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Friday 23 March 2012

List of agricultural machinery


Traction and power

  • Tractor
  • Tracked tractor / Caterpillar tractor

Soil cultivation

  • Cultivator
  • Cultipacker
  • Chisel plow
  • Mulch tiller
  • Harrow
  1. Spike harrow
  2. Drag harrow
  3. Disk harrow
    • Plow (or plough)
    • Power tiller / Rotary tiller / Rototiller
    • Spading machine
    • Subsoiler
    • Two-wheel tractor
    • Stone picker ( picker)
    • Rock windrower (rock rake)
    • Rotavator
    • Destoner
    • Bedtiller
    • Ridger
    • Roller

Planting
  • Broadcast seeder (alternately: broadcast spreader or fertilizer spreader)
  • Planter (farm implement)
  • Plastic mulch layer
  • Potato planter
  • Seed drill
  • Air seeder
  • Precision drill
  • Transplanter
  • Rice transplanter

Fertilizing & Pest Control

  • Fertilizer spreader, see broadcast seeder
  • Terragator
  • Liquid manure/slurry spreader (slurry tanker)
  • Manure spreader
  • Sprayer
  • Slurry agitator

Irrigation

  • Center pivot irrigation
  • Drip irrigation
  • Hydroponics

Produce sorter

  • Weight sorter
  • Color sorter
  • Blemish sorter
  • Diameter sorter
  • Shape sorter
  • Density Sorter
  • Internal/taste sorter

Harvesting / post-harvest
  • Baler
  • Beet harvester
  • Beet cleaner loader
  • Bean harvester
  • Cane harvester
  • Cart
  • Carrot harvester
  • Chaser bin
  • Combine harvester
  • Conveyor belt
  • Corn harvester
  • Cotton picker
  • Cradle (grain)
  • Fanning mill
  • Farm truck
  • Flail
  • Forage harvester (or silage harvester)
  • Gleaner
  • Grain cleaner
  • Grain dryer
  • Gravity wagon
  • Haulm topper
  • Haulout transporter
  • Mower
  • Over-the-row mechanical harvester for harvesting apples
  • Potato spinner/digger
  • Potato harvester
  • Rake
  • Reaper
  • Reaper-binder
  • Rice huller
  • Scythe
  • Sickle
  • Silage trailer
  • Sugarcane harvester
  • Swather
  • Thresher
  • Tractor
  • Wagon
  • Winnower

Hay making
  • Bale mover
  • Bale wrapper
  • Baler and Big Baler
  • Conditioner
  • Hay rake
  • Hay tedder
  • Mower
  • Loader wagon, self-loading wagon – used in Europe, but not common in USA
  • Bale lifter
  • Topper

Loading
  • Backhoe/backhoe loader
  • Front end loader
  • Skid-steer loader

Milking

  • Bulk tank
  • Milking machine
  • Milking pipeline

Other
  • Allen Scythe
  • Grain auger
  • Feed grinder
  • Grain cart
  • Conveyor analyzer
  • Chillcuring
  • Shear Grab
  • Trailer
  • Power link box
  • Transport box
  • Bale trailer
  • Bale spike
  • Livestock trailer
  • Tractor mounted forklift
  • Buckrake
  • Bale splitter
  • Diet feeder
  • Hedge cutter, see flail mower
  • Post driver
  • Yard scraper

Obsolete farm machinery

Steam-powered:

  • Stationary steam engine
  • Portable engine
  • Traction engine
    1. Agricultural engine
    2. Ploughing engine
    3. Steam tractor
      • Reaper-binder
·        Flail
      • Hog oiler
      • Reaper
      • Winnowing machine/Winnowing-fan
      • Threshing machine
      • Drag harrow

Agricultural machinery


History
Hand tools

The first person to turn from the hunting and gathering lifestyle to farming probably did so by using his bare hands, and perhaps some sticks or stones. Tools such as knives, scythes, and wooden plows were eventually developed, and dominated agriculture for thousands of years. During this time, almost everyone worked in agriculture, because each family could barely raise enough food for themselves with the limited technology of the day.
The Industrial Revolution

With the coming of the Industrial Revolution and the development of more complicated machines, farming methods took a great leap forward. Instead of harvesting grain by hand with a sharp blade, wheeled machines cut a continuous swath. Instead of threshing the grain by beating it with sticks, threshing machines separated the seeds from the heads and stalks.
Steam power

