WO1995025424A1 - Abri protecteur - Google Patents

Abri protecteur Download PDF

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Publication number
WO1995025424A1
WO1995025424A1 PCT/NZ1995/000028 NZ9500028W WO9525424A1 WO 1995025424 A1 WO1995025424 A1 WO 1995025424A1 NZ 9500028 W NZ9500028 W NZ 9500028W WO 9525424 A1 WO9525424 A1 WO 9525424A1
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WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
barrier
panel
cloth
net
configuration
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/NZ1995/000028
Other languages
English (en)
Inventor
Michael David Robinson
Original Assignee
Michael David Robinson
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
Priority claimed from US08/216,954 external-priority patent/US5519965A/en
Application filed by Michael David Robinson filed Critical Michael David Robinson
Priority to AU20868/95A priority Critical patent/AU2086895A/en
Publication of WO1995025424A1 publication Critical patent/WO1995025424A1/fr

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Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A01AGRICULTURE; FORESTRY; ANIMAL HUSBANDRY; HUNTING; TRAPPING; FISHING
    • A01GHORTICULTURE; CULTIVATION OF VEGETABLES, FLOWERS, RICE, FRUIT, VINES, HOPS OR SEAWEED; FORESTRY; WATERING
    • A01G13/00Protecting plants
    • A01G13/02Protective coverings for plants; Coverings for the ground; Devices for laying-out or removing coverings
    • A01G13/0206Canopies, i.e. devices providing a roof above the plants

