Agricultural Microcombine: Difference between revisions
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1949 Popular Mechanics magazine with cutaway picture of a self-propelled combine of its era, plus pictures of two small miniature reapers at work on extension experimental farms. | 1949 Popular Mechanics magazine with cutaway picture of a self-propelled combine of its era, plus pictures of two small miniature reapers at work on extension experimental farms. | ||
http://tinyurl.com/3k3func | http://tinyurl.com/3k3func | ||
1937 picture of a self-propelled cutting header, Australia | |||
http://museumvictoria.com.au/sunshine/displayimage.asp?iid=13350 | |||
More early designed, 1885 to 1930s, from Australia | |||
http://museumvictoria.com.au/sunshine/displaysubtheme.asp?stid=4&tid=2 | |||
Pictures of threshers, northern Great Plains of the US, 1890s through 1940s. | |||
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/award97/ndfahtml/ngpSubjects21.html | |||
=== Combine - Specific=== | === Combine - Specific=== |
Revision as of 06:11, 26 April 2011
Main > Food and Agriculture > Farm equipment
Agricultural Microcombine (Combine) - a combine is a complex device that cuts, threshes, and winnows grains and field crops of all sorts. Modern combines are huge devices today, and a smaller one is desirable for a small farm. This is not to say that this design should not be scaleable to larger size, as required to feed larger populations effectively. We propose a hybrid combine, with all parts driven by separate, infinitely speed controllable motors. This eliminates all pulleys and complexity of a single power source powering the entire modern combine. The key here is availability of cost-effective motors and controls, where today, motor controls are prohibitively expensive for such a proposition. OS changes this. With a microcombine under the control of the operator, expensive maintenance is avoided, and full food sufficiency becomes feasible on the tens-of-acres scale.
Collaboration
This project is now open for work. Please contribute your expertise to any of the work categories identified in this section. At this stage of the project, everything is needed. Please pass the word along, together with the direct url for this project, to others who may benefit from the activation of this research and development project. Note also that development funds are needed. The best way to contribute is by becoming a True Fan and making a monthly donation. A True Fan donation may be made at this page -- http://openfarmtech.org/wiki/Donate .
Review of Project Status
The status of the project is "We are getting started now, as of April 25, 2011.
Combine - Current Work
Combine - Developments Needed
Combine - General
Wikipedia article on combines -- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combine_harvester
1949 Popular Mechanics magazine with cutaway picture of a self-propelled combine of its era, plus pictures of two small miniature reapers at work on extension experimental farms. http://tinyurl.com/3k3func
1937 picture of a self-propelled cutting header, Australia http://museumvictoria.com.au/sunshine/displayimage.asp?iid=13350
More early designed, 1885 to 1930s, from Australia http://museumvictoria.com.au/sunshine/displaysubtheme.asp?stid=4&tid=2
Pictures of threshers, northern Great Plains of the US, 1890s through 1940s. http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/award97/ndfahtml/ngpSubjects21.html
Combine - Specific
Combine - Background Debriefing
Combine - Information Work
Combine - Hardware Work
Combine - Sign-in
Development Work Template
- Combine - Product Definition
- Combine - Technical Design
- Combine - Deployment and Results
- Combine - Documentation and Education
- Combine - Resource Development
- Combine - Identifying Stakeholders
- Combine - Grantwriting
- Combine - Collaborative Stakeholder Funding
- Combine - Tool and Material Donations
- Combine - Charitable Contributions