Harvesting
JF Rickman, Agricultural Engineering,
M Gummert, Agricultural Engineering
IRRI, Los Baños , Philippines
Content
• Introduction
• What is harvesting
• Harvesting systems
• When to harvest
• How to harvest
(technology options)
• Harvest losses
• Recommendations
Introduction
Harvesting is the process of collecting the
mature rice crop from the field.
• Cutting: cutting the panicles and straw.
• Hauling: moving the cut crop to the threshing
location.
• Threshing: separating the paddy grain from
the rest of the cut crop.
• Cleaning: removing immature, unfilled and
non-grain materials.
• Field drying: (optional) leaving the cut crop in
the field and exposing it to the sun for drying.
• Stacking / Piling: (optional) temporarily storing
the harvested crop in stacks or piles.
Good harvesting practices
Goals of good harvesting:
• maximize grain yield
(minimize losses)
• minimize grain damage
• Minimize quality
deterioration
• Heat build up from mold and
insect development
• Discoloration/Yellowing from
heat build-up
• Cracking from re-wetting of
dried grains
• Loss of vigor
• Reduced head rice yield
• Shattering losses
At harvest the quality of
rice is best. From then on
it can deteriorate quickly:
Harvesting systems
1. Manual system
• Manual operation
sometimes using
tools
• Labor
requirement: 48
person days / ha
Harvesting systems
2. Manual cutting / machine threshing
• Labor requirement: 28 person days/ha
• Capital cost appr.: US$ 1000
Optional:
Winnowing
or
cleaning
Harvesting systems
2. Machine cutting / machine threshing
• Capacity reaper:
• Capacity thresher:
• Capital cost approx.: US$ 2,500
Optional:
Winnowing
or
cleaning
Harvesting systems
4. Combine harvesting
• Cutting, hauling,
threshing, cleaning in
one combined operation
• Capacity: > 0.5 ha/h
• Labor requirement: 1
Operator
• Capital cost: > $
250,000
When to harvest
Harvest rice when:
• 20-25% grain moisture
• 80-85% straw colored
and
• the grains in the lower
part of the panicle are in
the hard doe stage
• 30 days after flowering
Manual cutting and hauling
• Capacity: 0.07 ha/person day
• Advantages
– effective in lodged crop
– less weather dependent
• Problems
– high labor cost
– labor dependent, competes with
other operations in peak season
– winnowing/cleaning necessary
Mechanical reaping
• Capacity: 2-4 ha/d
• Advantages
– Fast cutting
• Problems
– Places crop in window
back in the field
– Problem with lodged
crop
– Complex cutter bar and
conveying mechanism
Manual threshing
• Capacity: approximately
15 person days/ha
• Threshing by impact
• High shattering losses
• Pre-drying might be
needed
Pedal thresher
• Capacity:
• Principle
– Wire loop threshing drum
– Mainly combing the grains
off the straw, some
threshing by impact
• Advantages
– Maintains the straw
• Disadvantage
– Needs winnowing after
threshing
Wire loop threshing drum
Axial-flow thresher
produced in 9 different countries
used by several 100,000’s of rice farmers across Asia
• Capacity: 0.3-3t/h
• Threshing through impact
• Large range of sizes
available
• With or without cleaner
• Truck mounted units
• Advantages
– Can thresh wet crop
– Compact
Peg tooth
threshing
drum
Axial flow principle
Winnowing
• Principle: lighter
materials are blown
away by air
• Removes chaff, straw
and empty grains
• Hand or mechanical
winnowing
• Does not work for
materials heavier than
grain (dirt, stones)
Cleaning
• Combination of fan and
oscillating sieves
• Air delivered by fan
removes lighter materials
• Top sieves with large
holes remove larger straw
particles
• Bottom sieves with
smaller holes remove
small seeds (e.g. weed
seeds)
Combine harvesting
• Features
– capacity: 4-8 ha/day
– combines cutting, threshing,
cleaning and hauling
– tracks for mobility in wet fields
• Advantages
– high capacity
– low total harvest losses
• Disadvantages
– Requires relatively large field
sizes
– Problem in terraced fields
Stripper harvesting
• Capacity: 1ha/day
• Advantages
– strips and collects
grains only
– less material to handle
• Problems
– problems in wet soils
and lodged crop
– straw treatment
– does not work well
with long straw
– complex machine
– skills required
Despite strong promotion in SE-Asia
the stripper harvester has not gained
wide popularity because of its
problems in less favorable harvesting
conditions
Losses during cutting
• Shattering loss = premature shedding of mature
grains from the panicle caused by birds, wind, rats,
and handling operations. Certain rice varieties shatter
more easily than others.
