A trailer vehicle for distributing a fertilizing manure slurry to a field which includes a slurry distribution assembly mounted to the tear of the vehicle having four slurry distribution units, each with three plow teeth and a slurry distribution nozzle associated with the teeth for feeding the slurry at root level in the soil. The distribution assembly includes an elongated manifold with four flexible conduits extending from the manifold to each nozzle on the distribution units. The manifold communicates with the slurry tank. The trailer vehicle can also have a special suspension to maintain the tank relatively level. The trailer has three sets of wheels which are articulated in tandem, and the rear wheels of the trailer can be steered in the arc traced by the motive vehicle pulling the trailer. The tank includes an annular wall defining an impeller pump area and a door is hinged to the annular wall. An impeller pump wheel is mounted on the door in the pump area which pumps slurry to the distribution assembly.
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0. 4. In an apparatus for spreading a liquid, including a vehicle and a holding tank mounted on the vehicle, wherein the holding tank includes at least a wall and an opening located on the wall near the bottom of the holding tank, an annular flange defining an impeller pump area surrounds the opening and a swingable door disposed on the annular flange surrounding the opening, and impeller pump wheel mounted on the door in the pump area facing the opening and an outlet pipe communicating through the annular flange with the impeller pump area such that the liquid in the holding tank can be pumped through the outlet pipe by rotating the impeller pump wheel on the door.
0. 3. In an apparatus for spreading a liquid, including a vehicle and a holding tank mounted on the vehicle, wherein the holding tank includes at least a wall and an opening located on the wall near the bottom of the holding tank, an annular flange defining an impeller pump area surrounds the opening and a door disposed on the annular flange surrounding the opening, an impeller pump wheel mounted on the door in the pump area facing the opening and an outlet pipe communicating through the annular flange with the impeller pump area such that the liquid in the holding tank can be pumped through the outlet pipe by rotating the impeller pump wheel on the door, and further wherein the door includes a handle comprising a cam member pivotally mounted to the annular flange, wherein said cam member is adapted to engage the door when it is closed in order to firmly close the door against the annular flange and thereby seal the tank and the impeller pump area.
0. 1. In an apparatus for spreading fertilizer slurry, including a vehicle and a holding tank mounted on the vehicle, wherein the holding tank includes at least a front wall and an opening located on the front wall near the bottom of the holding tank, and an annular wall defining an impeller pump area surrounds the opening and a door is hinged to the annular wall and closes on the annular wall surrounding the opening, an impeller pump wheel mounted on the door in the pump area facing the opening and an outlet pipe communicating through the annular wall with the impeller pump area such that slurry in the holding tank can be pumped through the outlet pipe by rotating the impeller pump wheel in the door.
2. In an apparatus for spreading fertilizer a liquid, including a vehicle and a holding tank mounted on the vehicle, wherein the holding tank includes at least a wall and an opening located on the wall near the bottom of the holding tank, an annular flange defining an impeller pump area surrounds the opening and a door closing on the annular flange surrounding the opening, an impeller pump wheel mounted on the door in the pump area facing the opening and an outlet pipe communicating through the annular flange with the impeller pump area such that the liquid in the holding tank can be pumped through the outlet pipe by rotating the impeller pump wheel on the door, and further as defined in
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This is a divisional of application Ser. No. 08/328,422 filed Oct. 25, 1994, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,595,347, which is a divisional of Ser. No. 07/903,455 filed Jun. 24, 1992, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,357,883, which is a continuation-in-part of Ser. No. 07/857,426 filed Mar. 24, 1992, now abandoned.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a method and apparatus for spreading a liquid slurry, and more particularly, to spreading fertilizer in a field.
2. Description of the Prior Art
It is quite common for farmers to collect animal manure in a lagoon next to a barn in which animals are kept, and to recycle the manure as fertilizer far vegetable growing fields, such as in corn fields or the like. Presently, the manure is pumped from the lagoon as a slurry (using a pumping device as described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,594,006, issued Jun. 10, 1986, and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 434,909, filed Nov. 9, 1989 in the name of the applicant), into a tank mounted on a vehicle, and the vehicle, either self propelled or a trailer drawn by a farm tractor, is passed through a corn field spreading the slurry on the soil surface. In some cases, particularly if the stalks of corn have sprouted above the ground surface, in rows, coinciding with the planting furrows, care is taken to ensure that the vehicle wheels pass in paths between the furrows, and the delivery of the manure slurry is directed by nozzles onto the paths between the furrows.
In these cases, the manure is spread on the surface and thus the fertilization is dependent on the amount of slurry which seeps or leaches into the earth, assuming it does not get washed away by rain water or drained because of the slope of the land.
