined by an apex of a rib 48 extending longitudinally of the cutter bar 13. The rib 48 and its apex 47 are located at a position slightly forwardly of the imaginary line 18Y joining the axes 18X.
[0163] The pivotal movement is carried out by a respective adjustment screw 40, 41, 12 for individual adjustment of each finger 16 by extension of the adjustment screw located on the base portion located rearwardly of the imaginary line 18Y, that is on the opposite side of the fulcrum from the finger. As shown in
[0164] The base mounting member 164 connects the two hold-down fingers and defines a bridge 165 between the two hold-down fingers which is shaped to provide lateral strength and to be sufficiently flexible in torsion to provide individual adjustments of the two fingers. That is the base member 164 including the bridge 165 and the fingers extending forwardly therefrom forms an integral casting or forging where the portions 166, 167 of the base member 164 connected to the fingers 16 are rigid relative to the fingers with the flexibility of the base member 164 being defined by the narrower bridge 165.
[0165] The fulcrum 47 and the adjustment screws 41, 42 are located relative to the imaginary line 18Y such that the hold-down fingers 16 are adjustable by extension of the respective adjustment screw to reduce the settable spacing S without adjustment or loosening of the bolts 18. This is obtained by the fact that the fulcrum 47 is only slightly forward of the imaginary line and spaced forward of the imaginary line by a distance less than a radius of the threaded fasteners, that is the fulcrum is behind the edge 18Q of the front of the bolts 18. This adjustment to reduce the space S as the blades wear obtained by extending the bolts 41, 42 is obtained because the fulcrum is located such that there may be slight sliding movement of the fulcrum rearwardly when the adjustment screw 41, 42 is extended. However the adjustment may be provided from flexing of the hold-down as it is easier to flex the hold-downs the small amount required rather than to slide the fulcrum.
[0166] The fulcrum and where the nut 18N makes contact with the top of the hold-down should be arranged such that when the nut is tightened it results in the hold-down being tight at the back, putting pressure on the adjuster screw as opposed to causing the finger to put pressure on the knife, in which case the adjuster screw cannot be used. This is done by having the fulcrum slightly ahead of the centerline of the mounting bolt for minimal sliding of the fulcrum, and by having the nut contact the top of the hold-down at the center line of the mounting hole, as provided by the arched shape of the top surface.
[0167] Each adjustment screw 40, 41 comprises a bolt with a head 40A projecting upwardly from a top surface of the hold-down member so that the head can be grasped by a wrench for application of a significant adjustment force.
[0168] As the hold-down member is an integral member with a bottom surface including the fulcrum directly contacting the upper surface of the cutter bar 13, there are no intervening elements which need to be adjusted such as adjustment bars or shims.
[0169] The bolts 18 each include a nut 18N with a shoulder 18S engaging an upper surface 168 of the hold-down member and the upper surface 18S is arched or convexly curved so as to include a curved surface at least rearwardly of the imaginary line and preferably on both sides of the common line to allow rotation of the hold-down member on the shoulder during the extension of the adjustment screw.
[0170] The double hold-down members 162 include therefore two adjustment screws 41, 42 for individual adjustment of the fingers. The single hold-down members 161 have a single center adjustment screw 40 to adjust the single finger so that no flexing of the member 161 is required.
[0171] The arrangement described and shown herein, particularly in
[0172] This can be further combined with an arrangement in which the width of the guard at its rear edge 117 is increased so that the width W1 of each guard 115 at the rear edge 117 is preferably of the order of the maximum width which can be obtained while leaving a space W2 at the rear edge 117 between the ledger surfaces of the order of 0.5 inch or the distance necessary to avoid pinching of crop stalks between the ledger surfaces.
[0173] Typically, in order to maximize the cutting action, the length of the cutting edge of each of the knife blades is substantially the maximum length of the blade.
[0174] The fore-aft length of a blade has traditionally been in the order of 45 mm (1.75 in) from the rearmost cutting location or the rear of the cutting action, to the tip of the section, or 55 mm (2.2 in) from the front edge of the knife back to the tip of the section. Traditionally this dimension is usually similar to the length of the cutting edge.
[0175] In this present arrangement, the fore-aft length of the blade is increased substantially. Thus the length of cutting edge of each sickle blade from a rearmost end of the cutting action to a front edge of the blade in the present invention is greater than 1.75 inches. This can lie in the range 2.2 to 3.0 inches.
[0176] This also reduces the angle of inward inclination of the cutting edge from the typical 30 degrees to an angle less than 20 degrees and typically of the order of 15 degrees and in the range 15 to 30 degrees.
[0177] Thus in one example the blade has a width of 2.0 inches at the base and a length from the front of the trash bar to the tip of 2.5 inches.
