|
|
Line 1: |
Line 1: |
|
| |
| ==Combine - Current Work -- Desired Features of the Microcombine== | | ==Combine - Current Work -- Desired Features of the Microcombine== |
| This category is for grain and bean farmers to comment on the features they would find useful in this machine. | | This category is for grain and bean farmers to comment on the features they would find useful in this machine. |
Line 140: |
Line 139: |
| Zhejiang Shenmao Appliance Co., Ltd. Available at: http://shenmao.en.alibaba.com/product/250305412-209425313/43cc_small_Grain_Harvester.html . Accessed 25 March 2010. | | Zhejiang Shenmao Appliance Co., Ltd. Available at: http://shenmao.en.alibaba.com/product/250305412-209425313/43cc_small_Grain_Harvester.html . Accessed 25 March 2010. |
|
| |
|
| ===== THE MINI COMBINE-HARVESTER: RESEARCH RESULTS AND A RELATED AUTOMATION CONCEPT=====
| |
|
| |
| By Phan Hieu Hien (*), Le Van Ban (**)
| |
| (*) Center for Agricultural Energy and Machinery
| |
| Nong Lam University, Thu Duc, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
| |
| E-mail: phhien@hcm.vnn.vn
| |
| (**) Faculty of Engineering and Technology
| |
| Nong Lam University, Thu Duc, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
| |
|
| |
|
| |
| ABSTRACT
| |
|
| |
| In Viet Nam, rice harvesting is a rising problem
| |
| due to shortage of manual labor during harvest.
| |
| Attempts to mechanize this operation using combine
| |
| harvesters encountered problems with soft soils,
| |
| frequent breakdowns, and lodged crops. Conventional
| |
| combine models weighs at least 1.2 tons and such
| |
| heavy units could not manage soft soils or “seemingly
| |
| dry” soils in the Mekong Delta.
| |
|
| |
| A Chinese-originated lightweight mini-combine,
| |
| improved in several components by the Philippine Rice
| |
| Research Institute, was recently selected by the Nong-
| |
| Lam University Research Team on Combine, who
| |
| added and compared different wheel designs for wet
| |
| soft soils. In 2004, test results in several Provinces in
| |
| Viet Nam showed the performance of this model at
| |
| one ha per day capacity, cutting width is 1.2m, and
| |
| total grain losses is less than 2%. The combine
| |
| harvesting cost is 1/2 - 2/3 that of the current practice
| |
| of manual cutting and mechanical threshing. The light
| |
| weight of the machine (570 kG) proved to be an
| |
| absolute advantage in soft soils typical of the Mekong
| |
| Delta rice fields. Very soft soils leading to bogging
| |
| down could easily be overcome within minutes by
| |
| seven people. No other combine so far could allow
| |
| such troubleshooting. Thus, the design was
| |
| transferred to VINAPPRO, a manufacturer of engine
| |
| and machinery, which planned to manufacture 20 units
| |
| for the Spring harvest of 2005.
| |
|
| |
| The resulted advantages pointed to a new
| |
| automation concept in combine operation: The
| |
| lightweight combine could be made even lighter in
| |
| operation. If the pooled operating weight of the combine
| |
| could be further reduced, then more trafficability and
| |
| mobility on very soft soils could be realized. This can
| |
| be simply done by removing about 120 kG of the two
| |
| operators (driver and bagger) from the combine, and
| |
| incorporating a device to conctrol the steering of the
| |
| machine from a short distane. Likewise, an automatic
| |
| bagging device replacing the manual bagger (who
| |
| used to sit on the machine) would reduce the total
| |
| weight. Together, 17% of weight in combine operation
| |
| could be reduced. Such scenario is not too
| |
| complicated in terms of automation circuit, and a plan
| |
| is underway to verify the concept.
| |
|
| |
| INTRODUCTION
| |
|
| |
| Rice harvesting in the Mekong Delta of Viet
| |
| Nam is still mostly done manually and thus is a rising
| |
| problem due to shortage of labor during harvest. Over
| |
| the past 20 years, among efforts to mechanize rice
| |
| harvesting in this region, combines have been
| |
| attempted by different government agencies as well
| |
| as the private sector, but failed to be accepted by
| |
| farmers.
| |
|
| |
| This paper describes the adaptation work on a mini-
| |
| combine, including the testing of different versions, design
| |
| and selection of wheel systems for wet soils, and initial
| |
| promotional work in Southern Viet Nam; the information
| |
| draws heavily on an earlier publication (Tran Van Khanh
| |
| et.al. 2004). The second part of the paper presents a new
| |
| automation concept in combine operation by eliminating
| |
| the driver’s weight from the combine operation.
| |
|
| |
| Review of literature: problems with combines
| |
|
| |
| Thailand maybe the only country in South East
| |
| Asia with some success in adapting the combine.
| |
| There are about 8000 units of Western-style Thai-made
| |
| combine (with cutting width 2- 3m) in current use. In
| |
| other countries including Viet Nam, introduction of
| |
| such large combines have encountered three major
| |
| problems:
| |
|
| |
| Soft soils
| |
|
| |
| Most combine weights 1.2 – 2 tons (excluding
| |
| imported models of 4 – 11 tons). Such heavy machines
| |
| easily bog down in soft soils. Even during the dry-
| |
| season harvest, a seemingly dry field with a localized
| |
| soft spot can stop a heavy combine and make it
| |
| helpless in areas without access road for the rescue
| |
| vehicle. This is the main reason that have failed many
| |
| researchers and engineers in the area. One researcher
| |
| even concluded that there is no “dry soil” in the
| |
| Mekong Delta as far as the combine is concerned.
| |
| Many people now maitain that, for a large combine-
| |
| harvester to work, the field must be well irrigated and
| |
| drained, and should be large enough for the machine
| |
| to easily maneuver. This sounds logical, except that
| |
| the investment to implement such requirement for
| |
| combine operation is too big to be drawn from the
| |
|
| |
| Nong Lam University Journal of Agricultural Sciences and Technology, No 4/2004
| |
|
| |
| �
| |
| SCIENCE RESEARCH
| |
|
| |
| agriculture itself, a condition for a sustainable progress
| |
| of a developing country. A more feasible option is to
| |
| develop a light-weight mini-combine that local
| |
| operators can easily pull out of soft sink spots if a
| |
| bogged-down situation occurs.