Definitions

  • This invention relates to the field of providing a protective canopy and has particular application to the provision of retractable protective coverings for plants and/or animals in an outside space, or inside a greenhouse or other permanent structure such as a shadehouse.
  • Damage affecting pip-fruit trees in particular but also many other crops is likely as a result of adverse weather; particularly from hailstorms.
  • One severe hailstorm, not an infrequent event, can totally destroy a crop and hence the income from it, or damage a crop by bruising so that it is downgraded to a less remunerative grade.
  • Plants respond to an improved environment but the optimum environment for a given plant changes with the weather, the time of day, and over the seasons.
  • Hail protection for example is important when fruit is developing, but is not needed over winter.
  • snow to take one example
  • it is useful to be able to take away or re-install the generally horizontal canopies now used to provide sun, hail, bird, insect or wind protection.
  • the invention provides a retractable barrier to at least partially shield an area
  • the barrier is comprised of a deformable panel supported along its length by a pair of elongate flexible elements, and wherein each elongate flexible element is attached to one or more supports at a required distance above the ground so that the barrier can be positioned above ground in a first shielding configuration with the panel assuming a first extended substantially parallelogram shape, and wherein in use the barrier can be deformed into a contracted configuration of lesser area by relatively moving opposite edges of the panel along the edges in opposite directions to distort the panel from the extended, substantially parallelogram configuration to a much narrower substantially parallelogram configuration.
  • the panel includes at least one deformable open-mesh fabric or net and more preferably the panel consists of a woven net having a loose weave allowing for movement or pivoting at the intersections.
  • a knotted or knitted net may be used.
  • the panel may be made up of a plurality of separate strips of flexible material.
  • the invention provides a barrier to at least partially surround an object and protect it from paniculate material, characterised in that the barrier is comprised of elongated support means in duplicate and at least one array of linear elements supported on the elongated support means at at least two points; the array being capable of being oriented at angles ranging from a first contracted position (wherein the barrier has a minimised area) where the elements of the array are substantially parallel to the support means to a second expanded position where the elements of the array are substantially perpendicular to the support means and the barrier assumes a configuration having a maximised area.
  • An example application for the barrier is in protecting vegetation from damage by hailstones and here the barrier is provided in the form of an elongated parallelogram supported horizontally above the vegetation to be protected.
  • each element of the at least one array of linear elements comprises a sheet of fibrous material; preferably a woven fabric comprised of material resistant to environmental degradation.
  • the presently preferred materials include polypropylene and polyethylene with appropriate fillers and dyes.
  • the weaving method used provides a loose interlocking between the warp and weft threads so that in use the fabric or textile can be easily deformed into parallelograms of various configurations.
  • One preferred weaving method is known as the "leno" process.
  • the fabric or textile may be created by a knitting process or other means, providing a material in which the threads are held together at crossing points by a type of loose knot.
  • the threads are held together at crossing points by adhesion or fusion.
  • the fabric may be a flexible sheet such as a sheet of plastic film like a polyethylene sheet.
  • the support means of the barrier comprises wires or cables passing along the longer opposite sides of the parallelogram, and rigid struts or poles passing along the shorter sides of the parallelogram.
  • the support means along the longer sides may be the (optionally selvedged) edges of the sheet or sheets of fabric.
  • the fabric is attached along its longer edges to the adjacent wire or cable and preferably this attachment is made by means of a clip, securing the cable to the fabric by crimping the clip to the wire or cable and then penetrating the weave of the fabric with protruding and interlocking projections from the clip.
  • the support means of the barrier provides for controlled lateral movement of the support means so that variation of the relative tensions applied to at least one support means of the supported barrier causes the parallelogram to alter its shape from a substantially contracted configuration to a substantially expanded configuration.
  • the material is mounted so that a combination of stretching and/or buckling and/or sliding along the support wires permits the material to follow the lateral movement of the support means.
  • the material may be attached at at least one end to a bar, the bar being attached at one end to the support means.
  • the invention provides a protective shield including a linear array comprising a series of flexible strips, anchored at each end to one of two substantially parallel cables which strips are capable of overlapping or lying side by side, and which in use provide a sun shade or a rain shield when the barrier is in its expanded configuration, and which overlap when the barrier is in its contracted configuration so that it provides a minimal obstruction to a desired environmental input such as sunlight.
  • the strips may run parallel to the edge or control cables and be held in a configuration by attachments to a series of cross members running between the edge cables.
  • cross members are attached to or form part of the structure of the flexible strips.
  • the invention provides a protective shield including intermediate supports to maintain its position above a tree or a row crop.
  • these intermediate supports maintain the barrier in a substantially horizontal plane.
  • these intermediate supports may impose an arched profile to the barrier so that its edges are lower than its centre.