[0178] In view of the increased length of the blade, the fact that the blade fingers are only in contact with hold-down fingers at alternate guard fingers and the increased length at the front point portion, it is highly desirable that the blade thickness is increased from the typical value of 2.7 mm (0.106 inch) up to a new value of the order of 3.68 mm (0.145 inch). Thus a suitable value of the thickness is greater than 0.12 inch and more preferably greater than 0.14 inch. This provides a stiffness of the blade which can reduce lifting of the blade at the finger tip or front point portion.
[0179] The cutting efficiency and therefore stubble length are also affected by the width W1 of the cutting edge of the knife guard. Generally, the width at the rear of the cutting edge on the guard is in the order of 25 mm (1.0 in). In the arrangement of the present invention that width is substantially increased. Thus the width of each guard at the rear end of the cutting edge of each blade is greater than 1.0 inches. The maximum width W1 of the guard is slightly less than the center to center spacing of the blades since it is necessary to leave a gap between the guards at the back to prevent pinching the crop and to allow the crop to reach the back for the rearmost cutting action. Thus with a blade center to center spacing of 2.0 inches the width of the guard is slightly less than that of the width of the blade or roughly 1.5 to 1.9 inches. Thus with a blade of this width, the width of the guards can be as much as 1.9 inches and preferably lies in the range 1.2 to 1.9 inches. However where the blade is greater than 2.0 inches in width, the guard has a width which is between 0.5 and 0.1 inches less than the width of the blade.
[0180] Thus the arrangement provided herein provides a center line spacing between each guard finger and the next which is less than 3.0 inches and more preferably 2.0 inch where a width of each guard at the rear trash bar is greater than 1.5 inches and preferably 1.75 inches.
[0181] As best shown in
[0182] Each knife guard as described before includes the base portion 19 arranged to be mounted on the cutter bar and at least one guard finger 15 mounted on the base portion so that the guard fingers are arranged in a row along the cutter bar presenting the upwardly facing ledger surfaces 15A with opposed first and second side edges 15B, 15C arranged to provide first and second shearing edges which cooperate with the side cutting edges of the knife blades.
[0183] As set forth above, the ledger surface 15A of each guard finger at the imaginary line 129 has a width W1 between the first and second side edges 15B, 15C which is greater than a spacing W2 at the imaginary line 129 between the first side edge 15B of the ledger surface 15A of each guard finger and the second side edge 15C of the ledger surface of the next adjacent guard finger.
[0184] The first and second side edges 15B, 15C of the ledger surfaces 15A of each of the guard fingers extend to a rear end of the side edge at the rear edge 117. The rear edges 117 all lie on a common imaginary line 130 at a position behind the imaginary line 129.
[0185] As shown in
[0186] That is the ledger surfaces 15A of each of the guard fingers 15 are free from any connection each to the next in front of the imaginary line 129. That is there is no conventional trash bar.
[0187] In this way the first and second apexes 127, 128 as they reciprocate along the imaginary line 129 depart from the side edge 15B of the ledger surface 15A of the guard finger 15 and are free from contact with any support surface of the guard fingers until the apexes reach the second side edge 15C of the next adjacent guard finger.
[0188] Preferably the ledger surface of each guard finger at the imaginary line has a width between the first and second side edges thereof which is more than twice the spacing at the imaginary line between the first side edge of the ledger surface of each guard finger and the second side edge of the ledger surface of each next adjacent guard finger.
[0189] Thus in an arrangement where the center to center spacing of the guards is substantially equal to 2.0 inches, the width of the ledger surface at the imaginary line can lie in the range 1.2 to 1.9 inches. Thus the percentage of the total distance between the guards taken up by the width of the ledger surface is between 60% and 95%. At the preferable width of 1.5 inch, the width of the ledger surface is three times the width of the space and the percentage is 75%. These percentages can be applied where the center to center spacing is different from the 2.0 inches stated. In such a case, with a center to center spacing of 2.5 inches and a ledger surface of 2.0 inches thus providing the same preferred spacing of 0.5 inches, the percentage is 80%. These widths are significantly greater than the traditional width of 1.0 inch guard in a center to center spacing of 3.0 inch where the percentage of the ledger surface is only 33%.
[0190] One problem which has arisen with the use of wider guards and longer blades is that there is a tendency for material to collect underneath the blades and lift the blade off the ledger surface thus generating a space between the blade edges and the ledger surface edges thus reducing the scissor type cutting action. It has been found that this effect can be reduced by providing no trash bar joining the side edges of the ledger surfaces so that the apex between the blade passes over free pace as it crosses from one ledger surface to the next and then gets cleaned or wiped as it enters onto the next. In addition the tendency of the blade to lift away from the ledger surface is reduced by providing effective hold down action by the alternate hold-down fingers while avoiding the presence of the hold-down fingers from interfering with the movement of the crop and collecting material away from the area of the cutting action.