It is an aim of the present invention to provide an improved apparatus for spreading a slurry of fertilizer in a growing field.
It is a further aim of the present invention to introduce the slurry of fertilizer mechanically below the soil surface, preferably at root level.
It is a further aim of the present invention to provide an improved suspension system for a vehicle.
It is a still further aim of the present invention to provide an improved method of growing corn and like vegetables.
An apparatus in accordance with the present invention comprises a vehicle having a chassis with a front end and a rear end, a slurry holding tank on the chassis between the front end and rear end a slurry distributing assembly mounted on the chassis at the rear end thereof, and means for moving the assembly between a storage position wherein the slurry distributing assembly is inoperative and an application position wherein the slurry distributing assembly is operative. The slurry distributing assembly includes a frame mounted to the chassis and at least a slurry distributing unit having a plow beam mounted on the frame and having an axis parallel to the longitudinal axis of the vehicle; a plurality of plow means mounted on the beam and one of the plow means is a colter tooth with the other plow means spaced apart rearwardly thereof on the beam; a slurry nozzle mounted to the beam and interspaced with the plow means, behind the colter tooth, with the nozzle facing downwardly towards the soil when the frame is in the application position; conduit means communicating the holding tank and the nozzle means, and pump means delivering the slurry to the nozzle from the tank whereby the soil may be furrowed by at least the colter tooth when the assembly is in an application position and slurry can be delivered into the so-formed furrow.
In a more specific embodiment, the frame includes a sub-frame rotatable about a hinge axis extending laterally of the rear end of the chassis, and an actuation means for rotating the sub-frame about the hinge axis between the application position and the storage position. The slurry distributing assembly is mounted on the sub-frame.
More specifically, the hinge axis is included in a shaft, and the sub-frame further includes a bracket extending radially from the shaft and downwardly when in the application position, and an arm extends radially, rearwardly of the shaft, at an acute angle and within the same plane as the bracket. The beam is pivotally connected to the free end of the arm remote from the shaft, and the beam is associated with the bracket far limited pivoting movement relative to the arm. A wheel is provided at the front end of the beam adapted to contact the soil to support the beam when the slurry distributing assembly is in the application position.
In another embodiment, the sub-frame may include a first bracket mounted for rotation on the shaft and a second bracket mounted on the plow beam and a parallelogram linkage between the first and second brackets such that the plow beam and the second bracket can move vertically relative to the first bracket.
In a more specific embodiment, there are several sub-frames mounting independent slurry distribution units mounted on the shaft in laterally, spaced-apart relation with the spacing approximating the distance between paths.
In a method in accordance with the present invention, there are provided the steps of seeding a field with vegetable seeds and placing the seeds in longitudinal, spaced-apart rows forming paths therebetween, allowing the seeds to sprout their stalks through the top surface of the soil, forming temporary furrows in the paths and immediately injecting a fertilizing slurry in the temporary furrows at root level and closing the furrows. More specifically, the fertilizer is a manure slurry
In another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a suspension system for a vehicle wherein the vehicle is a trailer and mounts a manure slurry tank on a chassis, the chassis including a hitch pole at the front end thereof and a manure slurry distribution assembly at the rear end of the chassis, at least three sets of wheels in tandem mounted to the chassis by having a first axle extending laterally of the chassis and a first beam pivotally mounted about the axis of the axle on either side of the chassis, each first beam mounting wheel means at the rear free end thereof and mounting a second wheel mounting beam at the front free end thereof, each second beam mounting a wheel at each front and rear ends thereof.
In another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a trailer including a chassis including a hitch pole extending longitudinally at the front thereof and an articulated hitch pole extension at the front end of the hitch pole and adapted to be connected to a motive vehicle, at least three sets of wheels mounted to the chassis with the rear set of wheels being articulated about respective vertical axes, an action-reaction communication means between the hitch pole and the hitch pole extension communicating with actuation means on the chassis for providing opposite articulation of the rear set of wheels such that the trailer will follow an arc traced by the motive vehicle to which the hitch pole extension is connected.
Having thus generally described the nature of the invention, reference will now be made to the accompanying drawings, showing by way of illustration, a preferred embodiment thereof, and in which:
Referring now to the drawings, and in particular
In the present embodiment, there are three plow teeth including a colter 32 and teeth 34 and 36 mounted to the plow beam 26. The colter 32 and plow teeth 34, 36 are clamped at their upper end to the plow beam 26 by brackets 56, and each tooth has an S shape which allows a spring action. These plow teeth are arranged on alternate sides of the plow beam 26a. The colter 32 breaks the surface of the ground to allow the manure to be distributed and fed directly to root level by means of a furrow created by the colter 32. The downstream teeth 34 and 36 are offset and will tend to cover the furrow opened by colter 32.
