A seed singulator for use with a vacuum disk having a seed face and a shoulder. The seed singulator has a first member and a second member supported by biasing members. The first member has upper lobes disposed at a radius of curvature slightly less than the outside radius of a row of apertures on a seed plane of the vacuum disk. The seed member has lower lobes disposed at a radius of curvature slightly greater than the inside radius than the row of apradius. The biasing members permit the lobes to move with the seed plane and the shoulder as the vacuum disk rotates thereby maintaining their position with respect to the apertures.
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0. 15. In combination, a seed singulator and a vacuum disk, the vacuum disk having a row of apertures at a radius r1 from a center of the vacuum disk, a radius r2 to the outside of the apertures, and a radius r3 to the inside of the apertures, said singulator comprising:
a first member supporting a lobe, said first member being radially spring biased to float and remain in contact with the vacuum disk while compensating for radial translation of the vacuum disk.
0. 22. In combination, a seed singulator and a vacuum disk, the vacuum disk having a radially symmetrical surface and a row of apertures for entraining seeds, said singulator comprising:
a member supporting a first lobe, said first lobe disposed adjacent to the row of apertures for removal of seeds from the apertures; and
a spring radially biasing said member against the radially symmetrical surface of the vacuum disk,
wherein said spring allows said member to float radially with the radially symmetrical surface of the vacuum disk upon movement of said vacuum disk toward said spring.
0. 8. In combination, a seed singulator and a vacuum disk, the vacuum disk having a seed plane and a row of apertures at a radius r1 from a center of the vacuum disk, a radius r2 to the outside of the apertures, a radius r3 to the inside of the apertures, and a radius r4 to an annular shoulder of the vacuum disk, said singulator comprising:
a first member having upper lobes disposed at a radius less than the radius r2 and greater than the radius r1, said first member further having a surface biased radially toward the annular shoulder of the vacuum disk,
said upper lobes having substantially co-planar surfaces biased axially against the seed plane of the vacuum disk.
1. In combination, a seed singulator and a vacuum disk, the vacuum disk having a seed plane and a row of apertures at a radius R1 from the center of the vacuum disk, a radius R2 to the outside of the apertures, a radius R3 to the inside of the apertures, and a radius R4 to an annular shoulder of the vacuum disk, said singulator comprising:
a first member having upper lobes disposed at a radius of curvature slightly less than the radius R2 and greater than the radius r1, said first member further having a surface biased radially toward the annular shoulder of the vacuum disk;
a second member having lower lobes disposed at a radius of curvature slightly greater than the radius R3 and less than the radius r1;
said upper and lower lobes having substantially co-planar surfaces biased axially against the seed plane of the vacuum disk.
2. The combination of
3. The combination of
4. The combination of
5. The combination of claim 4 1 wherein said singulator further includes an axial spring and a radial spring whereby said axial spring biases said single unitary element singulator in a axial direction and said radial spring biases said single unitary element singulator in a radial direction.
6. The combination of claim 4 1 wherein said upper lobes and said lower lobes move with the seed plane and with the shoulder while maintaining the position of the upper lobes with respect to the radius R2 and the lower lobes with respect to the radius R3.
7. The combination of
0. 9. The combination of claim 8, wherein said singulator includes three upper lobes.
0. 10. The combination of claim 8 wherein said surface of said first member of said singulator has a radius of curvature substantially the same as the radius r4.
0. 11. The combination of claim 10 wherein said singulator further includes an axial spring and a radial spring whereby said axial spring biases said singulator in an axial direction and said radial spring biases said singulator in a radial direction.
0. 12. The combination of claim 8 wherein said singulator further includes an axial spring and a radial spring whereby said axial spring biases said singulator in an axial direction and said radial spring biases said singulator in a radial direction.
0. 13. The combination of claim 8 wherein said upper lobes move with the seed plane and with the shoulder while maintaining a position of the upper lobes with respect to the radius r2.
0. 14. The combination of claim 13 wherein said upper lobes move with the seed plane and said upper lobes move with the shoulder while maintaining a position of the upper lobes with respect to the radius r2.
0. 16. The combination of claim 15, wherein said lobe is disposed at a radius either less than the radius r2 and greater than the radius r1 or greater than the radius r3 and less than the radius r1.
0. 17. The combination of claim 15, wherein said lobe is disposed at a radius less than the radius r2 and greater than the radius r1 and further including a second member having a lower lobe disposed at a radius greater than the radius r3 and less than the radius r1.
0. 18. The combination of claim 17, said lower lobe having a lower lobe surface biased axially toward the vacuum disk.
0. 19. The combination of claim 15, said lobe being biased axially against the vacuum disk.
0. 20. The combination of claim 15, wherein a spring member axially biases said singulator against the vacuum disk.
0. 21. The combination of claim 15, wherein said first member includes a face, wherein the vacuum disk includes a radially symmetrical surface, and wherein said face is in contact with said radially symmetrical surface.
