NZ206199A - Rotating skeith mounted to trail correctly - Google Patents

Rotating skeith mounted to trail correctly

Info

Publication number
NZ206199A
NZ206199A NZ20619983A NZ20619983A NZ206199A NZ 206199 A NZ206199 A NZ 206199A NZ 20619983 A NZ20619983 A NZ 20619983A NZ 20619983 A NZ20619983 A NZ 20619983A NZ 206199 A NZ206199 A NZ 206199A
Authority
NZ
New Zealand
Prior art keywords
skeith
plough
blade
supporting arm
dished
Prior art date
Application number
NZ20619983A
Inventor
Hugh Henry Newton
Original Assignee
Hugh Henry Newton
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Hugh Henry Newton filed Critical Hugh Henry Newton
Priority to NZ20619983A priority Critical patent/NZ206199A/en
Priority to NZ20698984A priority patent/NZ206989A/en
Priority to NZ20830784A priority patent/NZ208307A/en
Priority to EP84307471A priority patent/EP0145222A1/en
Priority to DK522584A priority patent/DK522584A/en
Priority to AU35196/84A priority patent/AU3519684A/en
Priority to NO844444A priority patent/NO844444L/en
Priority to ES1984290200U priority patent/ES290200Y/en
Priority to FI844387A priority patent/FI844387L/en
Publication of NZ206199A publication Critical patent/NZ206199A/en

