Three Section Threshing Concave Configuration and Adjustment Mechanism for an Agricultural Harvesting Combine
20170339832 · 2017-11-30
Assignee
Inventors
- Robert A. Matousek (Valley Center, KS, US)
- Bryan S. Claerhout (Hesston, KS, US)
- Russell S. Secrest (Newton, KS, US)
Cpc classification
A01D69/00
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
A rotor and cage assembly includes a skeleton of curved spaced-apart side members affixed to laterally extending upper and lower spaced-apart members therebetween and surrounding the rotor. One of the curved spaced-apart side members is terminated with curved fingers. Three concave inserts insert laterally into the skeleton spanning 270° around the rotor. One of the concave inserts carries straight fingers that interlace between the skeleton side member curved fingers. A control assembly of plates having arcuate slots placed at 3 of the pivots of the skeleton assembly, 3 control bars connected to the skeleton pivots, and an actuator is connected separately to each control bar at one end effect arcuate rotation of the control bars resulting in the synchronized rotation of the arcuate slotted plates so that the interlaced straight fingers move closer together or farther apart with the fixed skeleton assembly curved fingers for different types of grain.
Claims
1. A rotor and cage assembly for a harvesting combine, which comprises: (a) a rotor having a longitudinal axis of rotation; (b) a skeleton comprising curved spaced-apart side members affixed to laterally extending horizontal spaced-apart members therebetween with pivots where they connect, the skeleton surrounding the rotor, one of the curved spaced-apart horizontal members being terminated with curved fingers; (c) 3 concave inserts insertable laterally into the skeleton spanning 270° around the rotor, one of the concave inserts carrying straight fingers that interlace with the skeleton horizontal member curved fingers; (d) a control assembly comprising: (i) plates having arcuate slots placed at 3 of the pivots of the skeleton assembly; (ii) 3 control bars connected to the skeleton pivots; and (iii) 3 actuators each connected to a different control bar at one end for arcuate rotation of the control bars independently so that the interlaced straight fingers move closer together or farther apart with the fixed skeleton assembly curved fingers; and (e) a grate assembly following and adjacent to the concaves skeleton and surrounding the rotor.
2. The rotor and cage assembly of claim 1, wherein the rotor has flights at an end for receiving grain for threshing.
3. The rotor and cage assembly of claim 1, which additionally comprises 3 adjacent sets of the concave inserts.
4. The rotor and cage assembly of claim 1, wherein the grate assembly comprises 3 grate inserts insertable laterally into a grate skeleton assembly spanning 270° around the rotor.
5. The rotor and cage assembly of claim 4, wherein the grate inserts are pivotally inserted into the grate skeleton.
6. The rotor and cage assembly of claim 4, additionally comprising a front bulkhead, a middle bulkhead, and a rear bulkhead that provide support for the concaves assembly and the grates assembly.
7. The rotor and cage assembly of claim 1, wherein rotor contains a spiral pattern of rasp bar assemblies.
8. The rotor and cage assembly of claim 1, wherein arcuate rotatable plates with rotating rods also adjust the concave inserts for different types of grain.
9. The rotor and cage assembly of claim 1, wherein the interlaced straight fingers move closer together or farther apart with the fixed skeleton assembly curved fingers one or more of laterally or vertically.
10. The rotor and cage assembly of claim 1, wherein one of the concave inserts is terminated with straight fingers and is movable relative to interlaced fixed skeleton assembly curved fingers.
11. The rotor and cage assembly of claim 1, wherein the rotor has the same diameter along its longitudinal axis of rotation.
