PROGRAMMABLE ONE-TOUCH RAISE FEATURE FOR AN AGRICULTURAL HARVESTER SUCH AS A WINDROWER
20170311541 ยท 2017-11-02
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
An agricultural vehicle including a chassis and a header carried by the chassis and including a cutter mechanism. The header is adjustable in a vertical direction. The agricultural vehicle also includes a header actuator connected to the header and configured to adjust the header in the vertical direction, and a controller coupled to the header actuator. The controller is configured for receiving an input command for controlling an operation of the header actuator to achieve a lifting height, operating the header actuator in conformance with the input command, and terminating the operating of the header actuator.
Claims
1. An agricultural vehicle, comprising: a chassis; a header carried by said chassis and including a cutter mechanism, said header being adjustable in a vertical direction; a header actuator connected to said header and configured to adjust said header in the vertical direction; and a controller coupled to said header actuator, said controller being configured for: receiving an input command for controlling an operation of the header actuator to achieve a lifting height; operating the header actuator in conformance with said input command; and terminating the operating of the header actuator.
2. The agricultural vehicle according to claim 1, wherein said input command is one of an operator input command of a prescribed distance for raising the header and an operator input command for operating the header actuator over a prescribed time period.
3. The agricultural vehicle according to claim 1, wherein said controller is further configured for determining whether said operating of the header actuator is in compliance with said input command.
4. The agricultural vehicle according to claim 1, wherein said controller is further configured for: detecting a distance moved by said header during said operation of the header actuator; receiving an operator input command for raising said header a prescribed distance; and terminating the operating of the header actuator after achieving said lifting height.
5. The agricultural vehicle according to claim 1, wherein said controller is further configured for: determining a time period over which said header actuator has been operating; receiving an operator input command for operating said header actuator over a prescribed time period; and terminating the operating of the header after operating said header actuator for said prescribed time period.
6. The agricultural vehicle according to claim 1, further comprising a location sensor coupled to said controller.
7. The agricultural vehicle according to claim 6, wherein said controller is further configured for commencing said operating of the header actuator in response to a location determined by said location sensor.
8. The agricultural vehicle according to claim 1, wherein said agricultural vehicle further includes a switch that is coupled to said controller; and said controller is further configured for commencing said operating of the header actuator in response to activating said switch.
9. The agricultural vehicle according to claim 8, wherein said switch is one of a physical switch and a graphic image in a graphical user interface shown on a touchscreen display.
10. A method of controlling an agricultural vehicle including a header being adjustable in a vertical direction while harvesting a crop and forming a windrow having a windrow height, said method comprising the steps of: determining one of a distance for raising the header in the vertical direction and a time period for raising the header in the vertical direction to achieve a lifting height that is dependent on said windrow height; initiating a vertical adjustment of the header; ascertaining when said lifting height has been achieved by one of: determining a distance the header has been raised and comparing the distance the header has been raised to said distance for raising the header in the vertical direction to achieve the lifting height; and determining a time period over which the vertical adjustment has occurred and comparing the time period over which the vertical adjustment has occurred to said time period for raising the header in the vertical direction to achieve the lifting height; and stopping the vertical adjustment of the header upon achieving said lifting height.
11. The method according to claim 10, wherein said step of initiating the vertical adjustment of the header is initiated by an operator inputting a command by activating a switch.
12. The method according to claim 11, wherein said switch is at least one of a physical switch and a graphic image in a graphical user interface shown on a touchscreen display.
13. The method according to claim 10, wherein said agricultural vehicle further includes a controller.
14. The method according to claim 13, wherein said agricultural vehicle further includes a location sensor coupled to said controller and configured to provide a location signal to said controller.
15. The method according to claim 14, wherein said step of initiating the vertical adjustment of the header is initiated by said controller in response to a location determined by said location sensor.
16. An agricultural vehicle, comprising: a chassis; a header carried by said chassis, said header being adjustable in a vertical direction; a header actuator connected to said header and configured to adjust said header in the vertical direction; a swath roller carried by the chassis and configured for forming a windrow having a windrow height, said swath roller being adjustable in the vertical direction; a roller actuator connected to said swath roller and configured to adjust said swath roller in the vertical direction; and a controller coupled to said header actuator and said roller actuator, said controller being configured for receiving an input command and controlling an operation of the header actuator and an operation of the roller actuator to raise the header and swath roller to a lifting height in order to pass above the windrow.