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Description

20696^ 20830 / NOV 1984 Patents Form No. 5 / o ,7T— r' PATENTS ACT 1953 COMPLETE SPECIFICATION (COGNATE) After Provisional Numbers 206199, 206989 and 208307 dated 8th November 1983, 31st January 1984 and 29th May 1984 respectively IMPROVEMENTS IN OR RELATING TO PLOUGHS I/ NEWTON HUGH HENRY of Main Road, Loburn, R.D. 2 Rangiora, New Zealand, being a British subject and New Zealand citizen, hereby declare the invention, for which I pray that a patent may be granted to me, and the method by which it is to be performed, to be particularly described in and by the following statement This invention relates to ploughing and more particularly to a skeith/skimmer for new or existing ploughs.
A skeith, disc jointer or skimmer is an attachment for a plough which cuts and turns a small furrow, usually in advance 5 of a mould board forming a larger furrow, toward where the open furrow is produced by the mould board.
An object of the invention is to provide a skeith for a new or existing plough which improves turning of a furrow to thereby bury stubble, trash, soil and the like. 10 According to the first aspect of the invention there is provided a skeith comprising a dished blade rotatably mounted upon a supporting arm, and mounting means for mounting the skeith upon a plough, characterised in that the mounting means allows the supporting arm to swivel laterally to alter the 15 position of the dished blade relative to the direction of travel of the plough and the axis of rotation of the blade is inclined forwardly at an angle of between 1 and 2 0 degrees to the horizontal such that, in use on level ground, the dished blade automatically adopts a position in which the leading 20 cutting edge of the blade is aligned with the direction of travel and the plane of the surface portion of the dished blade adjacent the leading cutting edge is vertical.
The supporting arm may include means for absorbing shocks imparted to the dished blade, said shock absorbing 25 means being disposed between a first part of the supporting arm which is connected to the mounting means, and a second part of the supporting arm which carries the dished blade.
N EW ZEALAi\!0~] -3 FEB 1987 PATFMT ncn/^r- 208199 "'206339 20S307 The shock absorbing means may be rubber or the like packaging.
Alternatively the supporting arm may be of suitable tension material, such as spring steel, the arm being adapted at one end to support the dished blade and at its other end to connect to the mounting means to enable the spring steel arm to support the skeith upon a plough, the arrangement being such that the arm is able to move in a vertical plane relative to the mounting means to absorb shocks imparted to the dished blade.
The invention also includes a plough comprising a frame having a plurality of trailing plough beams, a mould board mounted on each plough beam, and a plurality of swivelling skeiths depending from the frame or plough 20830 beams, one in front of each mould board, each skeith including a supporting arm and a dished blade rotatably mounted upon the supporting arm, the axis of rotation of the dished blade on level ground being inclined to the horizontal such that the curved plane of a circumferential surface portion of the dished blade is generally vertical.
According to another aspect of the present invention there is provided a method of ploughing including the steps of: fitting to a plough frame a plurality of skeiths each including a dished blade rotatably mounted upon a supporting arm, positioning a skeith on the plough frame in front of each mould board with the axis of rotation of the dished blade inclined to the horizontal so that on level ground, a circumferential surface portion of the dished blade adjacent to the leading edge is generally vertical, and towing or ploughing the plough frame to produce a furrow in which the dished blade of the skeith throws stubble, trash and other material into the adjacent furrow cavity before the mould board covers same with the furrow-slice.
The present invention will now be described by way of example with reference to the accompanying drawings in which: Figure 1; is a perspective view from above of part of the rear of a plough incorporating an example of the 20619^ 20fS9&2/^ 208307 invention; Figure 2: is a perspective view from above the back of part of the plough beam showing the skeith in more detail; Figure 3: shows rear elevation of a supporting arm with part of a dished blade and which forms part of the skeith assembly according to the invention; Figure 4: shows an opposite front elevation of the supporting arm shown in Figure 3; Figure 5: shows a plan view of the supporting arm shown in Figures 3 and 4; Figure 6: shows a side view in the direction of arrows V - V of the mounting arm shown in Figures 3 to 5; Figure 7: is a plan view of the dished blade 15 positioned relative to the mould board; Figure 8: is a side elevation of the dished blade showing its position relative to the ground during use; Figure 9: is a section on 9-9 in Figure 8; and Figure 10: shows an alternative supporting arm 20 which may form part of the skeith assembly according to the invention.
A plough incorporating the skeith according to the present invention is manufactured in a similar manner to existing plough and includes a plough frame generally 25 indicated by arrow 1 (Figure 1) which supports a series of trailing plough beams (only one shown) 2. Each plough beam 2 has a mould board 3 at the rear thereof. The • • ' 20619^ 206989^ 20830? example shown and described is designed for use with a long mould board but it will be appreciated that the invention with minor modifications can be adapted to cooperate with mould boards of differing sizes and shapes or may be used alone. The plough is described in its position on level ground and it is to be appreciated that on inclined ground the references to horizontal and vertical mean parallel to the land and normal thereto respectively.
Positioned beneath the plough beam 2, intermediate the frame 1 and the mould board 3, is a skeith assembly 4 according to the present invention. The skeith assembly 4r shown in detail in Figures 2 to 6 comprises a mounting means 5 in the form of a crank arm for clamping the skeith assembly to the plough beam 2 so that the height thereof relative to the plough beam or frame 2 and the position of the skeith relative to the mould board 3 can be adjusted.