| |
|
| |
| Frequent break-downs
| |
|
| |
| Due to the single-unit fabrication with limited
| |
| resources, sometimes by village mechanics, combines
| |
| often fail under operation. Each break-down cost hours
| |
| or days to repair; one week’s time for repair could result
| |
| in significant lost income during the harvest season and
| |
| unreliability discouraged users to adopt such new
| |
| technology. This problem can be addressed through
| |
| improved manufacturing and continuous design
| |
| improvement with due consideration to added costs. A
| |
| workable initial design, a competent local manufacturer,
| |
| close monitoring of field operation, and after-sales service
| |
| support will help realize successful adoption of this new
| |
| technology.
| |
|
| |
| Lodged crops
| |
|
| |
| Rice lodging is often caused by extreme
| |
| climatic conditions such as typhoons or floods but
| |
| this is also related to the works of plant breeders and
| |
| agronomists. To date, attempts to develop a combine
| |
| that can harvest severely lodged crops have been
| |
| unsuccessful. Plant breeders and agronomists need
| |
| to improve lodging resistance of rice varieties.
| |
| However, a partially-lodged field area, say a 10%, still
| |
| means that 90% of the field is still readily available
| |
| for combine harvesting, especially if the combine is
| |
| small enough to circumvent around more severely
| |
| lodged spots that can be managed through manual
| |
| harvesting.
| |
|
| |
| Thus, a suitable combine for local Viet Namese
| |
| conditions can be summarized into two basic
| |
| requirements: light weight and reliability.
| |
|
| |
| MATERIALS AND METHODS
| |
|
| |
| Design adaptation
| |
|
| |
| Different surveys by the NLU Center for
| |
| Agricultural Energy and Machinery (CAEM) resulted
| |
| in a considerable database, including hundreds of
| |
| pictures. In 2003, the Philippine Rice Research
| |
| Institute (PhilRice) shared a design of a light-weight
| |
| mini-combine (570 kG), to continue a long tradition of
| |
| cooperation between NLU and the Institute in the area
| |
| of Agricultural Engineering. The project has been
| |
| sponsored by Briggs & Stratton Corporation, a well-
| |
| known gasoline manufacturer.
| |
|
| |
| The first design of the mini-combine originated
| |
| in China. In 2003, PhilRice re-designed and improved
| |
| key functions adding significant improvements to the
| |
| prototypes, which were then transferred to NLU for
| |
| testing in Viet Nam. The new design is a typical
| |
| Western-type combine, with a reel wheel at the top of
| |
| a reciprocating cutting blades and a feeding crop auger
| |
| at the back of the cutter to feed a conveyor that brings
| |
| the cut plants towards an axial-flow thresher. The
| |
| cleaning of paddy is done beneath the thresher
| |
| concave by an oscillating screen and a fan, similar to
| |
| the IRRI axial-flow threshers, before the paddy grain
| |
| is conveyed upwards for bagging. The combine is
| |
| powered by a 16-HP B&S gasoline engine (weighing
| |
| 40 kG), which is commonly used for axial-flow
| |
| threshers in the Philippines.
| |
|
| |
| In Viet Nam, design adaptation by the NLU
| |
| included: a) identifying areas for strengthening and
| |
| optimizing design performance and reliability; and b)
| |
| comparing different wheel designs for wet soft soils.
| |
| The NLU believes problems of combine harvesting in
| |
| Viet Nam are “of the earth, and not of the air”, that is
| |
| to say, they are more concerned on soil and wheel
| |
| interactions rather than the working principles and
| |
| components which are already common knowledge.
| |
|
| |
|
| |
| a) b)
| |
|
| |
| Figure 1. a) The -mini-combine prototype from PhilRice.
| |
| b) Mini-combines in DongThap; both units are made by Vinappro.
| |
|
| |
|
| |
| Journal of Agricultural Sciences and Technology, No 4/2004 Nong Lam University
| |
|
| |
| �
| |
| SCIENCE RESEARCH
| |
|
| |
| After evaluation and further “fine-tuning” of the
| |
| prototype, the design was transferred to the Viet Nam
| |
| Agricultural Power Company (VINAPPRO), a leading
| |
| manufacturer of diesel engines and other machinery
| |
| who then fabricated two units for local field testing
| |
| and evaluation.
| |
|
| |
| Testing
| |
|
| |
| The mini-combines (one from PhilRice and two
| |
| from Vinappro) have been tested in five locations in
| |
| the Mekong Delta and Eastern Provinces from March
| |
| to October 2004, including exploratory test,
| |
| performance tests in semi-wet and wet conditions,
| |
| durability test.
| |
|
| |
| Seven different traction types and variations
| |
| were tested for trafficability, namely: 1) rubber tyres,
| |
| 2)dual rubber tyres, 3)steel cage wheel, 4)original
| |
| pyramid-shaped lug wheel with 10 lugs/wheel,
| |
| 5)pyramid-shaped lug wheel with12 lugs/wheel, 6)wider
| |
| pyramid-shaped lug wheel with 12 lugs/wheel, and
| |
| 7)retractable lugs mounted to rubber tyre.
| |
|
| |
| Standard test instruments, such as stop watch,
| |
| tachometer, scales and a penetrometer (ASAE, 1994)
| |
| to measure the hardness of soil, were used in the
| |
| tests.
| |
|
| |
| Automation concept
| |
|
| |
| The positive test results prompted to a new
| |
| automation concept in combine operation: The
| |
| lightweigt combine could be made even lighter in
| |
| operation. If the pooled operating weight of the combine
| |
| could be further reduced, then more trafficability and
| |
| mobility on very soft soils could be realized. This can
| |
| be simply done by removing about 120 kG of the two
| |
|
| |
| operators (driver and bagger) from the combine, and
| |
| incorporating a device to conctrol the steering of the
| |
| machine from a short distane. Likewise, an automatic
| |
| bagging device replacing the manual bagger (who
| |
| used to sit on the machine) would reduce the total
| |
| weight. Together, 17% of weight in combine operation
| |
| could be reduced. Thus, work efforts on developing
| |
| device to realize this automation concept are under
| |
| way, with some initial results.