An idler wheel 52 is mounted at the front end of plow beam 26 in order to guide the plow beam 26 over the terrain somewhat independently of the vehicle so that the plow teeth follow the contours of the terrain as discerned by the wheel 52.
The plow beam 26 is urged downwardly in the bracket 28 rotating clockwise about the pivot 54, by gravity.
The arm 30 and the bracket 28 are urged downwardly by means of a spring 50 which is attached to an intermediate point of the arm 30 at 60 and is anchored to a bracket 58 fixedly mounted to shaft 22.
A stopper pin 68 is mounted on the sleeve 22a, and thus the sleeve is limited in its downward movement by abutting against a portion of bracket 58. The spring 50 urges arm 30 on sleeve 22a to rotate counterclockwise (as shown in FIG. 2).
A tubular foot 42 with a shoe-shaped nozzle 40 is provided at the end of the beam 26. The foot 42 communicates with manifold 20 by way of a flexible tube 44. As can be seen in
A sub-frame 48 is mounted to frame 18 in order to suspend the piston and cylinder arrangement 46 shown in
Referring now to
As shown in
Referring now to
In operation, as the slurry passes through the conduit 62 into the manifold 220, it will fill the manifold. Solid chunks of manure pass with the slurry and could block the pipes 244. The screws 238 force the break-up of such solids and keep the pipe sections 244 clear for the passage of the slurry. Thus, the slurry can move freely to the various distribution Assemblies 14a through 14d, 14x and 14y.
In
A lever 240 is illustrated in
Colter 270 and plow teeth 272 and 274 are mounted to the plow beam 262, similarly to that described in FIG. 2. Shoe-shaped nozzle 258 is mounted to the plow beam 262 and communicates with flexible tube 44a. Idler wheel 266 is mounted on bracket 268.
The parallelogram linkage, represented by links 252, 254, will operate to allow the plow beam 262 to reciprocate vertically when the idler wheel or colter 270 engages an obstacle in its path. The plow beam, rather than pivot as shown in
The door 170 is hinged on the annular wall 174 by means of hinge 160. A removable handle 184 includes pivot pins 188 adapted to engage brackets 178 and 180. An offset cam member 182 is provided as part of handle 184 to engage and lock door 170 against annular wall 174.
As mentioned previously, the return pipe 70 returns the slurry to the top of the tank 16 into a holding box 150 provided with a pair of hinged leaves 152 and 154 pivoted on opposite sides of the box 150 and adapted to form the bottom wall of the box. The leaves 152 and 154 are provided with counterweights 156 and 158 respectively. The leaves are normally in a closed position, as shown in dotted lines in
Referring now to
In the present embodiment, there are three sets of wheels 74a and b, 76a and b, and 78a and b. The suspension arrangement of these wheels will now be described. An axle 88 is mounted to the chassis 80, and a wheel mounting beam 90a and 90b is pivoted at each end thereof. The wheel assemblies 78a and 78b are mounted at the rear ends of beams 90a and 90b respectively. Pivot shafts 94a and 94b are provided at the front free ends of beams 90a and 90b and mount the wheel mounting beams 92a and 92b respectively. Wheel mounting beams 92a and 92b mount wheels 76a and 76b at the rear ends thereof while wheels 74a and 74b are mounted to the front free ends of beams 92a and 92b.
Thus, when viewed from the side, as shown in
Likewise, when the wheel 76a encounters the same obstacle, as shown in
Also incorporated in the suspension is a trailing wheel articulation system which is responsive to the direction of movement of the tractor vehicle pulling the trailer.
Referring now to
The ends of the beams 90a and 90b are connected to the chassis member 104 by means of hinge brackets 109a pivoted at pivot pin 107a in a lost-motion slot. This is best seen in FIG. 20. Guide members 105a and 105b enable the ends of the beams 90a and 90b to sit properly in the prescribed location on the chassis members 104. The hinging, brackets 109a and 109b allow some independent movement of the wheels 78a and 78b relative to each other.
A piston and cylinder arrangement 110 is provided with one end mounted to a bracket 108a and the other end thereof connected to a bracket on chassis member 104. There is hydraulic communication between opposite cylinder chambers in the piston and cylinder arrangement 84 and piston and cylinder arrangement 110. Thus, as seen in
It has also been contemplated to provide four sets of wheels on the trailer 10 with the front wheels 74a and b and the rear set of wheels 175a and b being articulated.
In a four-wheel suspension system as shown in
The tank 16 may be mounted in a manner to provide quick replacement of the tank, and this could be provided by having elongated right-angle rail seats 81a and 81b, as shown in
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