0. 23. The combination of claim 22, wherein said spring constrains said member to remain in contact with the radially symmetrical surface of the vacuum disk upon movement of said vacuum disk away from said spring.
0. 24. The combination of claim 23, wherein said singulator further includes a second lobe, said second lobe disposed adjacent to the row of apertures, wherein said second lobe is constrained to move with said first lobe, wherein said first lobe is located at a radius outside the row of apertures, and wherein said second lobe is located at a radius inside the row of apertures.
0. 25. The combination of claim 22, wherein said singulator further includes a second lobe, said second lobe disposed adjacent to the row of apertures, and wherein said second lobe is constrained to move with said first lobe.
0. 26. The combination of claim 22, wherein the radially symmetrical surface of the vacuum disk comprises a shoulder of the vacuum disk.
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10 100 is generally designed for use with a celled disk, but in
As best illustrated in
As best illustrated in
A preferred embodiment of a seed singulator assembly 900 is shown in
It is known that singulation performance improves with an increasing number of times that the seeds are contacted by the singulating lobes. It has been determined that superior singulation accuracy is achieved by bumping or agitating the seeds from both the top side (i.e., the outside radius R of the apertures) and the bottom side (i.e., the inside radius R3 of the apertures). For example, if a singulator is used that only bumps the seeds from the top side, then some seeds multiples may be able to “hang” on the very bottom of the aperture and would not be stripped or removed by the top singulator. Furthermore, it has been found that singulation can be best achieved when the seed is contacted three times from the top side of the apertures 208, 508 relative to the path of travel and two times from the bottom side of the apertures 208, 508.
Accordingly, in the preferred embodiment, a rail 906 supports three lobes 908, 910, 912. As illustrated in
Referring to
Continuing to refer to
It should be appreciated that the preferred embodiment permits the lobes 908, 910, 912, 914, 916 to “float” with the seed plane 222, 522 and the shoulder 230, 530 of the disk 200, 500. This ability to float provides inherent advantages. For example, during rotation, the disk 200, 500 may translate about the central axis due to warping, or as a result of the bearing or hub being out of alignment, or possibly due to bending or flexing of the disk 200, 500 caused by the pressure differential between the seed-side face and the vacuum side face of the disk. Additionally, the disk 200, 500 may be subject to radial translation caused by improper hub alignment, mounting tolerances or disk eccentricities associated with the manufacturing process or manufacturing tolerances.
Thus, by providing a singulator with lobes that float and remain in contact with the seed plane 222, 522 and/or in contact with the top of the shoulder 230, 530, the singulator assembly 900 is able to compensate for both radial translation and axial translation and radial rotation of the disk, while the amount of coverage of the apertures 108, 208, 508 by the passing lobes 908, 910, 912, 914, 916 remains constant regardless of the movement of the disk 200, 500. Additionally, the spring biased suspension of the lobes permits the lobes to flex away from the apertures 208, 508 in the case a seed or fragment becomes stuck in the aperture. This flexure prevents adverse wear to the surfaces 924 and edges of the lobes and also improves performance by preventing sudden jerking of the disk due to seeds wedging between an inflexible or immovable singulator and the aperture.
A further advantage of the preferred embodiment of the spring suspension system of the singulator 900 is that the singulator assembly 900 need not be removed when switching from the offset disk 500 to a celled (with which a singulator is not generally used). Instead, in the preferred embodiment, the rail 906 is capable of being locked into a depressed position whereby the lobes 908, 910, 912, 914, 916 will not contact the seed-side face 104 204, 504 of the disk 100 200, 500. Referring to
The foregoing description is presented to enable one of ordinary skill in the art to make and use the invention and is provided in the context of a patent application and its requirements. Various modifications to the preferred embodiment of the singulator assembly, such as the various alternative embodiments disclosed in co-pending U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/710,014 incorporated herein in its entirety, and the general principles and features described herein will be readily apparent to those of skill in the art. Thus, the present invention is not to be limited to the embodiments of the apparatus and methods described above and illustrated in the drawing figures, but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
Sauder, Gregg A., Sauder, Derek A., Koch, Justin, Plattner, Chad
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Sep 12 2006 | SAUDER, DEREK A | PRECISION PLANTING, INC | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 028750 | /0791 | |
Sep 13 2006 | SAUDER, GREGG A | PRECISION PLANTING, INC | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 028750 | /0791 | |
Sep 14 2006 | PLATTNER, CHAD E | PRECISION PLANTING, INC | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 028750 | /0791 | |
Sep 20 2006 | KOCH, JUSTIN L | PRECISION PLANTING, INC | ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 028750 | /0791 | |
Apr 19 2012 | Precision Planting LLC | (assignment on the face of the patent) | / | |||
Jun 25 2012 | PRECISION PLANTING, INC | Precision Planting LLC | MERGER SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS | 028773 | /0840 |
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