| |
|
| |
| RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
| |
|
| |
| Field performance
| |
|
| |
| The field tests were conducted under different
| |
| soil and crop conditions. The performance and
| |
| specifications of the combine are summarized in Table
| |
|
| |
| 1. Average harvest was one hectare per day. The total
| |
| losses ranged at 1.0 – 1.4 per cent, and never
| |
| exceeded 2 per cent. (Table 1)
| |
| Trafficability
| |
|
| |
| Our tests indicate that, on dry soils, the rubber
| |
| tyre is most suitable in terms of both traction and
| |
| vibration of the machine. However, in soft and wet soils,
| |
| the rubber tyres sank and bogged down the combine.
| |
| Two types of wheels were found to be suitable:
| |
|
| |
| 1) The pyramid-shaped lug wheels could
| |
| manage soft soils with penetration resistance of more
| |
| than 0.4 MPa.
| |
|
| |
| 2) The retractable lugs mounted to rubber
| |
| tyre proved to be most useful in soft soil. The rubber
| |
| tyres provide floatation, while the lugs provide both
| |
| traction and flotation.
| |
|
| |
| Table 1. Mini- combine performance and specifications (Tran Van Khanh et.al. 2004)
| |
|
| |
| Working width: 1.2 m maxmum
| |
| Working speed: 1.5 – 2.1 km/hr
| |
| Idle travel speed: 2.0 – 5.0 km/hr
| |
| Working time utilization efficiency: 70 – 80 %
| |
| Field capacity: 1 ha /day (0.9 – 1.3)
| |
| Cutting height: Adjustable 0.1 – 0.4 m
| |
| Combined losses (shattering,
| |
| unthreshed and separating): < 2.0 %
| |
| Power requirement: 16-HP B&S gasoline engine
| |
| Fuel consumption: 15 Liter/ ha
| |
| Labor requirement: 5: one driver, one bagger, and three haulers of grain
| |
| bags to levees.
| |
| Traction: Semi-dry soil:
| |
| Soft, wet soil:
| |
| Rubber tyres 6.00 x 12
| |
| Pyramid-shaped lug wheel, or
| |
| Retractable lugs + rubber tyre
| |
| Overall dimensions (L x W x H): 3.5 m * 1.5 m * 1.5m
| |
| Net weight: 570 kg
| |
|
| |
| Nong Lam University Journal of Agricultural Sciences and Technology, No 4/2004
| |
|
| |
| �
| |
| SCIENCE RESEARCH
| |
|
| |
| On soft soils, the light weight of the combine
| |
| proved to be an absolute advantage. If the machine
| |
| was about to sink, the bag laborer in the rear seat
| |
| could dismount temporarily to reduce machine weight,
| |
| thus allowing the mini-combine to pass through soft
| |
| spots while maintaining operation. This suggests that
| |
| any additional weight (i.e. from alternative heavy diesel
| |
| engines) would pose major problems on soft soils and
| |
| also re-confirms why one-ton-plus combines could not
| |
| work so far.
| |
|
| |
| During the test on extreme soft soils leading to
| |
| occasional bogging down, the problem was overcome
| |
| within minutes by eight people, who simply pulled
| |
| back the combine out of the troubled spot.
| |
|
| |
| Reliability
| |
|
| |
| The mini-combine have been operated on 12
| |
| hectares to date. Breakdowns and troubles occurred,
| |
| such as shear of cotter pin of the steering wheel, failure
| |
| of the rear U-fork..., but these were considered minor
| |
| and were right away fixed in the field or by small village
| |
| mechanics.
| |
|
| |
| Cost comparison to current harvesting methods
| |
|
| |
| Although the actual unit cost from the
| |
| production line is not yet available, the estimated sale
| |
| price is 41.000.000 VND (H” US$2600). Based on
| |
| test data and assumptions usually made for cost
| |
| calculations, the harvesting cost for 1 hectare using
| |
| this combine is 361 000 VND or about US$23, of which
| |
| 35% are for depreciation-interest-repair, 34% are for
| |
| gasoline, and 31% are for labor. How is this cost
| |
| compared to current harvesting methods ?
| |
|
| |
| The most practiced harvesting method in the
| |
| Mekong Delta of Viet Nam is manual havesting +
| |
| mechanical threshing. Depending on the province, rice
| |
| yield, and cropping season, the total cost in 2003 of
| |
| existing methods ranged from 700 000 to 900 000 VND
| |
| per hectare, with 60% representing harvesting costs
| |
| and 40% for threshing costs.
| |
|
| |
| Thus a total cost of 361 000 VND/ha with the
| |
| mini-combine represents a cost reduction of 48 to 60
| |
| percent, compared to current practices. This is
| |
| significant, considering that this saving is equivalent
| |
| to about 15% of the profit from a typical hectare of
| |
| rice.
| |
|
| |
| Moreover, labor cost decreases appreciably
| |
| with use of the combine. The current harvesting and
| |
| threshing system normally requires dozens of laborers
| |
| and 150 man-hours per hectare, which is now reduced
| |
| to five people and 40 man-hours per hectare with the
| |
| combine.
| |
|
| |
| In summary, Test results showed both the
| |
| technical and economic feasibility of the mini-combine
| |
| under Vietnamese conditions. The outstanding
| |
| advantage of this combine lies in its light weight, which
| |
| enables the trafficability in typical soft soils of the
| |
| Mekong Delta.
| |
|
| |
| A CONCEPT IN COMBINE AUTOMATION
| |
|
| |
| The above resulted advantages pointed to a
| |
| new automation concept in combine operation: The
| |
| lightweigt combine could be made even lighter in
| |
| operation. If the pooled operating weight of the
| |
| combine could be further reduced, then more
| |
| trafficability and mobility on very soft soils could
| |
| be realized. The idea stemmed from our
| |
| observations in the field tests. In some very soft
| |
| soils wherein the combine was about to bog down,
| |
| the bagger-laboror jumped out of his seat and
| |
| walked along, then the trafficability improved, and
| |
| the combine surpass the obstacled soft soil. In
| |
| worse situation, the driver had to jump down too
| |
| and steer the combine walking alongside until better,
| |
| harder soil was present.
| |
|
| |
| The implication is that even 120 kG of the
| |
| two operators, or even about 60 kG of the bagger is
| |
| accountable for the trafficability of the combine.
| |
| Thus, if we remove these operators’ weight from
| |
| the combine, and incorporate a device to conctrol
| |
| the steering of the machine from a short distane,
| |
| then the combine mobility would be improved.
| |
| Likewise, an automatic bagging device replacing
| |
| the manual bagger would reduce the total weight.