  • Optionally further supports may provide the barrier with at least one free edge extending substantially downwards, where the free edge serves as protection against obliquely oriented damaging materials.
  • Optionally further supports may provide the barrier with at least one free edge extending substantially upwards, where the free edge, in apposition to a free upwards-extending edge of an adjacent barrier, forms a bird, bat, or insect exclusion filter.
  • the barrier is supported by spreaders which normally hold the fabric in a substantially horizontal plane yet are capable of undergoing downwards deflection at their outer edges as a result of applied forces, in order to dump a built-up load of hail or the like.
  • the configuration of the barrier is under control of a winch which can wind up or unwind one or more edge cables.
  • the winch takes the form of an elongated pipe at one end of one or several rows of the crop under protection.
  • the winch is under the control of an electric motor which is in turn controlled by an external sensor of imminent hail or snow.
  • the barrier can be oriented vertically at the side of a crop to be protected if a hazard, such as wind, wind-blown items or a swarm of flying insects is expected to arrive from a horizontal direction.
  • a hazard such as wind, wind-blown items or a swarm of flying insects
  • the invention provides a method for protecting a horticultural crop or area with protection against hailstorms or the like, comprising the steps of erecting one or more barriers above the crop and causing the barriers to become substantially expanded at least during periods of risk.
  • the invention includes the steps of detecting an imminent hailstorm and responding to that event by expanding the or each barrier by applying a tension along the elongated support means so that the barrier covers a wider area of the crop to be protected.
  • the invention comprises an orchard comprising rows of trees, at least one row of trees being protected by a retractable barrier as claimed in any one of the preceding claims.
  • the invention comprises an orchard comprising substantially parallel rows of trees, with each row of trees being protected by a retractable barrier as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 13.
  • the invention provides means for deploying a flexible protective shield around or over items to be protected.
  • FIG. 1 is a closer plan view of a barrier according to the invention, illustrating the various configurations of a parallelogram assumed by each barrier.
  • FIG. 1 is a perspective view along the length of a barrier according to the invention, placed over trees.
  • FIG. 1 illustrates a clip for supporting a woven fabric from the cables or wires of the invention.
  • FIG. 1 is an elevation view of a preferred barrier support including means to dump heavy loads of accumulated material off the barrier to either the side of the protected area.
  • FIG. 1 illustrates a preferred sun shade type of barrier including a linear array of flexible strips.
  • FIG. 1 illustrates further means for supporting a material above an item to be protected, adapted for use with a knitted material or the like.
  • FIG. 1 illustrates an example of means to hook the ends of adjacent poles together, in order to give the shade greater structural integrity.
  • Fig 14 illustrates the operation of a beam mount for a knitted cloth.
  • Fig 15 illustrates a typical knitted cloth.
  • the invention in this application is intended to prevent particles such as hailstones from colliding at full speed with plants under protection by the barrier and it is especially intended to protect developing fruit carried by the plants.
  • the fabric which comprises the preferred barrier has a weave which is tight enough to catch larger hailstones, and at least slow down small ones, while flakes of snow will also be trapped. (Spring falls of snow may damage growing tips of plants, flowers and developing fruit. Spring falls are difficult to predict).
  • the existing practice is for conventional structures to be erected in the Spring to protect the crop, but these are at risk of overload from unseasonal snows. A collapse at this time presents financial problems as the crop may be lost if the damaged protection cannot be quickly replaced.
  • Means are provided in at least some forms of the present invention to deposit accumulated ice, snow or other detritus onto the ground at the sides of the barrier when the accumulated weight exceeds a preset amount.
  • the barrier of this invention has been devised to provide for substantially instantaneous deployment. It is retained in a closed or contracted form lying above and along the length of a row of trees or other crop to be protected, and may be expanded to its full size simply by pulling on one or both edge-supporting cables.
  • Fig 1 shows in plan view 100 the overall arrangement of protective barriers of this invention protecting an orchard comprising rows of trees 104. This view is at one end of five rows.
  • the barrier 101 is fully extended; three barriers (102) are partially extended, and 103 is a substantially contracted barrier.
  • the actual barrier fabric 114 is supported along each edge by elongated control wires or cables 106, which we call edge wires. These are preferably 12.5 gauge high tensile galvanised steel fence wire, or alternatively plastic-coated cable; preferably 1/8 inch VHT (very high tensile) steel, plastic-coated to 1/8 inch depth with a UV-resistant plastic.
  • VHT very high tensile
  • the barrier fabric is particularly supported by a central cable 109, preferably plastic-coated if cloth is to drape over it, otherwise it is a galvanised high-tensile cable preferably 7.5 mm (5/16 inch) high tensile 7 strand galvanised steel cable, held in tension from anchors at each end.
  • the safe working load of the preferred cable is 9,500 lb force (45 kN). Larger constructions are also supported from side to side by cross cables as shown in later drawings.
  • Tensioning of the central cable is provided by cables such as cable 109, comprising a loop of 7.5 mm (5/16 inch) high tensile 7 strand galvanised steel cable, anchored by pulleys to a pole and in turn to a deadman or anchor 1 11 , which is one or a pair of anchors in the ground.
  • Anchors may be driven timber posts (for example 8 inches diameter and 8 feet long), or screw anchors with for example a 7 inch plate.
  • the post 110 is a galvanised steel pipe sloping to the left of the drawing as it rises.
