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Redesign and Evaluation of a Chickpea Harvester
Author(s) -
Hiwa Golpira
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of biosystems engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.208
H-Index - 3
eISSN - 2234-1862
pISSN - 1738-1266
DOI - 10.5307/jbe.2015.40.2.102
Subject(s) - combine harvester , tractor , agricultural engineering , adaptability , header , cropping , engineering , mechanical engineering , mathematics , biology , ecology , statistics , agriculture
Purpose: Slow manual harvesting of rain-fed chickpeas cultivated in fallow fields in developing countries have encouraged the design of a mechanical harvester. Methods: A tractor-pulled harvester was built, in which a modified stripper header detached pods from an anchored plant and a chain conveyor transferred material. The stripper harvester was redesigned to use: 1) the maneuverability of tractor-mounted frames, 2) the adaptability of floating headers, and 3) the flexibility of pneumatic conveyors. Results: A mobile vacuum conveyor, which was an innovator open system, was designed for the dilute phase transferring mode for both grain and material other than grain. A centrifugal fan transferred harvested material to a cyclone separator that settled harvested material in a grain tank 1 m high. The machine at the spot work rate of 0.42 ha·h-1 harvested chickpea pods equal to the output of 16.6 farm laborers. Conclusion: The low cost and reasonable projected purchase price are the advantages of the concept. Additionally, the shattering loss reduction confirms the feasibility of the prototype chickpea harvester for commercialization.

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