| |
| Together, 17% of weight in combine operation could
| |
| be reduced. Such scenario is not too complicated
| |
| in terms of automation circuit. The following
| |
| schematic diagram and description serve to
| |
| illustrate the concept.
| |
|
| |
| Control objectives
| |
|
| |
| The objectives to control the combine operation
| |
| are as follow:
| |
|
| |
| -Control of the reel height
| |
|
| |
| -Control of the cutter bar height
| |
|
| |
| -Control of the engine speed
| |
|
| |
| -Control of the forward speed (high or low)
| |
|
| |
| -Control of the turning (left or right)
| |
|
| |
| -Control of the stopping (open or close)
| |
|
| |
| Journal of Agricultural Sciences and Technology, No 4/2004 Nong Lam University
| |
|
| |
| �
| |
| SCIENCE RESEARCH
| |
|
| |
| A plan is underway to verify
| |
| the concept and operation.
| |
|
| |
| Tieán
| |
| (Forward)
| |
| Reõ phaûi
| |
| (Turn right)
| |
| Reõ traùi
| |
| (Turn left)
| |
| luøi
| |
| (Reverse)
| |
| Thaáp (Low)
| |
| Cao (High)
| |
| Toác ñoä
| |
| ñoäng cô
| |
| (Engine
| |
| speed )
| |
| Phanh
| |
| (Brake)
| |
| Ñoùng
| |
| (Close)
| |
| (Gear box)
| |
| Soá
| |
| (1)
| |
| (2) (4)
| |
| (3)
| |
| Reel
| |
| Air Cylinder
| |
| Cutter bar
| |
| Air cylinder
| |
| Figure 2. Block schematic diagram of remote control for mini combine harvester
| |
|
| |
| Selected method for control system
| |
|
| |
| A total of 10 actuators would be needed.
| |
| Three different methods were evaluated: by high
| |
| pressure air, by servo-motors, and by hydraulic
| |
| system. Considering the cost, ease of installation
| |
| and operation, and reliability, the air pressure
| |
| system was selected. The control is by the remote
| |
| cable, with the operator walking along or at a
| |
| distance with the combine; the power source is a
| |
| DC 12 volt system. The drawback is a compressor
| |
| is needed, and the advantages are ease of control,
| |
| component parts are easily available.
| |
|
| |
| The block schematic diagram of remote control
| |
| for mini-combine is shown in Figure 2.
| |
|
| |
| CONCLUSION
| |
|
| |
| A newly designed mini-combine has been
| |
| successfully adapted in Viet Nam. Data for its
| |
| technical and economic performance seems to be
| |
| favorable for local acceptance of this new technology.
| |
| The outstanding feature of this combine is its very
| |
| light weight, which enables its mobility on soft soils
| |
| and difficult access roads, a fact rarely achieved by
| |
| other hevier combines. A campaign is underway to
| |
| commercialize this mini-combine in Viet Nam for the
| |
|
| |
| winter-spring harvest of 2005. The first batch of 20
| |
| combines will be launched to farmer-users at this time.
| |
|
| |
| Continuing in the direction of making the
| |
| combine as light as possible to keep the maximum
| |
| mobility, a new design concept in combine automation
| |
| has been put forward with the aim of removing the
| |
| operators’ weight during operation of the combine.
| |
| Different scenarios with different alternative setup are
| |
| planned to be evaluated to verify the concept.
| |
|
| |
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
| |
|
| |
| The support for the design, testing, and
| |
| promotion in various ways from Briggs&Stratton Inc
| |
| (Wisconsin), and from VINAPPRO Company (Dong-
| |
| Nai) is gratefully acknowledged. PhilRice is
| |
| acknowledged for sharing the initial design of the mini-
| |
| combine.
| |
|
| |
| REFERENCES
| |
|
| |
| ASAE. 1995. ASAE Standards 1994. American Society
| |
| of Agricultural Engineers, St. Joseph, Michigan, U.S.A.
| |
|
| |
| BARDAIE M.Z. 1980. Economic farm size for rice
| |
| combine harvester in Malaysia. Agricultural
| |
| Mechanization in Asia, Autumn 1980 pp.49- 52.
| |
|
| |
| Nong Lam University Journal of Agricultural Sciences and Technology, No 4/2004
| |
|
| |
| �
| |
| SCIENCE RESEARCH
| |
|
| |
| BAUTISTA, E.U. and A. SCHMIDLEY. 2004. PhilRice-
| |
| B&S Collaboration: Building partnerships across Asia.
| |
| Paper presented at the Philippine Rice R&D Conference,
| |
| PhilRice, Maligaya, Munoz, Nueva Ecija. 114-16 April
| |
|
| |
| BENSON E.R., J.F. REID, Q. ZHANG. 2003. Machine
| |
| vision-based guidance system for an agricultural small
| |
| grain harvester. Transactions ASAE Vol.46 (4) 12551264.
| |
|
| |
|
| |
| PHAN HIEU HIEN. 1991. Development of the axial-
| |
| flow thresher in Southern Vietnam. Agricultural
| |
| Mechanization in Asia J. Vol.22 No.4 pp.42-46.
| |
|
| |
| SUZUKI M. 1980. Performance of rice combine
| |
| harvesters as evaluated by the national test in Japan.
| |
| Japan Agricultural Research Quarterly Vol.14 No.1
| |
| pp.20-23.
| |
|
| |
| TRAN VAN KHANH, PHAN H. HIEN, E. BAUTISTA,
| |
|
| |
| A. SCHMIDLEY, K.LEE, MAI D. BAN. 2004. Testing
| |
| and promotion of a rice mini-combine in Viet Nam.
| |
| Proceedings of the Mekong Rice Conference,
| |
| organized in HoChiMinh City, Viet Nam, 15- 17
| |
| October 2004.
| |
| Journal of Agricultural Sciences and Technology, No 4/2004 Nong Lam University
| |
|
| |
| ===== Development of rice combines in Viet Nam=====
| |
| Phan Hieu Hien, Tran Van Khanh# # , Graeme R. Quick ***
| |
|
| |
| E-mail: phhien@hcm.vnn.vn
| |
|
| |
| This is not a peer-reviewed article.
| |
| Electronic-only Proceedings of the International Conference on Crop Harvesting
| |
| and Processing, 11-14 February 2007 (Louisville, Kentucky USA)
| |
| Publication Date, 11 February 2007.