12. The rotor and cage assembly of claim 1, wherein the actuators are linear actuators.
13. The rotor and cage assembly of claim 1, wherein the actuators are computer controlled.
14. A concaves control assembly for a concaves assembly comprising: (a) a skeleton for receiving at least two concave inserts end-to-end; (b) at least two concave inserts inserted within the skeleton for threshing grain in concert with a rotor assembly; (c) rotatable plates having arcuate slots, located where the at least two concave inserts meet, and carried by and rotatable with skeleton pivot pins; (d) a control bars connected to and between the skeleton pivot pins; and (e) actuators connected separately to each control bar at one end of one of the control bars, whereby actuation of the actuator independently moves the control bars causing arcuate rotation of the arcuate slotted plates for moving the at least two end-to-end concave inserts closer together and farther apart.
15. The concaves control assembly of claim 14, wherein one of the concave inserts carries curved fingers at the one end and the second concave inserts carries straight fingers interlaced between the curved fingers wherein actuation of the actuator moves the interlaced fingers closer together or farther apart for different sized grain.
16. The concaves control assembly of claim 14, wherein the skeleton carries 3 concave inserts in end-to-end abutting relationship about 270°.
17. The concaves control assembly of claim 16, wherein the skeleton carries three sets of the 3 end-to-end concave inserts.
18. The concaves control assembly of claim 17, wherein there are 3 actuators.
19. The concaves control assembly of claim 14, wherein the actuators are linear actuators.
20. The concaves control assembly of claim 14, wherein the actuators are computer controlled.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0011] For a fuller understanding of the nature and advantages of the present method and process, reference should be had to the following detailed description taken in connection with the accompanying drawings, in which:
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[0039] The drawings will be described in greater detail below.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0040] It is known in the agricultural harvesting industry that one can control the relative amount of material that is discharged through a porous concave surface by changing the amount of clearance that a given area of the surface has to the rotor. Wider clearance tends to discharge less material than tight clearance. In commonly owned application Ser. No. 14/967,691, the clearance of the surface area (called opening or closing the concave) of the 3 sections is changed by a control mechanism that connected the 3 sections and is controlled in the cab by the combine operator. Disclosed herein is the individual remote control of each of the 3 sections by 3 linear actuators, one of which is associated with each of the 3 concave sections.
[0041] Referring initially to
[0042] An off-loading auger assembly, 22, is in the folded home position and being carried by rear grain cart 14. Grain cart 14 also bears a foldable roof, 24, shown in an open position, but which can fold inwardly to cover grain stored in rear grain cart 14. Foldable roof 24 may be made of metal, plastic, or other suitable material, but may be made of durable plastic for weight reduction and easy folding/unfolding. A grain storage bin, 28, carried by grain cart 14 may be made of plastic also in keeping with desirable weight reduction; although, it could be made of metal also at the expense of weight. All plastic parts may be filled with particulate or fiber reinforcement in conventional fashion and could be laminate in construction. Further details on rear grain cart 14 can be found commonly owned application Ser. No. 14/946,842 filed Nov. 20, 2015.
[0043] Referring now to
[0044] Looking next at
[0045] Progressing rearwardly, the crop material reaches the end of feeder assembly 50 at velocity and is projected rearwardly and upwardly onto the walls of a transition cone, 52, which is a robust structure that describes shape and direction of material flow and generally funnels the flow of crop material toward both sides and the bottom of a rotor inlet cone, 52, of a spinning rotor, 54 (see
[0046] The process within rotor cage 58 delivers the crop material off the end of flights 56 and onto rasp bar assemblies for grain threshing and separation (see
[0047] Entry into rotor cage 58 begins the threshing process, as the rasp bars rub the crop material across concaves, 70 (see also
[0048] The separation section of rotor cage 58 is located immediately behind (upstream) the threshing section and is for most part identical to the threshing section. By tradition, the same inserts that are located in the threshing area are now called grates, 74 (see
[0049] An important and new feature in rotor cage 58 is a top cover vane assembly, 76 (see
[0050] Finally the MOG (which by convention now changes its name to straw or residue) now located at the rear of the separation area (grates 74) is ready to be discharged from rotor cage 58 to be spread across the ground. In PPU 12, this will be done quite unconventionally by discharge openings in rotor cage 58 to discharge assemblies that contain straw chopper assemblies, 90 and 92 (see