17. The agricultural vehicle of claim 16, wherein said input command is one of an operator input command of a prescribed distance for raising the header and an operator input command for operating the header actuator over a prescribed time period.
18. The agricultural vehicle according to claim 16, wherein an operator activates a switch to initiate said controlling of the operation of the header actuator and the operation of the roller actuator.
19. The agricultural vehicle of claim 16, wherein said agricultural vehicle further includes a location sensor and said controlling of the operation of the header actuator and the operation of the roller actuator by said controller is initiated automatically at a location sensed by the location sensor.
20. The agricultural vehicle of claim 16, wherein said swath roller is positioned behind said header when viewed in the travel direction such that the controller initiates said controlling of the operation of the header actuator before said controlling of the operation of the roller actuator.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0015] The above-mentioned and other features and advantages of this invention, and the manner of attaining them, will become more apparent and the invention will be better understood by reference to the following description of embodiments of the invention taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022] Corresponding reference characters indicate corresponding parts throughout the several views. The exemplifications set out herein illustrate embodiments of the invention and such exemplifications are not to be construed as limiting the scope of the invention in any manner.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0023] Referring now to the drawings, and more particularly to
[0024] The header 14 includes a cutter mechanism 24 to cut crop material as the windrower 10 advances across a field. The cutter mechanism 24 can be any sort of mechanism, such as the cutter bar shown, that can cut crop material from the field. The header 14 can also include a reel (not shown) to direct uncut crop material toward the cutter mechanism 24 and a conveying mechanism (not shown) to direct crop material toward a center of the header 14 to produce crop windrows as the windrower 10 advances across the field. The header 14 is adjustable in a vertical direction, designated by arrow 26, by a header actuator 28 connected to the header 14 and the chassis 12. The header actuator 28 can include, for example, a hydraulic or pneumatic cylinder linked to the header 14 that utilizes fluid pressure to raise and lower the header 14. A controller 30 can be linked to the header actuator 28, as shown in
[0025] As shown in
[0026] The swath roller 16 trails the header 14 and rolls across the field so that, as the windrower 10 advances in the field, the swath roller 16 engages crop material which has been cut by the header 14 and rolls the cut crop material into more densely packed windrows that are resistant to crop material loss due to blowing wind. The swath roller 16 can be formed as a tapering wheel with a varying diameter, with two lateral ends of the swath roller 16 having a greatest diameter of the roller 16 and a center of the swath roller 16 having a smallest diameter of the roller 16. It should be appreciated that other geometries of the swath roller 16 can also be utilized, so long as the swath roller 16 can roll across the field as the windrower 10 travels across the field. The swath roller 16 pivots about a roller axle 36 which can be linked to a pair of roller arms 38, one at each lateral end of the swath roller 16, which are connected to a roller actuator 40 mounted to the rear of the windrower 10 which can raise and lower the swath roller 16. The roller actuator 40 raises and lowers the swath roller 16 analogously to the header actuator 28 which raises and lowers the header 14. The roller actuator 40 can be in the form of a hydraulic or pneumatic actuator. The roller actuator 40 is coupled to the controller 30, as shown in
[0027] As the windrower 10 advances in the forward travel direction 34, the cutter bar 24 of the header 14 will cut crop material for windrowing. After the crop material is cut, the header 14 deposits the cut crop material behind the header 14 in the path of the forwardly advancing swath roller 16, which will roll over the cut crop material and more densely pack the windrow. Once the header 14 has been advanced sufficiently to finish a cut, the header 14 can be raised to prepare for a turn. The header 14 as shown in
[0028] Referring now collectively to
[0029] The controller 30 may also be coupled to a location sensor 42, such as a Global Positioning Satellite (GPS) sensor, which determines the current geographic location of the windrower 10 and sends a geographic location signal to the controller 30. The location sensor 42 can be any type of sensor capable of gathering positional information about the windrower 10. The controller 30 can therefore be coupled to the header actuator 28, the roller actuator 40, and the location sensor 42 to allow the controller 30 to gather positional information about the windrower 10, in general, and the header 14 and swath roller 16, specifically. The controller 30 also can be coupled to solenoid valves 44 and 46 of the header actuator 28 and the roller actuator 40, respectively. The controller 30 may signal the header actuator 28 and roller actuator 40 to activate and raise or lower the linked header 14 and swath roller 16 when desired by selectively activating the respective solenoid valve 44, 46 of the actuators 28 and 40. Coupling the controller 30 to the location sensor 42 and the actuators 28 and 40 allows the controller 30 to determine the location of windrower 10 and to automatically raise and lower the header 14 and the swath roller 16 in response to movement of the windrower 10 in the forward travel direction 34.