| |
| ASABE Publication Number 701P0307e
| |
|
| |
| ABSTRACT
| |
|
| |
| Rice combine development in Viet Nam, especially in the Mekong Delta in the South, has been a
| |
| slow process. Mechanized farm equipment is accepted only if it matches local agricultural
| |
| conditions technically and economically. Earlier attempts at bringing in or developing combines
| |
| by Central research institutes, Provincial factories, and farmer-mechanics were unsuccessful at
| |
| actual scale operation. Three main problems were encountered over the past 20 years:
| |
|
| |
| (1) Machines working in soft paddy fields bog down, especially heavy Western-style combines.
| |
| (2) Reliability at lowest cost is critical; delays caused by machine breakdowns result in significant
| |
| lost income during the harvest, and unreliability discourages users from adopting new technology.
| |
| (3) Harvesting severely lodged rice crops is challenging, not so much as an engineering problem
| |
| as it is a matter of plant breeding and varietal selection to improve lodging resistance.
| |
| Nevertheless there has been intensive development in the past 5 years by as many as 15 small-
| |
| scale Vietnamese manufacturers. One mini-combine manufacturers has lately sold 90 units to
| |
| private farmers across the country. In 2006 a combine contest was organized by the Vietnamese
| |
| National Testing Agency. Three designs were given “accredited recognition awards”, meaning
| |
| recognition for future promotion through the governmental Extension system. The recent
| |
| development of mini-combines follows.
| |
|
| |
| Keywords: Combine, Rice Harvesting, Mechanization
| |
|
| |
| INTRODUCTION
| |
|
| |
| Viet Nam is an agricultural country with 82 millions (M) inhabitants in 2005, of which 61 M are
| |
| in rural households. Rice is the most important crop, cultivated on 80 % of the total farm area,
| |
| and rice accounts for 85 % of the country’s food grain output. In 2003 , Viet Nam produced 35
| |
| M ton of paddy on 4.2 M ha of rice land. This total production was four times more than that of
| |
| 1976. Viet Nam is the world’s third largest rice exporter. For the past 10 years, the export of rice
| |
| has been 3 – 4 M tonnes a year.
| |
|
| |
| The Mekong Delta in Southern Viet Nam , with 2.7 M ha of rice land, is producing about 50 %
| |
| of Viet Nam total rice output. With only 17 % of the total population, this region has accounted
| |
| for more than 90 % of Vietnamese rice export in the past decade. Average farm size is about 1
| |
|
| |
| #
| |
| Paper for presentation at the International Conference on Crop Harvesting and Processing,
| |
| February 11-14 2007, Louisville, Kentucky.
| |
|
| |
| # # Lecturers, Nong-Lam University (formerly: University of Agriculture and Forestry), HoChi-
| |
| Minh City, Viet Nam,
| |
|
| |
| *** Consulting Engineer (Queensland, Australia) and Former Head, IRRI Agricultural
| |
| Engineering, Philippines.
| |
|
| |
| �
| |
| ha per household, although in some newly-reclaimed districts, 3 - 10 ha per household is not
| |
| uncommon.
| |
|
| |
| Rice harvesting in the Mekong Delta of Viet Nam is still mostly done manually, but threshing
| |
| was completely mechanized. Over the past 20 years, effort to introduce rice harvest equipment
| |
| in this region have been attempted by different government agencies as well as the private sector,
| |
| from central research institutes to skilled village mechanics. Different alternatives have been
| |
| tried, i.e. the reaper or the combine, but these either failed or were only half-way solutions to the
| |
| problem.
| |
|
| |
| This paper describes the slow process of combine development in the Mekong Delta, identifies
| |
| affecting factors and related problems. Details of the work on a mini-combine, including wheel
| |
| systems for wet soils, and promotion to the industry for manufacturing are presented.
| |
|
| |
| CURRENT STATUS OF RICE HARVESTING AND PROBLEMS
| |
|
| |
| In the Mekong Delta of Viet Nam, as in various parts of South-East Asia, rice harvesting is
| |
| mechanized to varying degrees beyond traditional manual methods. Three types of mechanized
| |
| harvesting are:
| |
|
| |
| 1)
| |
| Manual harvesting + mechanical threshing. More than 95% of rice is threshed mechanically
| |
| by the axial-flow thresher (Phan H. Hien 1991). However, due to lack of technically suitable
| |
| and economically viable methods of mechanically cutting rice plants, local people continue
| |
| to harvest rice manually with a sickle.
| |
|
| |
|
| |
| Figure 1: (a) Rice reaper, made by Long-An Mechanical Factory in 1985…
| |
|
| |
| (b)
| |
| … and one from 3 major reaper manufacturers remaining in 2004;
| |
| (c)
| |
| A combine made by a farmer-mechanics in Dong-Thap Province;
| |
| (d)
| |
| An imported combine under test in 1998.
| |
| 2
| |
|
| |
|
| |
| �
| |
| 2) Mechanical reaper + mechanical threshing. The Chinese windrower reaper was introduced to
| |
| South-East Asia through the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) way back in the
| |
| 1980’s. The IRRI-designed reaper was introduced to Viet Nam in 1984 by the University of
| |
| Agriculture and Forestry (now renamed Nong-Lam University NLU). Commercialization of
| |
| the reaper (Figure 1a) peaked in around 1988 with about 15 manufacturers but there remain
| |
| only three manufacturers producing 100-200 units per year each in the year 2000. (Figure 1b)
| |
| Reaper adoption did not expand rapidly because it was only a partial solution. Manual
| |
| gathering of the cut windrows still cost about 2/3 of the traditional hand cutting-gathering.
| |
| Besides, the long-length cut of the plants is less suited to mechanical threshing, unlike
| |
| manually harvested crops.
| |
|
| |
| 3) Combine. (See Next Section)
| |
|
| |
| COMBINE DEVELOPMENT
| |
|
| |
| Unlike Thailand, the only country in South-East Asia with some success in adapting the combine
| |
| (with about 8000 units of Western-style Thai-made units in use), the introduction of such large
| |
| combines have encountered three major problems in Viet Nam:
| |
|
| |
| (1) Soft soils. Most local combine weights 1.2– 2 tonnes while imported models weigh 4– 11
| |
| tonnes. Such heavy machines easily bog down in soft soils. Even during the dry-season
| |
| harvest, a seemingly dry field with a localized soft spot can render a heavy combine helpless
| |
| in areas which may not have access roads for a rescue vehicle (Fig.1c and 1d). This is the
| |
| main reason that has failed many researchers and engineers; one researcher has even
| |
| concluded that there is no “dry soil” in the Mekong Delta as far as the combine is concerned.