[0051] Shortly after chopping and propulsion, the residue pieces will encounter straw hood assemblies, 94 and 96 (see
[0052] Returning to the MOG and grain that is being expelled through concaves 70 and grates 74, these materials exit the inserts at reasonably high velocity and on a trajectory imposed by both their angular velocity from spinning in rotor cage 58 and from the centrifugal force imparted by rotation of rotor 54, the net of which is largely an outward (if not radial) departure from rotor cage 58 down into the void below rotor cage 58 and above cleaning system assembly 68 (see
[0053] As a matter of secondary assurance of high capacity, and because the disclosed PPU 12 configuration allows it, a bonus sieves assembly, as disclosed in commonly assigned application Ser. No. 15/649,684, filed Jul. 14, 2017, is provided. Unknown to the rest of the industry, these bonus sieves are allowed by the rear axle for harvesting combine 10 being on rear module 12, not beside the sieves. So the frame of PPU 12 will bulge outwardly wider once past the front tires, and fill that space on each side of the main sieves with narrower, shorter sieve members, bonus sieves, that in total will add about 20% more sieve area. Moreover, remembering the condition of having a much higher MOG ratio being expelled from the rear of the separation area, this bonus sieves area will add additional cleaning area back where the cleaning is made more difficult by higher MOG concentrations, whether that be in the airstream or on the sieve surfaces.
[0054] Under the front majority of the major sieves' length, a clean grain conveyor, a belt conveyor (running rearward on the top) that catches the grain as it falls, and conveys it rear ward to a clean grain cross auger. A secondary, but equally important, function of the flat top of the conveyor is to serve as a converging plenum versus the lower sieve, such that the air being moved rearward by the cleaning fan is progressively forced to be directed upward through the sieves, thus powering the pneumatic cleaning function of the cleaning system. If stray MOG were to fall through both sieves, this is yet another chance for that MOG piece to be blown rearward, and perhaps out of the system. Again, this is disclosed in detail in U.S. Ser. No. 15/642,799, cited above.
[0055] The fate of the separated clean grain exiting the various cleaning systems in PPU 12 and its transfer to grain cart 12 is disclosed in commonly owned application Ser. No. 14/946,827, cited above.
[0056] Finally, PPU 12 will contain a tailings return system, as disclosed in detail in commonly owned application Ser. No. 15/649,684, cited above, that will be located below and aft of the aft of cleaning assembly 68. Material that is small enough and dense enough to fall through the extreme rear section of the chaffer, referred to as a chaffer extension, and material that because of size or low density could not fall through the lower sieve will be delivered to a tailing auger trough. In the trough is a tailings cross auger, an auger with opposing flighting, that this time augers the material outward from the middle. As the material reaches the sidesheets of the major structure, it enters a tailings elevator, one on each side of the structure. Running on a sprocket on the (each) end of the cross auger will be a roller chain with rearward leaning paddles that are also canted to move the material inward against the inner wall as it is conveyed upward. The leaning and canting of the paddle reduces the conveying efficiency while also increasing the tumbling and rubbing of the unthreshed grain against the walls and outer ring of the elevator chute. This “rethreshed” material will then be introduced back into cleaning system 68 above the bonus sieves by auger flights on a tailings top drive shaft to make another attempt at proper cleaning and saving, or to be rejected again, and, in either case, it will in one way or another be ejected from the system.
[0057] At this point in the disclosure, we look at
[0058] Looking at
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[0060] Referring additionally to
[0061] Referring in more detail to
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[0066] Of additional novelty for this disclosure is the operational mode that would allow each section to be adjusted a little or a lot, and adjusted differently than each other or than the others. It is known in the industry that one can control the relative amount of material that is discharged through a porous concave surface by changing the amount of clearance that a given area of the surface has to the rotor. Wider clearances tend to discharge less material than tight clearances. In typical rotary combines, one has only the choice of changing the clearance of the whole of the surface area (called opening or closing the concave) by push button mechanical means, or by moving the entire concave right or left in (typically) slots in the mounting mechanisms, an arduous manual mechanical process. In this disclosure, each of the 3 concave sections can be adjusted independently.