[0030] Referring now to
[0031] The controller 30 can determine when the header 14 has been raised to the lifting height H in a variety of ways. For example, the controller 30 can query a position sensor located in the header actuator 28 to determine the elevation of header 14 when lifting is started. Subsequent queries of the position sensor can be used to determine when the lifting height H is achieved. For example, the controller 30 may compare the position of the header 14 that is sensed by the position sensor to the lifting height H, and the controller 30 may continue actuating the header actuator 28 until the sensed position of the header 14 is substantially the same as the lifting height H. By way of further example, the controller 30 can terminate operation of the header actuator 28 after a specific time period of operation that corresponds to the lifting height H. In this regard, the controller 30 may determine a time period over which the vertical adjustment has occurred, and the controller 30 may compare the determined time period to the specific time period of operation. Once the determined time period over which the adjustment is substantially the same as the specific time period of operation, the controller 30 may stop the vertical height adjustment, i.e. cease operation of the header actuator 29 upon achieving the lifting height H.
[0032] The desired lifting height H can be determined in numerous ways. For example, the desired lifting height H can be stored in the memory 50 of the controller 30 as a constant value for a given crop. Thereby, when the windrower 10 is set up for harvesting a crop, the appropriate lifting height H will be used. Alternatively, the lifting height H can be determined by the operator inputting a specified lifting height H, inputting a specified duration for operating the header actuator 28 in the lifting mode that corresponds to raising the header 14 to the lifting height H, and inputting data relating to the height of the windrows 47 obtained from any of a variety of observing and recording sensors to determine the existing height of windrows 47. As another alternative, the lifting height H can be specified by a crop height sensor that is located on the windrower 10 and operably coupled to the controller 30. The crop height sensor may sense the height of the windrows 47 and send a corresponding signal to the controller 30 to define the lifting height H based of the height of the windrows 47.
[0033] An operation to raise the header 14 and the swath roller 16 can be initiated manually through activation of a physical or graphic switch by the operator and/or automatically through the use of a sufficiently accurate position sensing system. Thereby, in manual operation, the controller 30 may be configured to receive an operator input command of a prescribed distance for raising the header 14, or alternatively the controller 30 may receive an operator input command for operating the header actuator 28 over a prescribed time period. Also, an operator may cause the header 14 to raise at a header raising point 48 by manually initiating operation of header actuator 28, as described above. Alternatively, the controller 30 can also be configured as an auto-guidance unit with multiple header raising points 48 saved in the memory 50 of the controller 30. In such a case, the controller 30 can be configured to automatically signal the header actuator 28 to raise the header 14 once the header 14 reaches a location, e.g., the header raising point 48, that is determined by the location sensor 42.
[0034] After the windrower 10 has finished turning, the operator can then activate the controller 30 to signal the header actuator 28 to lower the header 14 to the cutting position, which is shown in
[0035] Referring now to
[0036] Referring now to
[0037] While this invention has been described with respect to at least one embodiment, the present invention can be further modified within the spirit and scope of this disclosure. This application is therefore intended to cover any variations, uses, or adaptations of the invention using its general principles. Further, this application is intended to cover such departures from the present disclosure as come within known or customary practice in the art to which this invention pertains and which fall within the limits of the appended claims.