| |
| Many people now maintain that, for a large combine-harvester to work, the field must be
| |
| well irrigated and drained, and should be large enough for the machine to easily maneuver.
| |
| This sounds logical, except that the investment to implement such requirement for combine
| |
| operation is too big to be drawn from the agriculture itself, a condition for a sustainable
| |
| progress of a developing country.
| |
| (2) Frequent break-downs. Quality is often lacking in one-off manufacture by village
| |
| mechanics, and such combines breakdown. Each break-down cost hours or days to repair; a
| |
| week’s repair time means significant lost income during the harvest season. Unreliability
| |
| discouraged users from adopting new technologies. Thus, reliability at lowest cost is critical.
| |
| The frequent breakdown of combines can be addressed through improved manufacturing and
| |
| continuous design improvement with due consideration to added costs. A workable initial
| |
| design, competent local manufacturer, close monitoring of field operation, and after-sales
| |
| service support are all essential for the realization of a new technology.
| |
| (3) Lodged crops. Rice lodging is often caused by extreme climatic conditions such as typhoons
| |
| or floods and attempts to develop a combine that can harvest severely lodged crops have
| |
| been unsuccessful. Plant breeders and agronomists need to improve lodging resistance of rice
| |
| varieties. However, a partially-lodged field area, say 10 % lodged, means that 90 % of the
| |
| field is still available for combine harvesting, particularly if the combine is small enough to
| |
| circumvent severely lodged spots that can be manually harvested.
| |
| These are the three reasons why combine development in the Mekong Delta of Vietnam has
| |
| been slow over the past 20 years. Things are changing however in the last 5 years.
| |
|
| |
| 3
| |
|
| |
|
| |
| �
| |
| 1980- 1999
| |
|
| |
| Between 1980 and 1999, several combines were developed by Central research institutes,
| |
| Provincial factories, and even farmer-mechanics. Attention was focused in 1997 when the
| |
| Vietnamese Ministry of Agriculture organized a combine contest in Can-Tho Province, the heart
| |
| of the Mekong Delta. Seven models participated, several locally made combine that were
| |
| heavier than 2 tonnes, and one 5-tonne European combine. All bogged down in soft soils, except
| |
| for a second-hand Japanese head-fed combine that weighed around 1 tonne. All bogged down in
| |
| soft soils, except one second-hand Japanese head-fed combine weighing around 1 ton. About ten
| |
| of these “light weight” combines were later sold by some trading companies. But these secondhand
| |
| units quickly broke down in the first harvest season; spare parts were not available as they
| |
| had been no longer fabricated in Japan; so these combines were junked. Among “best” locally
| |
| made combines, the manufacturer was able to sell a few units; but again after one harvest season,
| |
| buyers returned the machine to the manufacturer because of frequent breakdowns; each time
| |
| requiring a severak critical days for repair. A one-week downtime meant that half of the peak
| |
| harvest season was missed in the area. That meant significant lost harvest income as rice quality
| |
| deteriorates when not harvested at the optimal time (Quick, 2003).
| |
|
| |
| 2000- Present
| |
|
| |
| Since 2000, the Vietnamese economy has demonstrated rapid growth, and as a consequence
| |
| harvest labor has become a serious problem. Rural people prefer higher-paying jobs at
| |
| construction sites or other industrial jobs. This has motiovated researchers and manufacturers to
| |
| renew efforts at promoting combines, this time with experience learnt from the earlier efforts.
| |
| From 2000, about 15 small-scale combine manufacturers have tried their products. A combine
| |
| contest was organized in 2006 by the Vietnamese National Testing Agency (Fig. 2). Eight local
| |
| models and one Chinese imported model presented. Unlike the previous contest, these machines
| |
| had been used by the manufacturers for harvesting their own rice or else extensively tested.
| |
| Some manufacturers had sold up to a dozen units before entering the contest. From the contest,
| |
| three designs were given “accredited recognition awards”, meaning recognition and future
| |
| promotion through the governmental Extension system. Two winners were the local Chin-
| |
| Nghia 1500-kg combine, and a 2300-kg Chinese imported combine. The third was a 600-kg
| |
| “mini-combine” with several distinctive features, which are described in the following Section.
| |
|
| |
|
| |
| Figure 2: Combines at the contest in Can-Tho Province, 2006.
| |
|
| |
| 4
| |
|
| |
|
| |
| �
| |
| THE MINI-COMBINE
| |
|
| |
| Design
| |
|
| |
| The NLU Center for Agricultural Energy and Machinery (CAEM) was established in 2001 and
| |
| began research to improve rice harvesting methods and conditions in Viet Nam. Different
| |
| surveys resulted in a database, including hundreds of pictures. In 2003, the Philippine Rice
| |
| Research Institute (PhilRice) shared a design of a light-weight 600 kg mini-combine, to continue
| |
| a long tradition of cooperation between NLU and the Institute in the area of Agricultural
| |
| Engineering. The mini-combine project was sponsored by Briggs & Stratton Corporation, a U.S
| |
| leading gasoline manufacturer.
| |
|
| |
| The initial design came from China. In 2003, PhilRice re-designed and improved key functions
| |
| adding significant improvements to the prototypes, which were then transferred to NLU for
| |
| testing in Viet Nam. This is based on a tricycle undercarriage, and uses a Western-style
| |
| combine open front gathering head (Fig. 2a), to feed a conveyor that brings the cut plants
| |
| towards an axial-flow thresher. The cleaning of paddy is done beneath the thresher concave by
| |
| an oscillating screen and a fan, similar to the IRRI axial-flow threshers (Quick, 1998), before the
| |
| paddy grain is conveyed upwards for bagging (Bautista &Schmidley 2004). The combine is
| |
| powered by a 16-HP B&S gasoline engine that weighs 40 kg.
| |
|
| |
| In Viet Nam, design adaptation by the NLU included: a) identifying areas for strengthening and
| |
| optimizing design performance and reliability; and b) comparing different traction wheel designs
| |
| for wet soft soils. The NLU believes problems of combine harvesting in Viet Nam are “of the
| |
| earth, and not of the air”, that is to say, they are more concerned about soil and wheel
| |
| interactions rather than the working principles and components which are already common
| |
| knowledge.