The base of the mounting means 5 terminates in a mounting shaft 25 which receives a tubular sleeve 6 formed on one end of a supporting arm 7 of the skeith assembly 4. The mounting shaft 25 has a depending lug 8 formed adjacent to the bottom thereof and the supporting arm 7 may pivot or swivel about the mounting shaft 25 within limits defined by engagement of the lug 8 with the supporting arm 7 and with a stop 20 on the tubular sleeve 6: other means of stopping may also be used. The provision for this lateral swivelling movement of the supporting arm 7 allows the 20619" 2069f" 2083C skeith assembly 4 to move aside if obstructions or different soil conditions are encountered and provides self-alignment wherby the leading edge of the skeith assembly 4 is aligned with the direction of travel as will 5 be explained.
The supporting arm 7 has at its lower end 9 an axle on which is supported a bearing 11. The stub axle is angled away to the side of the supporting arm 7, for example, as shown the longitudinal axis of the axle may extend away from the supporting arm 7 in the direction of normal travelling movement of the plough at an angle of about 23 + 10 degrees to the horizontal (See angle oC in Figure 3). In addition the axle 10 is angled forwardly of an axis extending transversely of the supporting arm 7 at an angle of for example, between 1 degree and 20 degrees (in Figure 5 an angle of 5 degrees is shown as ^8 ). The supporting arm 7 may itself suitably extend downwardly at an angle of about 23 degrees from the horizontal as illustrated as angle & in Figure 6.
The axle 10 carries a dished blade 16 on the bearing 11 and trials have shown that an 18" blade with a curvature of 1 1/2" to 3" when mounted on the axle angled as hereinbefore described successfully buries stubble etc when in use. The angle of downward inclination and forward inclination of the dished blade will be varied according to the curvature and diameter of the blade so that the blade runs straight and the lower part of the 7 10696^ 2083 blade is held substantially vertically as will be explained. Moreover, in order to accommodate different curvatures the skeith assembly is adjusted at the crank mounting arm 5 to adopt the desired position of the blade in relation to the mould board. In this respect reference may be made to Figure 7 which shows the interrelationship between the leading edge of the disc and the landside of the mould board.
The supporting arm 7 may additionally include a shock absorbing facility and, for this reason, the arm 7 is formed in two parts 12 and 13, the first part 12 of which telescopically receives the second part 13. The first part 12 has the sleeve 6 which is engaged on the mounting shaft 25 by a pin or the like locking means (not shown) and the other part 13 has, at the bottom the axle 10. The space between the first part 12 and the second part 13 is packed by natural or synthetic rubber which acts to absorb any shock imparted to the arm 7 from the blade 16. The first part 12 and second part 13 are held together by the pin 15 which passes through the protruding end of the second part 13 which abuts and the upper end of the first part 12.
The skeith assembly 4 is designed so that the dished blade 16 is held so that the axis of a plane through the face of the blade 16 is at an acute angle relative to a vertical plane. A lower part 17 of the blade 16 is therefore held so that a plane therethrough is generally vertical. Referring to Figures 8 and 9, where the dished 206199^-20696 208307 blade 16 is shown in the ground G, the lower part 17 in question is the circumferential surface portion of the blade 16 which cuts into the ground and which is shown shaded. In addition to being set substantially vertical on level ground the actual cutting leading edge is aligned with the direction of travel so that the leading edge of the blade 16 performs a skeith action.
The skeith of the present invention may be fitted to existing plough frames or may be incorporated in new ploughs during the manufacture thereof. In use a plough incorporating the skeith of the present invention has a skeith assembly positioned in front of each mould board.
The blade 16 is set as a skeith with land and height as with respect to the shear point as seen in Figure 7.
Upon forward movement of the plough the skeith 4 rotates and the leading edge of the dished blade 16 acts to produce an initial cut of the required depth, i.e. as a skeith, while the trailing portion of the dished blade acts as a skimmer where the stubble, trash etc on the furrow-slice hits the trailing curved face of the blade at 18 and is thrown by the curvature of the blade cover and out into the furrow cavity of the adjacent mould board i . ; furrow where it is covered by the turned furrow-slice [ produced by the following mould board 3.
An alternative construction of supporting arm 7 is shown in Figure 10. The supporting arm is constructed from suitable tension material e.g. spring steel formed into 20619^ 20698^ 2083C7 generally the shape in the drawing which is in side elevation.
The end 26 of the arm 7 has bolted/attached thereto a member 27 to which the axle 10 is attached. The axle 10 is 5 fixed at the preferred angle relative to the member 27 as hereinbefore described. The other end 28 of the arm 7 is bolted to a plate 29 fixed to the sleeve 6 which is mounted to a plough beam in the same manner as hereinbefore described.
In use the end 26 of the arm 7 can move in the direction of the arrows 30 to jump over any obstructions.
The applicant's experiments have shown that with the construction shown it is not absolutely necessary for the sleeve 6 to be free to pivot about the mounting means 15 although this is desirable.
The alternative construction has mainly been found necessary with plough beams where the weight of the beam is such that there is no inherent tendency for the plough beams to jump over obstructions.
Thus by this invention there is provided a skeith for a new or existing plough which improved turning of a furrow to bury stubble, trash, soil etc. This skeith may be positioned in advance of a mould board or, if desired, the skeith of the invention may be used alone for performing 25 surface cultivation without a mould board. In the preferred arrangement, as seen from Figure 3, the rotation axis X of the blade 16 forms an obtuse angle (P with the 2Gif swivel axis Y so that the plane of the leading circuinferential edge portion is substantially parallel to the swivel axis. 3 11 -

