ASABE Technical Library - Abstract
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An Automated Sample Divider for Farmers Stock Peanuts
Published by the American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers, St. Joseph, Michigan www.asabe.org
Citation: 2015 ASABE Annual International Meeting 152188454.(doi:10.13031/aim.20152188454)Authors: Christopher L Butts, Harry T Sheppard, Marshall C Lamb
Keywords: Automated sampling, grading, groundnuts, peanut, samplers.
Abstract. In-shell peanuts are harvested, loaded into drying trailers, and delivered to a central facility where they are dried to a moisture content safe for long term storage, sampled, graded, then unloaded into bulk storage. Drying trailers have capacities ranging from five to twenty-five tons of dry farmers stock peanuts. Each conveyance is sampled using a pneumatic probe that is inserted into the load multiple times in a semi-random pattern. The total amount of peanuts extracted for sampling is proportional to the size of conveyance and may range from approximately 22 to 115 kg. That sample is subsampled using a rotating sample divider to obtain 3.0 to 6.0 kg of farmers stock peanuts, and then manually divided over a riffle divider to obtain an official grade sample and a check sample. The preferred grade sample size is 1800 ± 300 g. An instrumentation and control system consisting of an ultrasonic bin level sensor, an electric motor brake, and a PLC, was installed and calibrated to control a rotating sample divider. The PLC calculates the delay interval for rotating the divider through the stream of peanuts flowing out of the sample bin based on the bin level sensor output. The PLC then releases the bin gate, controls the rotating divider to achieve the desired 3.6-kg sample. Commercial prototypes were developed, calibrated, and tested in the laboratory then installed and operated at a commercial peanut buying. Due to variations in sampling bin construction, the commercial prototype required site specific calibration to consistently provide the desired sample size.
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