| |
|
| |
| After evaluation and further “fine-tuning” of the prototype, the design was transferred to the Viet
| |
| Nam Agricultural Power Company (VINAPPRO), a leading manufacturer of diesel engines and
| |
| other machinery, who then fabricated two units for local field testing and evaluation, before
| |
| deciding to go on with mass production.
| |
|
| |
| Testing
| |
|
| |
| In 2004, the mini-combines were tested in different provinces, first for exploring the working
| |
| capabilities of the PhilRice unit (Fig.3a), then for measuring the performance of the Vinappro
| |
| units in wet conditions (Fig.3b), and for durability evaluation
| |
|
| |
| Seven different traction types and variants were tested for trafficability (Figures 4), namely:
| |
| 1)rubber tyres, 2)dual rubber tyres, 3)steel cage wheels, 4)original pyramid-shaped lug wheels
| |
| with 10 lugs/wheel, 5)pyramid-shaped lug wheels with12 lugs/wheel, 6)wider pyramid-shaped
| |
| lug wheels with 12 lugs/wheel, and 7)retractable lugs mounted next to rubber tyre.
| |
|
| |
| Standard test instruments and a penetrometer (ASAE 1994) to measure the hardness of soil, were
| |
| used in the tests.
| |
|
| |
| Results
| |
|
| |
| The performance and specifications of the combine are summarized in Table 1 (Tran V. Khanh
| |
| et.al 2004); the field tests were conducted under different soil and crop conditions. Average
| |
|
| |
| 5
| |
|
| |
|
| |
| �
| |
| harvest was one hectare per day. The total losses ranged at 1.0 – 1.4 per cent, and never
| |
| exceeded 2 per cent.
| |
|
| |
|
| |
| (a) (b)
| |
| Figure 3: a) The 600-kg mini-combine prototype from PhilRice (Tran V. Khanh et.al 2004).
| |
| b) Mini-combines in DongThap; both units are made in Viet Nam by Vinappro.
| |
| Table 1: Mini- combine performance and specifications
| |
|
| |
| Working width : 1.2 m maximum
| |
| Working speed : 1.5 – 2.1 km/hr
| |
| Idle travel speed : 2.0 – 5.0 km/hr
| |
| Working time utilization efficiency : 70 – 80 %
| |
| Field capacity : 1 ha /day (0.9 – 1.3)
| |
| Cutting height : Adjustable 0.1 – 0.4 m
| |
| Combined losses (shattering, unthreshed
| |
| and separating) : < 2.0 %
| |
| Power requirement : 16-HP B&S gasoline engine
| |
| Fuel consumption : 15 Liter/ ha
| |
| Labor requirement : 5: one driver, one bagger, and three
| |
| haulers of grain bags to levees.
| |
| Traction: Semi-dry soil :
| |
| Soft, wet soil :
| |
| Rubber tyres 6.00 x 12
| |
| Pyramid-shaped lug wheel, or
| |
| Retractable lugs + rubber tyre
| |
| Overall dimensions (L x W x H) : 3.5 m * 1.5 m * 1.5m
| |
| Net weight: 600 kg
| |
|
| |
| Trafficability Tests, among the 7 types of wheels:
| |
|
| |
| The tests indicated that, on dry soils, the rubber tyres were most suitable in terms of both traction
| |
| and vibration of the machine. However, in soft and wet soils, the pyramid-shaped lug wheels
| |
| (Fig. 3a) could manage soft soils with penetration resistance of more than 0.4 MPa. The
| |
| retractable lugs mounted to rubber tyres proved to be the most useful in soft soil. Rubber tyres
| |
| provided floatation, while the lugs provided both traction and flotation (Fig.3b).
| |
|
| |
| On soft soils, the light weight of the combine proved to be an critical advantage. If the machine
| |
| was about to sink, the bag laborer in the rear seat could jump off temporarily to reduce machine
| |
| load, to allow the mini-combine to pass through soft spots while maintaining operation. In
| |
| extremely soft conditions where there was occasional bogging down, the problem was overcome
| |
|
| |
| 6
| |
|
| |
|
| |
| �
| |
| within minutes by seven people, who simply lifted and pulled the combine out of the trouble spot
| |
| (Fig. 3f). No other combines could be managed that way!
| |
|
| |
| As for reliability, the mini-combine was operated on 15 hectares, before transferring the design
| |
| to industrial production. During the tests, breakdowns and troubles occurred, such as shear of
| |
| cotter pin of the steering wheel, failure of the rear U-fork..., but these were considered minor and
| |
| were immediately fixed in the field or by small village mechanics. Nevertheless, this indicates
| |
| more attention is needed during local manufacturing.
| |
|
| |
|
| |
| Figure 4: (a) The pyramid-shaped lug wheel; (b) Retractable lugs mounted adjacent to rubber tyre;
| |
|
| |
| (c) Dual tyre blocked with clay; (d) The cage wheel; (e) The combine is easily lifted for changing wheels;
| |
| (f) Bogged-down combine on soft soil was simply pulled out by 7 people. (Tran V. Khanh et.al 2004).
| |
| 7
| |
|
| |
|
| |
| �
| |
| Mini-combine commercialization
| |
|
| |
| The VINAPPRO Company produced a total of 90 units between 2005-2006. Apart from a few
| |
| units that went to state agencies for extension, the majority of these combines were bought by
| |
| private farmer-contractors with their own money. Four users placed repeat orders, each for a
| |
| second unit after the first unit had harvested some hundreds of hectares. All these are positive
| |
| indicators that the mini-combine is following the well-known mechanization pattern in the
| |
| Mekong Delta, where the machine is owned by the service provider. A small farmer owning
| |
| only 1 ha buys an 80-HP tractor, plows his field for one day or less, and next plows for 100 other
| |
| farmers on a contract basis. In the same way, the contractors harvest, thresh and dry paddy.
| |
|
| |
| Cost calculations
| |
|
| |
| In 2006, the sale price of a mini-combine from the production line was US$ 2900 ###. Other
| |
| data and assumptions are listed in Table 2 for estimating the cost of machine use.
| |
|
| |
|
| Table 2: Data and assumptions for estimating the cost of machine use (Tran V. Khanh et.al 2004).