Power for agricultural machinery was originally supplied by horses or other domesticated animals. With the invention of steam power came the portable engine, and later the traction engine, a multipurpose, mobile energy source that was the ground-crawling cousin to the steam locomotive. Agricultural steam engines took over the heavy pulling work of horses, and were also equipped with a pulley that could power stationary machines via the use of a long belt. The steam-powered machines were low-powered by today's standards but, because of their size and their low gear ratios, they could provide a large drawbar pull. Their slow speed led farmers to comment that tractors had two speeds: "slow, and darn slow."
Internal combustion engines

The internal combustion engine; first the petrol engine, and later diesel engines; became the main source of power for the next generation of tractors. These engines also contributed to the development of the self-propelled, combined harvester and thresher, or combine harvester (also shortened to 'combine'). Instead of cutting the grain stalks and transporting them to a stationary threshing machine, these combines cut, threshed, and separated the grain while moving continuously through the field.
Types
Combines might have taken the harvesting job away from tractors, but tractors still do the majority of work on a modern farm. They are used to pull implements—machines that till the ground, plant seed, and perform other tasks.

Tillage implements prepare the soil for planting by loosening the soil and killing weeds or competing plants. The best-known is the plow, the ancient implement that was upgraded in 1838 by John Deere. Plows are now used less frequently in the U.S. than formerly, with offset disks used instead to turn over the soil, and chisels used to gain the depth needed to retain moisture.

The most common type of seeder is called a planter, and spaces seeds out equally in long rows, which are usually two to three feet apart. Some crops are planted by drills, which put out much more seed in rows less than a foot apart, blanketing the field with crops. Transplanters automate the task of transplanting seedlings to the field. With the widespread use of plastic mulch, plastic mulch layers, transplanters, and seeders lay down long rows of plastic, and plant through them automatically.

After planting, other implements can be used to cultivate weeds from between rows, or to spread fertilizer and pesticides. Hay balers can be used to tightly package grass or alfalfa into a storable form for the winter months.

Modern irrigation relies on machinery. Engines, pumps and other specialized gear provide water quickly and in high volumes to large areas of land. Similar types of equipment can be used to deliver fertilizers and pesticides.

Besides the tractor, other vehicles have been adapted for use in farming, including trucks, airplanes, and helicopters, such as for transporting crops and making equipment mobile, to aerial spraying and livestock herd management.
New technology and the future

The basic technology of agricultural machines has changed little in the last century. Though modern harvesters and planters may do a better job or be slightly tweaked from their predecessors, the US$250,000 combine of today still cuts, threshes, and separates grain in essentially the same way it has always been done. However, technology is changing the way that humans operate the machines, as computer monitoring systems, GPS locators, and self-steer programs allow the most advanced tractors and implements to be more precise and less wasteful in the use of fuel, seed, or fertilizer. In the foreseeable future, some agricultural machines will be capable of driving themselves, using GPS maps and electronic sensors. Even more esoteric are the new areas of nanotechnology and genetic engineering, where submicroscopic devices and biological processes, respectively, are being used as machines to perform agricultural tasks in unusual new ways.

Agriculture may be one of the oldest professions, but the development and use of machinery has made the job title of farmer a rarity. Instead of every person having to work to provide food for themselves, less than 2% of the U.S. population today works in agriculture, yet that 2% provides considerably more food than the other 98% can eat. It is estimated that at the turn of the 20th century, one farmer in the U.S. could feed 25 people, where today, that ratio is 1:130 (in a modern grain farm, a single farmer can produce cereal to feed over a thousand people). With continuing advances in agricultural machinery, the role of the farmer will become increasingly specialized and rare.


Agricultural engineering


Agricultural engineering is the engineering discipline that applies engineering science and technology to agricultural production and processing. Agricultural engineering combines the disciplines of animal biology, plant biology, and mechanical, civil, electrical and chemical engineering principles with a knowledge of agricultural principles.
Some of the specialties of agricultural engineers include:

  • design of agricultural machinery, equipment, and agricultural structures
  • internal combustion engines as applied to agricultural machinery
  • agricultural resource management (including land use and water use)
  • water management, conservation, and storage for crop irrigation and livestock production
  • surveying and land profiling
  • climatology and atmospheric science
  • soil management and conservation, including erosion and erosion control
  • seeding, tillage, harvesting, and processing of crops
  • livestock production, including poultry, fish, and dairy animals
  • waste management, including animal waste, agricultural residues, and fertilizer runoff
  • food engineering and the processing of agricultural products
  • basic principles of electricity, applied to electrical motors
  • physical and chemical properties of materials used in, or produced by, agricultural production
  • bioresource engineering, which uses machines on the molecular level to help the environment.

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