Claims (10)

206J9a- -"S08339 _ -"203307 WHAT I CLAIM IS;-
1. A skeith comprising a dished blade rotatably mounted upon a supporting arm, and mounting means for mounting the skeith upon a plough, characterised in that the mounting means allows the supporting arm to swivel laterally to alter the position of the dished blade relative to the direction of travel of the plough and the axis of rotation of the blade is inclined forwardly at an angle of between 1 and 20 degrees to the horizontal such that, in use on level ground, the dished blade automatically adopts a position in which the leading cutting edge of the blade is aligned with the direction of travel and the plane of the surface portion of the dished blade adjacent the leading cutting edge is vertical.
2. A skeith according to claim 1 wherein the supporting arm includes means for absorbing vertical shocks imparted to the dished blade, said shock absorbing means being disposed between a first part of the supporting arm which is connected to the mounting means, and a second part of the supporting arm which carries the dished blade.
3. A skeith according to claim 1 or claim 2 wherein the dished blade is mounted upon an axle secured to the supporting arm.
4. A skeith according to claim 1 wherein the skeith is mounted on the plough in front of the mould board.
5. A skeith according to any one of the preceding claims wherein the axis of the dished blade forms an angle of between 13° and 33° with the horizontal. - 12 - NEW ZEALAND -3 FEB 198/ 20619 20698 3307
6. A skeith according to claim 5 wherein the angle is about 23°.
7. A skeith according to any one of claims 1 to 5 wherein the axis of rotation is inclined forwardly an angle of about 5°.
8. A skeith according to claim 4 wherein the longitudinal axis of the supporting arm extends downwardly from the frame at an angle of about 23° from the horizontal.
9. A plough comprising a frame having a plurality of trailing plough beams, a mould board mounted on each plough beam, and a plurality of swivel mounted skeiths as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 8 depending from the frame or plough beams, one in front of each mould board.
10. A plough substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to the accompanying drawings. NEWTON HUGH HENRY By His Attorneys BALDWIN, SON & CAREY _N.Z PATENT ncc^p "3DEC1986 .Received - 13 -
NZ20619983A 1983-11-08 1983-11-08 Rotating skeith mounted to trail correctly NZ206199A (en)

Priority Applications (9)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
NZ20619983A NZ206199A (en) 1983-11-08 1983-11-08 Rotating skeith mounted to trail correctly
NZ20698984A NZ206989A (en) 1983-11-08 1984-01-31 Rotating skeith mounted to trail correctly
NZ20830784A NZ208307A (en) 1983-11-08 1984-05-29 Rotating skeith mounted to trail correctly
EP84307471A EP0145222A1 (en) 1983-11-08 1984-10-30 Improved plough
DK522584A DK522584A (en) 1983-11-08 1984-11-02 EXPLOV WITH DISC BOX
AU35196/84A AU3519684A (en) 1983-11-08 1984-11-07 Skeith comprising rotatable dished blade mounted on supporting arm
NO844444A NO844444L (en) 1983-11-08 1984-11-07 PLOW.
ES1984290200U ES290200Y (en) 1983-11-08 1984-11-07 A STICKER
FI844387A FI844387L (en) 1983-11-08 1984-11-08 PLOG.

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
NZ20619983A NZ206199A (en) 1983-11-08 1983-11-08 Rotating skeith mounted to trail correctly

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
NZ206199A true NZ206199A (en) 1987-03-31

Family

ID=19920578

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
NZ20619983A NZ206199A (en) 1983-11-08 1983-11-08 Rotating skeith mounted to trail correctly

Country Status (1)

Country Link
NZ (1) NZ206199A (en)

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