Machine and method for producing and positioning erosion control watter
A wattle maker machine for attachment to a vehicle or for stationary use is disclosed. The machine produces wattles and the mobile version produces a ditch to put them in and positions the wattles in the ditch. The machine comprises a chute for receiving organic material, a processor for breaking up the organic material, a feed auger and a wattle pipe. Organic material is forced through the wattle pipe and into tubing made of net to produce wattles. The mobile version of the machine places wattles for erosion control as the wattles are produced. The linear speed at which wattles are produced is matched to the speed of the vehicle. A plurality of wattle pipes of different diameters are connectable to the machine to enable the production of wattles of more than one diameter.
1. Field of the Invention
This invention is a machine that, when operably connected to a power source, will process organic material such as straw that has been baled and feed the processed organic material into a tube made of a net to produce a wattle. Preferably, the machine also includes a ditcher that is operable, when the machine is mounted on a vehicle, to produce a trench in the ground and the machine is further operable to position the just made wattle in the trench.
2. Description of the Prior Art
U.S. Pat. No. 5,519,985 discloses a stationary machine for producing straw filed tubes, referred to herein as wattles, primarily for use in reducing erosion by strategic placement of the tubes in the ground. The machine seems to be well suited to its purpose but the production of twenty five foot long wattles in a fixed location soon leads to problems of storage and transportation to a site where the wattles will be placed for erosion mitigation. The entire disclosure of this U.S. Pat. No. 5,519,985 is incorporated herein by reference.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention is a wattle maker and is preferably one that can be attached to a vehicle to produce wattles and a ditch to put them in, and even position the wattles in the ditch. The machine comprises a chute for receiving organic material such as straw, a processor for breaking up the organic material, a feed auger and a wattle pipe connected to the discharge end of the auger to receive processed organic material. The organic material is forced through the wattle pipe, out of the pipe and into tubing made of net to produce wattles. The mobile version of the machine places wattles for erosion control as the wattles are produced, thereby eliminating problems of wattle storage and transportation. As used herein, the term “wattle” shall mean a longitudinally extending tube made of porous material such as netting and filled with processed organic material including, but not limited to, leaves, straw, wood chips, grass and combinations of these, suitable for stemming or mitigating soil erosion. The diameter of a wattle is sometimes indicated by the application where the wattle will be used for erosion mitigation. The present invention preferably includes a plurality of wattle pipes of different diameters all adapted to be mounted on the machine to enable the production of wattles of more than one diameter.
It is, therefore, an object of one aspect of the invention to provide a mobile wattle making machine that can be mounted on a vehicle, such as a tractor, and combined with a ditcher to produce a ditch into which the wattle can be placed as it is made.
It is a further object of this aspect of the invention to provide a mobile wattle making machine that can be operated to produce wattle at the rate at which the machine is conveyed by a vehicle to which it is attached.
It is a still further object of this aspect of the invention to provide a mobile wattle making machine with which the velocity of the machine and the rate of wattle production can be matched.
It is another object of the invention to provide a wattle making machine that can be operated to produce wattles of different diameters.