  • the preferred pipe has an outer diameter of 3 1/2 inches; wall thickness 0.22 inch and uses 60,000 psi steel. It is mounted on a 4 foot long screw anchor with a 4 inch base plate and a 6 inch ground-level plate.
  • the control wires 107 are preferably one or two flexible ropes, having a safe load of about 2 kN (400 lb force). If one rope is pulled to one extreme it results in a totally contracted barrier as in 103, while if the other rope is pulled, or the rope at the other end on the first side is pulled, it provides a profile of maximum expansion as shown at 101.
  • Alternatives for controlling the deployment of the barrier are given in Figs 4 and 5 which show one method for controlling the configuration of a number of barriers from one end of the rows.
  • Post 113 is a pivot post, made of galvanised steel pipe of for example an outer diameter of 3.5 inches; wall thickness 0.11 inch and again made of 60,000 psi steel.
  • a preferred pivot frame 112 is a length of 2 inch x 2 inch x 1/4 inch steel angle reinforced with 5/16ths inch rod bent into a wide "V" shape to create a truss in the horizontal and vertical planes.
  • Fig 2 illustrates the manner 200 in which the preferred woven barrier fabric can undergo profound alterations in surface area as it is taken from its maximum extension state 203 through a partial extension state 202 to a contracted state 201.
  • the arrow 206 indicates the direction in which a pull may be applied to one edge of the barrier in order to cause it to pivot on the support 204, and hence also the other support 205.
  • Lines 207 and 208 represent intermediate supports which are supported by a central strain-bearing cable, which in turn is supported on poles.
  • the grid of lines representing the fabric in Fig 2 does not represent individual fibres of the fabric - which are seen only at a much finer scale as in Fig 3.
  • Fig 3 shows a preferred woven fabric or cloth in detail, as it would be produced by the "leno" weaving process.
  • One suitable product is Australian (Sarlon Industries' hail cloth). (It is interesting to note that manufacture of this type of fibre has largely been discontinued in favour of knitted fibres, and we describe variants of this invention suitable for use with knitted fibres and the like later in this document). It has a wa ⁇ of 13 yarn pairs per 100 mm and a weft of 31 yarn pairs per 100 mm, and is made of ultra-violet stabilised polyethylene fibres, diameter 55 to 65 tex.
  • One preferred width is 4420 mm wide, with selvedge reinforcing comprising a 50 mm wide strip at each side having approximately 60 yarn pairs per 100 mm.
  • One, or two adjacent strips may be used on a barrier.
  • the elements of the linear array can swivel easily within the structure of the fabric. This is so that the barrier as a whole can undergo the transition from a contracted to an expanded state without undue stresses, as may be experienced if the weft fibres have to be bent partially into a "S" shape when the angle between the warp 301, also 305 with 307 of the fabric is other than perpendicular. Bending one fibre is easy; bending all the fibres in a long barrier requires much more force.
  • the warp threads are shown as 301 and the weft threads as 302.
  • the weft threads may be thicker as indicated in the drawing, or they may be of the same diameter as the remainder of the cloth.
  • the strip 303 indicates an optional anchoring member which may be used to maintain the location of the warp fibres in the cloth. It has been observed that fabric of the "leno" weave tends to open out - as where for example birds have forced their way through it and left holes, or where a locally applied load has distorted the cloth. We have found that altering the barrier from its contracted to its expanded state and back again - i.e.
  • the swelling 309 illustrates another optional way to maintain wa ⁇ position and fabric integrity.
  • the weft fibres are provided with swellings between each of the wa ⁇ fibres. These swellings may be produced by techniques known in the artificial textile industry such as using a previously stretched fibre, and locally heating it using contact or radiant heat to cause it to shorten and swell, or by knotting it.
  • Fig 4 illustrates at 400 an installed hail barrier according to the invention, covering one row 430 of possibly many rows of trees 402 in perspective view, with a protective fabric barrier 401 supported by intermediate poles 403, 413 and slung between anchored poles 404 (the other end is not visible).
  • An anchor 405 holds the central support cable 409 in tension, and also carries a lesser tension from the intermediate cable 406.
  • the two edge or control cables are 410 and 411, running from a winch pipe 415 past a swivel 417 and along each side of the fabric barrier 401. (For terminations of these control cables see Fig 5). Lateral stability is provided by a number of crossways support cables 412, 414, and optionally also cables across anchored poles 404.
  • a preferred cable material for the cross cables is 3/8 inch VHT galvanised 7 strand steel.
  • a portion of the fabric 401 has been deleted in order to show the spreaders 422 extending each side of the central support cable and which are held in position by internal spring pressure (see Fig 8) with ties 408 attached to the intermediate cable 406.
  • the fabric of the shield may be skewed or twisted into various parallelogram shapes (as per Fig 2) by means of the winch pipe 415, supported on a bearing (not shown) at each row of trees (or other crops).
  • This is an elongated winder that runs along the end of a number of rows.
  • the reversible motor/gearbox unit 419 preferably on an elevated stand 418, provides rotation in either direction. Limit sensors may also be provided.
  • a power source for the motor 421 may be operated remotely, perhaps by radio or telephone wires, or may itself detect the onset of a hailstorm and cause rotation of the winch pipe 415 in the appropriate direction.
  • Fig 5 illustrates at 500 one method for allowing relative movement of the edge or control cables.
  • Each cable 502 is provided with a substantially constant tension by means of a weight 505 suspended over a pulley 503. held above the ground on an anchor pole 504.
  • One alternative method 501 is to use tension springs 510, between the movable cables and a fixed support pole 513, which is held in position by the anchored cable 511 connected to an anchor 512.