| |
|
| |
| Purchase price : US$ 2900 (˜ 46 000 000 VND)
| |
| Life : 3000 hours / 6 years (#1)
| |
| Interest rate : 10 % / year
| |
| Working capacity : 1.0 ha /day
| |
| Fuel consumption (gasoline) : 15 Liter /ha
| |
| Fuel price US$ 0.63 / liter
| |
| Lubricants and filters… (as % fuel cost): 15 % fuel
| |
| Labor: Driver: (Number) * Daily wage: (1) * US$ 2.2
| |
| Bagger &Hauling laborer: (Number) * Daily wage: (4) * US$ 1.6
| |
| Total Repair & M. cost ( as % Purchase price): 40 %
| |
|
| |
| Note: (#1) 3000-hr life ˜ 6 yrs * 3 crop seasons/ year * 17 days/ season * 10 hrs/ day.
| |
|
| |
| Based on the above data, cost of using the mini-combine is calculated and summarized in
| |
| Table 3 and Figure 5.
| |
|
| |
| ### For the convenience of overseas readers, all monetary numbers in Vietnamese Dong
| |
| are converted to US$, with the conversion rate in 2006: 1 US$ ˜ 16 000 VND
| |
|
| |
| 8
| |
|
| |
|
| |
| �
| |
| Table 3: Cost of use for the mini-combine
| |
|
| |
| Cost US$ /ha
| |
| Depreciation 5.3
| |
| Interest 1.6
| |
| Gasoline 11.8
| |
| Labor 7.2
| |
| Repair 2.1
| |
| Total
| |
| US$ per hectare
| |
| 27.6
| |
| ˜
| |
| 28
| |
|
| |
| Cost of use, Mini-combine
| |
|
| |
| Deprecia
| |
|
| |
| Repair
| |
|
| |
| tion
| |
|
| |
| 19%
| |
| Labor Interest
| |
| 26% 6%
| |
|
| |
| 41%
| |
|
| |
| Gasoline
| |
| 8%
| |
| Figure 5: Distribution of utilization cost ( Total = US$ 27.6 )
| |
|
| |
| Comparing Costs with current harvesting methods
| |
|
| |
| The most common harvesting method in the Mekong Delta of Viet Nam is manual harvesting +
| |
| mechanical threshing. Depending on the province, rice yield, and cropping season (dry or wet
| |
| harvest), the total cost in 2004 of existing methods ranged from US$ 45 to 60 per hectare, with
| |
| about 60% representing cutting and gathering costs and 40% for threshing costs.
| |
|
| |
| Thus the total cost of US$ 28 /ha for the mini-combine represents a substantial cost reduction of
| |
| 38 to 53 percent, compared to current practices. This is significant, considering that this saving
| |
| alone is the equivalent of 15% of the profit from a typical hectare of rice.
| |
|
| |
| Moreover, the labor requirement is appreciably reduced by the combine. The current harvesting
| |
| and threshing system normally requires dozens of laborers and up to 150 man-hours per hectare,
| |
| against five people and 40 man-hours per hectare with the combine.
| |
|
| |
| 9
| |
|
| |
|
| |
| �
| |
| CONCLUSIONS
| |
|
| |
| Rice combine development in the Mekong Delta of Viet Nam over the past 20 years has been a
| |
| slow process, following the introduction of axial threshers and reapers. Three problems affect
| |
| the combine adoption: (a) soft soils; (b) machine reliability, and (c) lodged rice crops. Early
| |
| attempts in the 1980’s and 1990’s by different agencies and the private sector were unsuccessful
| |
| at actual scale operation. Since 2000’s severe labor shortage for rice harvesting has prompted
| |
| intensive development by several small-scale combine manufacturers. Three combine brands
| |
| gained the “accredited recognition awards” during a combine contest in 2006; these 3 companies
| |
| have commercialized their combines. Particularly, the Vinappro Company has sold 90
| |
| mini-combines. This 600-kg combine was adapted from an initial design from China, with
| |
| modifications of the cleaning system by PhilRice. Durability testing and improvement of the
| |
| wheels for soft soils were made by NLU in Viet Nam before transferring the design to industry.
| |
| The combine represents a good step forward in Viet Nam.
| |
|
| |
| Acknowledgements
| |
|
| |
| The authors wish to thank Dr. Wesley Buchele for his encouragement to submit this paper for
| |
| ASBAE 2007 International Conference on Crop Harvesting and Processing.
| |
|
| |
| REFERENCES
| |
|
| |
| ASAE. 1995. ASAE Standards 1994. American Society of Agricultural Engineers, St. Joseph,
| |
| Michigan, U.S.A.
| |
|
| |
| BAUTISTA, E.U., A. SCHMIDLEY. 2004. PhilRice-B&S Collaboration: Building partnerships
| |
| across Asia. Paper presented at the Philippine Rice R&D Conference, PhilRice, Nueva Ecija.,
| |
| April 2004.
| |
|
| |
| PHAN HIEU HIEN. 1991. Development of the axial-flow thresher in Southern Vietnam.
| |
| Agricultural Mechanization in Asia J. Vol.22 No4 pp.42-46.
| |
|
| |
| QUICK, G.R. 1998. Global assessment of power threshers for rice. Agricultural Mechanization
| |
| in Asia J. Vol.29 No3 pp.47-54.
| |
|
| |
| QUICK, G.R. 2003. Rice Harvesting. Chapter pp 491-542, in: Rice. The Monograph, by Wiley
| |
| & Sons, New York.
| |
|
| |
| TRAN VAN KHANH, P.H. HIEN, E. BAUTISTA, A. SCHMIDLEY, K. LEE, M.D. BAN.
| |
| Testing and promotion of a rice mini-combine in Viet Nam. Proceedings of the Mekong Rice
| |
| Conference, HoChiMinh City, Viet Nam, 15- 17 October 2004.
| |
|
| |
| 10
| |
|
| |
|
| == Combine - Sign-in== | | == Combine - Sign-in== |
Line 1,151: |
Line 151: |
| *John | | *John |
| *[[User:Mjn]] | | *[[User:Mjn]] |
| | |
| | |
| | =See Also= |
| | *[[Combine Research Paper]] |
| | *[http://www.indiamart.com/north-agro-industries/tractor-combine.html Tractor Combine] |
| | *[http://www.firstbtob.com/products/1143108/Wheat-Combine-Harvester-mounted-on-the-tractor.html Wheat Harvester] |