These and other objects and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the disclosure herein of preferred embodiments, reference being made to the attached drawing figures.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Referring now in more detail to the drawing figures,
The machine 10 has a chute with a floor 14, a rear wall which is coextensive with a rear wall 16 of the processor described below, a front wall that is coextensive with a front wall 18 of the processor described below, a top 20 and a lid 22 which can pivot about a hinge 24 between an open. position shown in
The processor 26 is in communication with a feeder 34 that is positioned below the processor 26 so that processed organic material in the processor 26 is delivered by gravity into the feeder 34. An auger 36 in the feeder 34 is supported on a shaft 38 which receives shaft power from the power take off PTO or another source of shaft power. The auger 36 is supported inside a housing 40 that is generally cylindrical and extends, circumferentially, all of the way around the auger except for the area that is open for communication between the feeder 34 and the processor 26. Organic material that enters the feeder is transported by the rotating auger 36, from left to right in
Tubular net material 44 is supported on the portion of the housing 40 that is between the processor 26 and the discharge end 42 of the housing 40. The net material 44 is fed onto the housing 40 just as sausage casing is fed onto the discharge pipe of a sausage making machine before sausage meat is discharged into the casing. Similarly, a portion of the net material 44 that is not on the housing 40 is closed, as indicated at 46, and the feeder 34 discharges processed organic material from the discharge end 42 of the housing 40 into the net material filling the net material 44 with processed organic material and displacing the net material 44 from the housing 40. It is preferred that a tensioner be associated with the housing 40 to increase the tension that must be applied to the net material 44 to displace it from the housing. One embodiment of a tensioner, shown in
A ditch cutter wheel 54 is supported on a shaft 56 which, in turn, is supported for rotation and to receive shaft power from the power take off PTO or some other source for shaft power. The cutter wheel 54 is supported on the machine 10 so that when it is supported on a tractor in the first position (
A person operating the tractor T with the machine 10. mounted on it could set the speed of the tractor T, set the position of the gate 58 and then monitor the placement of the wattle W in the ditch D to see if the wattle speed and the vehicle speed are matched or if the wattle speed needs to be increased or decreased to match the speed of the tractor T. In case the speed of the wattle needs to be increased or decreased, the gate 58 can be moved towards the second position or towards the first position, respectively, until there is a match in the speeds. The machine should be monitored so that wattle speed corrections can be made, as needed, on the fly. Mirrors, video cameras and other remote monitoring equipment may be employed, as desired. It will be appreciated that there are vehicles besides a tractor that are suited to have the machine 10 mounted on them. For example, the machine 10 can be mounted on a skid steer and driven by shaft power provided by a power take off on the skid steer. If the skid steer is equipped with a variable speed power take off, the variable speed of the power take off can be used in conjunction with or instead of the gate 58 to control the linear speed of the wattle as it leaves the machine so that the speed of the vehicle and the linear speed of the wattle are matched.
It has been determined that, in some cases, the net material 44 should be under more tension than can reasonably be achieved with the tension block 48. Excellent results have been achieved with a tensioning assembly indicated generally at 62 in
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It will be appreciated that various changes and modifications are possible from the specific details of the invention shown in the attached drawing figures and described above with reference thereto, and can be made without departing from the spirit thereof as defined in the attached claims.
Claims
1. A vehicle mountable machine for producing wattles, the machine comprising
- a chute having an inlet for receiving organic material,
- a processor for receiving organic material from the chute and processing it,
- a feeder comprising an auger in a housing with an inlet for receiving processed organic material from the processor and an outlet wherein the auger, when it rotates, is operable to move organic material from the auger housing inlet to and through said auger housing outlet and into a tube to form a wattle and
- a gate between said chute and said auger housing inlet, said gate being operable to control the rate at which organic material moves into said auger housing inlet and, thereby, control the linear speed of a wattle as it leaves the auger housing outlet so that the linear speed of a wattle can be adjusted to match a given linear speed of the vehicle.
2. The machine claimed in claim 1 which further comprises a ditch cutter mounted on said machine that is operable, when the machine is mounted on a vehicle and the vehicle is moving, to form a ditch in the ground beneath the vehicle.
3. The machine claimed in claim 2 wherein said machine is operable to place the wattle, as it is produced, into the ditch formed by said ditch cutter.
4. The machine claimed in claim 1 which further comprises a tensioner for tensioning the tube as organic material is discharged from the auger housing outlet into the tube.
5. A machine in combination with a vehicle having a variable speed power take off, said machine comprising
- a chute having an inlet for receiving organic material,
- a processor for receiving organic material from the chute and processing it,
- a feeder comprising an auger in a housing with an inlet for receiving processed organic material from the processor and an outlet wherein the auger, when it rotates, is operable to move organic material from the auger housing inlet to and through said auger housing outlet and into a tube to form a wattle,
- a transmission for transmitting shaft power from the vehicle power take off to the auger so that the speed of the auger can be controlled so that the linear speed of the wattle, as produced can be matched to the speed of the vehicle.
