Microcombine: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
==Product Ecology== | ==Product Ecology== | ||
'''Uses''' | '''Uses''' | ||
* | *{{Furnace}} - Steel | ||
* | *{{Torch Table}} - Parts | ||
* | *{{Power Cube}} - Power | ||
* | *{{Multimachine}} - Precision Parts | ||
* | *{{Hydraulic Motor}} - Movement | ||
* | *{{Tractor}} - Mounting | ||
==Components== | ==Components== |
Revision as of 00:47, 24 September 2011
Microcombine | ||
---|---|---|
Home | Research & Development | Bill of Materials | Manufacturing Instructions | User's Manual | User Reviews | ![]() |
Overview
Agricultural Microcombine (Combine) - a combine is a complex device that cuts, threshes, and winnows grains and field crops of all sorts.
Details
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.
Product Ecology
Uses
Induction Furnace - Steel
CNC Torch Table - Parts
Power Cube - Power
Multimachine - Precision Parts
Hydraulic Motor - Movement
Tractor - Mounting
Components
Status
Current work includes getting information from grain and bean farmers about their needs for a microcombine, the operation modes they'd like, etc. and surveying any commercial equipment available that is similar in scope/scale.
See Also