  • Cross cables are preferred as means to provide extra support in the case of larger structures. In the case of smaller barriers, the cross cables would obstruct the passage of vehicles along the rows, and in particular machines for harvesting which straddle the crops. They may be made removable, or may be uncoupled and dropped to the ground, but in many cases a straddle harvester can also straddle the (contracted) barrier as it is used to harvest a crop.
  • support posts 403, 413 may be set deeper into the ground to provide individual stability and thereby render cross-cables superfluous.
  • Poles 600, 601, and 602 are intermediate poles made of galvanised steel pipe, for example 2.5 inch OD, 0.09 inch wall thickness, 60,000 psi steel, if placed at every second tree, but if at every tree would be 2 inches diameter not 2.5 inches. These poles are expected to be adequate for snow loads of up to 1 foot, but if over 1 foot snowfalls are expected, more substantial posts are recommended.
  • edge cables controlling the shape of the barrier are shown at 610, 611, and 612.
  • the actual barrier is shown at 603, or 607 (several layers of barriers to provide additional shading and shading flexibility. Note that these can be in any orientation to the horizontal.
  • a preferred cross piece 608, 606 would be made of 25 mm (1 inch) bore PVC waste-pipe as this is flexible enough for arching as shown in 608 (held under tension by ties 609 to a lower central cable.).
  • the optional raised or lowered edges shown at 604 and 605 would be held by rods, for example fibreglass rods of approximately 1/4 inch dia and a length of 2 feet. These rods support a usually separate cloth strip.
  • the pu ⁇ ose of raised edges is that birds on the inside can fly out more easily than birds on the outside flying in - they would not be able to find the gap at the apex of an edge. If the raised or lowered edgers were to be used as a bird net, preferably one would add temporary links between adjacent barriers. Bats (such as fruit bats) and insects may also be controlled in this way.
  • a standard "Agrinova" plastic hail clip (700 in Fig 7) has been modified to provide a preferred clip to attach the barrier fabric to the edge wires 701.
  • These clips can be attached from the side (without any threading-on step) and are folded over from the opened-out state as supplied (see 712) to a closed state (as 713) in which a pattern of protrusions 705 on one leaf 703 pass through the cloth and through corresponding apertures 704 in the opposite leaf 702, where they lock in place owing to the provision of somewhat dilated ends.
  • These clips have been modified with a central cutout slot 714 in which we place an insert 706 of aluminium or copper.
  • the insert can be crimped over the edge wire (as shown in the crimped state 711 and the uncrimped state 710), and in use it engages with the plastic of the folded-over hail clip to transfer tension to the cloth.
  • the slot running along the length of the insert neatly fits the wire and may have a granular gripping material applied to its inside such as a sand/paint mixture to aid in gripping.
  • Our preferred insert has dilated ends 707 and section 708 to maximise contact with the hail clip, and a constricted middle 709 for crimping pu ⁇ oses.
  • the insert can be made in bulk from sheet material by a sequence of a folding and a pressure deforming action.
  • Fig 8 shows one improved form of mounting for the barrier, which provides it with means to discard loads which may build up on the upper surface of a horizontally orientated barrier - as during hail or snow.
  • the left diagram shows a deployed barrier 806 in its normal protective position, in front of a support pole (shown as discontinuous lines 800.
  • the deflected barrier 801 is in the act of shedding a load to each side of the line of crops.
  • Details of the central hinge which is one means to provide a resilient connection between the split spreader are shown in the other two diagrams.
  • the horizontal spreader 804 is split at its centre and a resilient section is included. This is preferably a coiled wire spring 807, 810 .
  • each half of the spreader When deployed, each half of the spreader is separately held against spring pressure in a substantially horizontal position by a tie 805 of light rope to a lower support cable 811 (411 in Fig 4).
  • the ties may be of any durable or easily tied material preferably having a safe load above about 100 lb force.
  • a preferred length for the fibreglass arc is 5 metres.
  • the weight will cause the spring to give way and the barrier will slope downwards as shown at 801, thereby dropping the material to the ground but out to either side of the crop or tree under protection, and then spring back to its protecting substantially horizontal orientation 806.
  • the spring 807, 810 is preferably 3/8 inch spring steel formed into a 1 ' circle with one turn or a 6 inch circle with 2 turns.
  • the ends are preferably coupled to the plastic pipe 808 used as spreaders by bending them to fit inside a preferred 1.25 inch bore waste pipe of PVC.
  • a reinforcing collar 809 is placed over the outside of the pipe, over the spring ends.
  • the spring 807 with obliquely bent ends so that when the barrier is contracted (and here the preferred direction of movement for contraction is clockwise) the spreaders lie parallel to and beside the central support cable 810 (like 409 in Fig 4) and the wide aperture inside the spring allows it freedom to twist about the central cable.
  • a one or two-turn spring is easy to thread over the cable at any point without having to pass it over the cable from one free end.
  • the barrier may be in its contracted state until an imminent hailstorm or the like requires its expansion to cover the trees, as indicated in Fig 1 and elsewhere.
  • the actuator causing expansion is means to apply extra tension to one of the elongated support cables in relation to the other.
  • This may preferably be a winch or pulley driven by an electric motor and a typical transition time from a contracted to an expanded state may be of the order of 30 seconds.
  • a series of electric motors driven in parallel from a common supply line may be controlled remotely, for example in response to a weather radar report of hail forming in the vicinity, or by local observation, or on a more local scale by a device including a microphone sensitive to the noise made by hailstones hitting a sounding board such as a metal sheet.