6. The machine claimed in claim 5 which further comprises a ditch cutter mounted on said machine that is operable, when the vehicle is moving, to form a ditch in the ground beneath the vehicle.
7. The machine claimed in claim 6 wherein said machine is operable to place the wattle, as it is produced, into the ditch formed by said ditch cutter.
8. The machine claimed in claim 5 which further comprises a tensioner for tensioning the tube as organic material is discharged from the auger housing outlet into the tube.
9. A method f6r positioning a wattle for mitigating soil erosion, said method comprising the steps of
- producing a wattle on a vehicle mounted machine while the vehicle is moving in a given direction so that the wattle is discharged from the machine in a direction that is generally opposite to the given direction,
- cutting a ditch so that the discharged wattle is received in the ditch and
- adjusting the linear speed of the wattle as it is discharged to match the speed of the vehicle.
10. A vehicle mountable machine for producing wattles, the machine comprising
- a chute having. an inlet for receiving organic material,
- a processor for receiving organic material from the chute and processing it,
- a feeder comprising an auger in a housing with an inlet for receiving processed organic material from the processor and an outlet wherein the auger, when it rotates, is operable to move organic material from the auger housing inlet to and through said auger housing outlet,
- a first wattle pipe having a first diameter, an inlet and an outlet, said first wattle pipe being connectable to the machine so that its inlet receives organic material discharged from said auger housing outlet and the organic material is discharged from said wattle pipe outlet into a tube to form a wattle having a first wattle diameter and
- a second wattle pipe having a second diameter that is different from said first diameter, an inlet and an outlet, said second wattle pipe being connectable to the machine so that its inlet receives organic material discharged from said auger housing outlet and the organic material is discharged from said wattle pipe outlet into a tube to form a wattle having a second wattle diameter that is different from said first wattle diameter.
11. The machine claimed in claim 10 which further comprises a gate between said chute and said auger housing inlet, said gate being operable to control the rate at which organic material moves into said auger housing inlet and, thereby, control the linear speed of a wattle as it leaves one of said wattle pipes so that the linear speed of a wattle can be adjusted to match a given linear speed of the vehicle.
12. The machine claimed in claim 10 which further comprises a ditch cutter mounted on said machine that is operable, when the machine is mounted on a vehicle and the vehicle is moving, to form a ditch in the ground beneath the vehicle.
13. The machine claimed in claim 12 wherein said machine is operable to place the wattle, as it is produced, into the ditch formed by said ditch cutter.
14. The machine claimed in claim 10 which further comprises a tensioner for tensioning the tube as organic material is discharged from the auger housing outlet into the tube.
15. A machine for producing wattles, the machine comprising
- a chute having an inlet for receiving organic material,
- a processor for receiving organic material from the chute and processing it,
- a feeder comprising an auger mounted for rotation in a housing with an inlet for receiving processed organic material from the processor and an outlet wherein the auger, when it rotates, is operable to move organic material from the auger housing inlet to and through said auger housing outlet,
- a first wattle pipe having a first diameter, an inlet and an outlet, said first wattle pipe being connectable to the machine so that its inlet receives organic material discharged from said auger housing outlet and the organic material is discharged from said wattle pipe outlet into a tube to form a wattle having a first wattle diameter and
- a second wattle pipe having a second diameter that is different from said first diameter, an inlet and an outlet, said second wattle pipe being connectable to the machine so that its inlet receives organic material discharged from said auger housing outlet and the organic material is discharged from said wattle pipe outlet into a tube to form a wattle having a second wattle diameter that is different from said first wattle diameter.
Type: Application
Filed: Feb 20, 2007
Publication Date: Aug 23, 2007
Inventor: Ronald Deitering (Leipsic, OH)
Application Number: 11/708,948
International Classification: B65B 43/42 (20060101);