[0067] Electronically, these three actuators are able to sense their own amount of length (called position) and by electronic control are caused to adjust in unison, and to remain at equal length when in operation, whatever that position the operator has chosen. That position is changed by a switch from the operators cab, and can change due to reaction to a given stimulus to crop or condition the best set the machine for maximum threshing and separation.
[0068] With the present disclosure of adjustment of each of the concaves inserts by individual “smart” actuators, it, then, makes sense that the proper digital controllers with the proper amount of programming could be caused to adjust each section to better the overall performance of the threshing system. Likewise, the individual actuators could be connected to individual switches whereby human intelligence input could adjust the given sections based on human desire and observation of what the process would best needs for optimum performance.
[0069] Not lost in this disclosure is the innovative thought that, while the current embodiment will expect to adjust all sections to similar specifications and retain relative equal adjustment of the section, it is equally possible that given the correct electronic feedback and programmed logic to oversee the action, this system lends itself to the notion of adjusting each section to a different opening in order to change some element of rotor discharge direction (right, left, down) of varying percentages of the discharge. Simply put, one could have very good and easy control of moving concentration of rotor discharge from one side of the rotor (and, thus, cleaning system) to the other, or some place between. This is desired in current combines, but requires arduous manual mechanical configuration changes to accomplish, and is not practical on a frequent or momentary basis. This disclosure looks ahead to automatic control of this function by an onboard processor or computer reacting to a stimulus as is being developed in the industry to adjust other functions.
[0070] Additionally, while electric linear actuators are shown in the drawings, such actuators could be pneumatically powered, hydraulically powered, or could be simple linear actuators, electric motors, or other assemblies. Actuators are “powered” for present purposes.
[0071] While the disclosed concaves inserts surmount 270°, a lesser or greater amount of wrap could be designed into such concave inserts. Moreover, the sections of concaves can be adjusted independently to not only effect a change in clearance to the rotor, but also to achieve multiple pinch points around the periphery in the same number as the number of peripheral sections. The drawings show 3 such concave sections resulting in triple convergence of concave clearance to the rotor; although this number could be greater or lesser. The net effect of this triple convergence is to enable a single crop pass around the periphery of rotation to have threshing and separation equivalence to three separate passes from typical configurations, greatly increasing the efficiency of threshing and separation. The disclosed design, then, permits the totality of the designated “separation” area, the grates, to be reconfigurable with respect to the type of grate separation surface chosen, as opposed to being fixed sized holes. Moreover, the grates also could be designed for simple adjustment for clearance and pinch should that be desired.
[0072] The flexibility of the concave adjustment mechanism permits their synched or adjusted independently. The same goes for the grates with the proviso that the grates could be synched with the concaves. The concave inserts and grates inserts are easily and quickly inserted and withdrawn according to their disclosed design. All concave inserts and all grate inserts are the same in design, permitting any insert to be installed in any location. Finally, the concave inserts have sets of fingered panels that move closer and apart as the concave clearance is adjusted inwardly and outwardly. These fingers on the panels are offset to each other to effect great change in the open area and shape of the open area to give prescribed separation based on crop type.
[0073] While the device and method have been described with reference to various embodiments, those skilled in the art will understand that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted for elements thereof without departing from the scope and essence of the disclosure. In addition, many modifications may be made to adapt a particular situation or material to the teachings of the disclosure without departing from the essential scope thereof. Therefore, it is intended that the disclosure not be limited to the particular embodiments disclosed, but that the disclosure will include all embodiments falling within the scope of the appended claims. In this application all units are in the metric system and all amounts and percentages are by weight, unless otherwise expressly indicated. Also, all citations referred herein are expressly incorporated herein by reference.