Harvesting mechanism integrating manual crop picking with automated full-container pallet accumulation
12486123 ยท 2025-12-02
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
B65G47/90
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A harvesting system incorporating manual picking to bins at varying heights and positions with an automated accumulation of filled containers in unit loads is disclosed and claimed. The system includes a powered rolling chassis driven between crop rows or lanes. The chassis has an adjustable front-mounted operator platform with controls, allowing one person to operate the system. A container pick-and-place apparatus and a container dispenser are mounted behind the platform to stack full containers in predetermined patterns in the unit load area and supply empty containers to the operator platform. The unit load area at the rear of the chassis has an indexer to allow staging of an empty unit load holder with empty containers for a quick changeover after removing a full load.
Claims
1. A mobile multiple-height harvester machine for crops comprising in combination, a powered wheel chassis having a primary propulsion power source and an equipment power source and control unit, an adjustable operator platform having access movement controls for crop terrain extending from said chassis, an operator seat and controls on the said platform for orientation and picking of crops, a multi-access automated container handling unit, a product container dispenser having a multiple container receiving guided powered enclosure, a sequential vertical distribution of individual containers to a conveyor in communication with said powered enclosure for providing empty containers to an operator and a powered articulated extension arm, an arm tool on the free end of said articulated arm for grasping product containers, and arm control positional sensors for transferring containers to pallet indexer of for product containers having pairs of vertically spaced pallet engagement rails moving sequentially from a first pallet loading position to a second unloading pallet access position powered by an independent electric motor.
2. The mobile multi-height harvest machine set forth in claim 1 wherein said equipment power source comprises, a hydraulic pump.
3. The mobile multi-height harvesting machine set forth in claim 1 including an extendable roller ramp, and a pop-up roller bed to load and unload pallets from said automated positional indexer.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(13) Referring to
(14) The rolling chassis 11 has a frame 16, a pair of spaced wheel assemblies 17, a power source (not shown), a hydraulic pump 19, and a central control panel 20.
(15) Referring now to
(16) This orientation allows a single operator (not shown) to run the harvester from the picking position. A hydraulic adjustment arm 25 assembly extends from the frame 16, allowing for platform adjustment thereto on multiple axes as to rotation, up and down positioning, forward and back, and side-to-side tilt to maintain an optional operable height and angle to the harvest target crops (not shown).
(17) The tote dispensing portion 13 transfers empty totes 26 to a tote dispenser 30. This is done manually or through automation using a powered pick and place articulated transfer arm 31. In an automated sequence, the arm 31 senses the totes orientation and picks an empty tote 26 off a tote stack 27A. It then transports the empty tote to the tote dispenser 30 and sets it into the guide arms 33 extending therefrom. Alternatively, the empty totes 26 may be manually loaded in the guide arms 33 placed on the picking and staging tote holder shown in
(18) The pick and place articulated transfer arm 31 is mounted on a jib crane 34 with a tote engagement tooling 35 on its respective free end for selective grasping of individual totes so positioned, as seen in
(19) The articulated arm 31 is formed of multiple pivoted segments S, allowing for positional grasping of selective totes 26, as noted, and placement thereof as required keeping the orientation to the ground as the entire harvesting device 10 moves. The pick and place articulated transfer arm 31 uses control logic to stack full totes 27 on pallets 28 in a predetermined pattern. The transfer arm 31 is triggered to pick up a full tote 27 from a sensing system on a full tote pick-up spot 29. It will be evident that a robotic arm with the proper end-of-arm tooling may be an alternate embodiment of this feature in the same spirit of the invention. The pick and place articulated arm 31 transfers full tote containers to the pallet 28 until it is complete. To unload, the operator stops the harvester to allow a forked vehicle (not shown) to stock an empty pallet and totes and unload a full pallet, as will be described hereinafter.
(20) Once a stack of empty totes 26 is loaded inside the guide arms 33 of the tote dispenser 30, gravity lowers them until the lip of the bottom tote is stopped by chain-driven lugs 34, best seen in
(21) The operator transfers the empty tote 26 to the front portion 46 of the tote work-and-transfer unit 45. The operator then fills the tote with the product and transfers it to the pick-up position 29. This signals the transfer arm 31 for the next automated step of stacking the filled totes 27 on a pallet 28 in the pallet indexer assembly 15, as will be described in detail hereinafter.
(22) The manual steps before stacking full totes 27 include filling the empty totes 26. An operator on the picker platform 21 fills the totes and runs the harvesting apparatus. They drive the unit to the crops and adjust the platform 21 to the optimal picking angle. This iteration shows a platform 21 with its hydraulic arm 25, as seen in
(23) In operation, the operator transfers the full tote 27 to the back of the picking and staging tote holder. Sensors detect the tote. The pick-and-place transfer arm 31 grasps the full tote and places it in a predetermined position on the indexed pallet 28, as noted.
(24) Referring now to
(25) A central drive shaft 41 connects and communicates with both chain drives, assuring operational efficiency.
(26) The pallet support rails 40 are made of flat bar metal stock with gussets and rotate around the chain drives to hold empty pallets at the top and to be filled pallets at the bottom.
(27) Referring back to
(28) Once a full pallet is removed, the gate 42 is repositioned, and the pallet indexer lowers an empty pallet for the next cycle. The gate can also be manually removed if needed.
(29) Alternately, manual loading and unloading of the index pallets can be achieved wherein an access conveyor 43 is positioned to extend from the ground, as seen best in
(30) As noted, two roller conveyors are illustrated for manual loading or unloading a pallet if the fork vehicle is unavailable. As noted, one conveyor is stored in the frame area, is pulled out, and lowered to the ground for pallet changeover. A secondary pop-up conveyor 44 is mounted in the bed with the ability to be raised to facilitate the pallet transfer. A winch (not shown) lowers the pallet to the ground and pulls a new pallet into position.
(31) It will be evident that the present embodiment uses nest and stack totes. The nested totes, as illustrated in
(32) It will be evident to those skilled in the art that alternate configurations, such as boxes and trays or other containment devices, may be substituted and used.
(33) The hybrid harvester is flexible for almost any agricultural product grown from ground level to six-plus feet above the ground. The harvester can be used for cucumbers, carrots, strawberries, flowers, nursery plants, and lettuce with a mat and kneeling block. Change the platform 21 to a chair or stool (not shown), and the hybrid harvester can be used for grapes, okra, blueberries, coffee, and other crops harvested three to six feet above the ground. Add in toe boards, rails, and a harness (not shown), and the platform can go above three feet for tree crops.
(34) While the invention has been shown and described regarding the embodiment thereof, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and detail may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.