  • bird or wind protection is the primary purpose of the barrier, it may be left in its extended state throughout much of the growing season; though exercising the cloth may assist in sealing holes made by birds.
  • the invention in this application is intended to provide a readily deployable shade over plants or animals yet be easily reduced to a minimum size if the ambient light falls. It may be stored in a closed or contracted form lying above and along the length of an elongated area to be protected, which may be a row of trees or other crop, or may be along water troughs in a feedlot for cattle, or may optionally be placed along a fenceline along which animals like to congregate.
  • the sun shade may be expanded to its full size simply by pulling on one or both edge-supporting cables. Intermediate settings will provide a "dappled" shade with strips or patches of light passing between partially contracted strips of shade fabric.
  • Fig 9 illustrates one preferred embodiment of a sun shade.
  • a fabric which blocks substantially all of the direct light incident on it is preferred although some light may pass through without detracting from the effectiveness of the installation.
  • the shade is shown in its expanded configuration at 900, a partially contracted configuration at 901, and a contracted configuration at 902.
  • the preferred shade comprises a series of 300 mm wide strips 905 of preferably a woven fabric capable of resisting environmental degradation, such as one of the horticultural plastics, black-dyed polyethylene or polypropylene. Any suitable size of strip may be used, depending on availability, but a preferred size is 4420 mm wide (compatible with support cables put up to accommodate the "leno" cloth width), and 2000 mm across.
  • Each strip 905 is preferably sewn with a hem to include a rather wide, floppy loop at each end like 908 and is clipped or attached at diagonally opposite corners (906, 907) to a supporting cable (903 and 904).
  • Means to allow replacement strips to be installed easily include providing crimpable collectors similar to that of Fig 7 (but preferably narrower), and the use of a similar press-through fastener, or a rapidly setting glue, or simply sewing a hem on-site to form the loop (908) at each end of the strip.
  • the wide hem allows the strip to pivot about its attachment point without distortion and excessive forces as the shade approaches its contracted state.
  • Advantages of the strip approach apart from the easy deployment which is as described for example 1 , include that it may be easily repaired by on-site replacement of a damaged strip; the rest of the structure need not be brought down for repair.
  • a perimeter windbreak may be installed and may be attached to the structure. This can also serve to keep birds, bats, and large insects out of the enclosed space.
  • woven cloth of the "leno" type Although we prefer woven cloth of the "leno" type, the majority of shade cloths presently available are knitted. Two distinguishing features of this type over “leno" cloths are that the strain-bearing fibres run diagonally across the length of the fabric, and that they are locked together, albeit loosely, at each intersection.
  • a typical barrier fabric uses 5 or 6 single fibres to form each diagonal strain-bearing strand, which are separated by about 12 mm, and fills the spaces with a mesh of single strands in order to reduce hail damage, obstruct wind, and reduce invasion by insects or birds.
  • Fig 15 shows a portion of such a cloth, at about 3.5X original size.
  • the width of a roll is typically about 4 m and its length may be 100 or 200m, though it can be made in any suitable size.
  • the protective barrier or shade cloth panel is reversibly converted into a lesser area by relatively moving opposite edges of the panel along the edges in opposite directions to distort the panel from the extended, substantially parallelogram configuration to a much narrower substantially parallelogram configuration. If a strip of knitted cloth is so forced the diagonal strands will rapidly become tensed and the cloth will oppose the closing movement.
  • the cloth panel 1004 is held to support wires 1001 along its long edges by slidable clips 1003 for example of the "Agrinet” type, so that sliding movement along the support cables is permitted over a reasonable distance.
  • the cloth is held along its ends by firm attachment to bars pivoted at the obtuse-angled joints A, C, as shown in Fig 14.
  • Fig 12 illustrates another improvement. This is the use of detachable catches or connections between the end of one spacer bar 1202 and the start of another 1203, at the site indicated at 1201.
  • An example catch is comprised of a hook 1204 and an eye 1205 (seen also in top view at 1206).
  • Fig 13 illustrates at 1300 a further improvement that is made possible by this combination of a knitted shade cloth and this type of support. It is the addition of slots through which accumulated hail or snow may be released. The material tends to slide into and be dropped relatively slowly from these slots, and inflicts less damage on underlying vegetation than hail falling from a cloud.
  • 1302 is a rigid end support pivotable around the pole 1301, and there are a number of cloth attachment points 1305 along part of the end support 1302.
  • Fig 14 again indicates at 1400, 1407, 1409, and 1411, the behaviour of a knitted cloth during closure, and in this case the cloth is suspended at one side from supports 1404 and only one edge is pulled (as suggested by the arrows 1406, 1410, and 1412.
  • the cloth 1401 is held along the full extent of its ends to swung bars like 1405 (also shown in an enlarged version) which are able to swing as shown, as the support wires are pulled as shown by the arrows.
  • This approach has the advantage that the cloth is held along all of the end and so is less likely to tear away in a strong wind.
  • movement of the swung bars provides "give" of a sort not possible with edge supporting wires.
  • the cloth When the support wire is fully stretched (as at 1412) the cloth provides a minimum of coverage or protection.
  • This arrangement is also capable of supporting (instead of a knitted fabric) a sheet of flexible material, such as a plastics film.
  • a sheet of flexible material such as a plastics film.
  • the film buckles as described for the knitted fabric.
  • suitable horticultural films include "Agphane 150 ⁇ m” (Agpac, Wales, new Zealand) or "Solargro” (Sarlon, Australia).

Abstract

Barrière (400), abri ou écran à montage facile et à usage agricole ou horticole assurant la protection contre la grêle, les oiseaux, le soleil ou analogue, et comportant un tissu ajouré ou tricoté (401) ou un tissu de type toile à ombrer maintenu au-dessus des objets à protéger (402) de sorte qu'il tend à avoir une forme de parallélogramme ouvert (ou quasiment rectangulaire) lorsqu'il se trouve dans sa position d'extension maximale, et qu'il tend à avoir une forme de parallélogramme fermé lorsqu'il se trouve dans sa position entièrement fermée ou repliée. On peut modifier la forme de la barrière en tirant sur le cordon (411) ou le cordon (410) qui s'étendent le long d'un bord du tissu dans le sens de sa longueur. On a également prévu des accessoires tels que des supports (403), des mécanismes (422) d'évacuation des matières accumulées sur la barrière, des câbles transversaux (412) assurant la stabilité, et des dispositifs de déploiement (415, 419). Les barrières peuvent se déployer automatiquement et protéger des surfaces étendues telles qu'un verger entier.
PCT/NZ1995/000028 1994-03-24 1995-03-21 Abri protecteur WO1995025424A1 (fr)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AU20868/95A AU2086895A (en) 1994-03-24 1995-03-21 Protective canopy

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US08/216,954 US5519965A (en) 1994-03-24 1994-03-24 Protective canopy
US08/216,954 1994-03-24
NZ26023694 1994-03-31
NZ260236 1994-03-31

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO1995025424A1 true WO1995025424A1 (fr) 1995-09-28

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PCT/NZ1995/000028 WO1995025424A1 (fr) 1994-03-24 1995-03-21 Abri protecteur

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AU (1) AU2086895A (fr)
CA (1) CA2186000A1 (fr)
WO (1) WO1995025424A1 (fr)

Cited By (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR2742022A1 (fr) * 1995-12-07 1997-06-13 Domaine Saint Georges Scea Systeme de protection des vergers notamment fruitiers contre les intemperies et materiel de mise en oeuvre du dit procede
EP0878125A1 (fr) * 1997-05-16 1998-11-18 Mohamed Mamouri Procédé et dispositif de protection de plantations telles que les vignes contre le gel et la grêle
FR2777737A1 (fr) * 1998-04-23 1999-10-29 Mdb Texinov Sa Ecran-filet de type tisse-tricote pour la protection des cultures contre la grele
EP1618782A1 (fr) * 2004-07-20 2006-01-25 Emanuel Tamanini Protection des cultures contre les intempéries
FR2893638A1 (fr) * 2005-11-08 2007-05-25 Paul Riedel Brise-vent souple renforce faisant disparaitre le vent dans l'air du vent,capable d'eliminer l'electricite statique ou de constituer une surface chauffante
ITMI20100486A1 (it) * 2010-03-24 2011-09-25 Valente Pali Precompressi Spa Copertura per coltivazioni ad apertura e chiusura migliorate
NL1039513C2 (nl) * 2012-04-03 2013-10-07 Johannes Franciscus Maria Pape Overkapping voor een stal, schuur of uitloopruimte.
US9421744B2 (en) 2012-08-31 2016-08-23 General Electric Company Methods and systems for automated ply layup for composites
ITUB20160131A1 (it) * 2016-01-15 2017-07-15 Magif S A S Di Angelo Cappi & C Sistema per la movimentazione trasversale, centralizzata e con sforzo limitato, dei teli e/o delle reti di copertura delle strutture di protezione dei filari di piante e strutture realizzate con tale sistema
CN107969257A (zh) * 2017-11-23 2018-05-01 梧州市雅正农业科技有限公司 一种茶园绿化藤蔓养殖支架
CN110337967A (zh) * 2019-07-09 2019-10-18 奉焕朝 一种果蔬种植用多功能遮雨棚
WO2022245232A1 (fr) 2021-05-21 2022-11-24 Momcilo Kokanovic Système doté de rails de guidage rotatifs de protection d'un verger contre des conditions météorologiques

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3140563A (en) * 1963-04-03 1964-07-14 Clayton M Allen Protective cover for plants
US3581436A (en) * 1968-09-25 1971-06-01 James D Basiger Plant shield
FR2452870A1 (fr) * 1979-04-04 1980-10-31 Lesouef Pierre Dispositif permettant de disposer un materiau souple au-dessus d'une surface a proteger
SU1074445A1 (ru) * 1980-12-25 1984-02-23 Всесоюзный Научно-Исследовательский И Конструкторско-Технологический Институт По Машинам Для Горного Земледелия И Возделывания Субтропических Культур Устройство дл защиты виноградных насаждений от града
SU1754013A1 (ru) * 1989-11-20 1992-08-15 Грузинский политехнический институт Устройство дл защиты виноградных насаждений от града
AU4179093A (en) * 1992-07-03 1994-01-06 John Nelson Paterson Goodall Tensioned retractable shade cover

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US3140563A (en) * 1963-04-03 1964-07-14 Clayton M Allen Protective cover for plants
US3581436A (en) * 1968-09-25 1971-06-01 James D Basiger Plant shield
FR2452870A1 (fr) * 1979-04-04 1980-10-31 Lesouef Pierre Dispositif permettant de disposer un materiau souple au-dessus d'une surface a proteger
SU1074445A1 (ru) * 1980-12-25 1984-02-23 Всесоюзный Научно-Исследовательский И Конструкторско-Технологический Институт По Машинам Для Горного Земледелия И Возделывания Субтропических Культур Устройство дл защиты виноградных насаждений от града
SU1754013A1 (ru) * 1989-11-20 1992-08-15 Грузинский политехнический институт Устройство дл защиты виноградных насаждений от града
AU4179093A (en) * 1992-07-03 1994-01-06 John Nelson Paterson Goodall Tensioned retractable shade cover

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* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
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DERWENT ABSTRACT, Accession No. 93-279037/35, Class P13; & SU,A,1 754 013 (GEOR POLY), 15 August 1992. *

Cited By (15)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR2742022A1 (fr) * 1995-12-07 1997-06-13 Domaine Saint Georges Scea Systeme de protection des vergers notamment fruitiers contre les intemperies et materiel de mise en oeuvre du dit procede
EP0878125A1 (fr) * 1997-05-16 1998-11-18 Mohamed Mamouri Procédé et dispositif de protection de plantations telles que les vignes contre le gel et la grêle
FR2763212A1 (fr) * 1997-05-16 1998-11-20 Mohamed Mamouri Procede et dispositif de protection de plantations telles que les vignes contre le gel et la grele
FR2777737A1 (fr) * 1998-04-23 1999-10-29 Mdb Texinov Sa Ecran-filet de type tisse-tricote pour la protection des cultures contre la grele
EP1618782A1 (fr) * 2004-07-20 2006-01-25 Emanuel Tamanini Protection des cultures contre les intempéries
FR2893638A1 (fr) * 2005-11-08 2007-05-25 Paul Riedel Brise-vent souple renforce faisant disparaitre le vent dans l'air du vent,capable d'eliminer l'electricite statique ou de constituer une surface chauffante
ITMI20100486A1 (it) * 2010-03-24 2011-09-25 Valente Pali Precompressi Spa Copertura per coltivazioni ad apertura e chiusura migliorate
EP2371207A1 (fr) 2010-03-24 2011-10-05 Valente S.p.A. Système de couverture de plantations avec mouvements d' ouverture et de fermeture améliorés
NL1039513C2 (nl) * 2012-04-03 2013-10-07 Johannes Franciscus Maria Pape Overkapping voor een stal, schuur of uitloopruimte.
US9421744B2 (en) 2012-08-31 2016-08-23 General Electric Company Methods and systems for automated ply layup for composites
ITUB20160131A1 (it) * 2016-01-15 2017-07-15 Magif S A S Di Angelo Cappi & C Sistema per la movimentazione trasversale, centralizzata e con sforzo limitato, dei teli e/o delle reti di copertura delle strutture di protezione dei filari di piante e strutture realizzate con tale sistema
WO2017121787A1 (fr) * 2016-01-15 2017-07-20 Magif S.A.S. Di Angelo Cappi & C. Système pour le mouvement de feuilles de couverture
CN107969257A (zh) * 2017-11-23 2018-05-01 梧州市雅正农业科技有限公司 一种茶园绿化藤蔓养殖支架
CN110337967A (zh) * 2019-07-09 2019-10-18 奉焕朝 一种果蔬种植用多功能遮雨棚
WO2022245232A1 (fr) 2021-05-21 2022-11-24 Momcilo Kokanovic Système doté de rails de guidage rotatifs de protection d'un verger contre des conditions météorologiques

Also Published As

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CA2186000A1 (fr) 1995-09-28
AU2086895A (en) 1995-10-09

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