• Lodging loss = plants with mature grains in the
panicles fall on the ground making the grains difficult
to recover.
• Standing crop loss = standing plants with mature
grains are left standing in the field after harvesting
operations as a result of oversight, carelessness or
haste.
Losses during threshing
• Separation loss or “blower loss” = mature grains that
are mixed with straw or chaff during the cleaning
operation.
• Scatter loss = mature grains that are scattered on the
ground during the threshing and cleaning operation.
• Threshing loss = mature grains that remain attached to
the panicle in the straw after completion of the threshing
operation. High threshing efficiency will lead to low
threshing loss, and vice versa.
Recommendations for optimizing
quality
• Harvest at the right time and moisture content
• Avoid stacking the cut crop in the field
• Avoid delays in threshing after harvesting
• Use the proper machine settings when using a
threshing machine
• Clean the grain properly after threshing
• Avoid delay in drying after threshing
Tips for manual threshing
• Thresh as soon as
possible after cutting
• Hand thresh at lower
moisture
• Place a large canvas
under the threshing
frame to minimize
shatter loss
Tips for machine threshing
• Thresh as soon as
possible after cutting
• Level the thresher
• Set machine correctly
– drum speeds in
thresher (600rpm)
– air flow in the cleaner
– angle in the cleaner
sieves
Thank you
Setting threshing drum speed
Always adjust the thresher correctly.
• For peg-tooth drums the drum tip
speed should be about 12-16
m/sec (see Table for correct
RPM).
• Higher speeds result in higher
grain damage and de-hulled
grains.
• Lower speeds increase the
amount of non-threshed grain
and result in grain loss. Lower
speeds also decrease the
throughput of the thresher.
RPM Tip speed (m/s) for drum diameters of
30 cm 40 cm 50 cm
400 6.3 8.4 10.42
450 7.07 9.4 11.78
500 7.85 10.5 13.09
550 8.64 11.5 14.4
600 9.42 12.6 15.7
650 10.21 13.6 17.02
700 11 14.7 18.3
750 11.8 15.7 19.64
800 12.6 16.8 21
850 13.4 17.8 22.25
900 14.14 18.85 23.6
Setting concave clearance
Concave clearance
• For most threshers
clearances between peg-
teeth and concave should be
about 25mm.
• Smaller clearance increases
grain damage and might
lead to clogging of straw.
• Larger concave clearances
reduce threshing efficiency.
Axial flow thresher
Combine harvester
Tips for good winnowing
• Place grain on a winnowing tray
• Place a net or mat on the ground
• Tilt the tray against the wind
• Pour grain slowly at a height of
about 1m
• Wind will separate light from heavy
grains
• Recover only the heavier grains
• Repeat the procedure, if needed
• Use a fan or blower if there is
insufficient wind.

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Mod_2_Harvesting.ppt

  • 1. Harvesting JF Rickman, Agricultural Engineering, M Gummert, Agricultural Engineering IRRI, Los Baños , Philippines
  • 2. Content • Introduction • What is harvesting • Harvesting systems • When to harvest • How to harvest (technology options) • Harvest losses • Recommendations
  • 3. Introduction Harvesting is the process of collecting the mature rice crop from the field. • Cutting: cutting the panicles and straw. • Hauling: moving the cut crop to the threshing location. • Threshing: separating the paddy grain from the rest of the cut crop. • Cleaning: removing immature, unfilled and non-grain materials. • Field drying: (optional) leaving the cut crop in the field and exposing it to the sun for drying. • Stacking / Piling: (optional) temporarily storing the harvested crop in stacks or piles.
  • 4. Good harvesting practices Goals of good harvesting: • maximize grain yield (minimize losses) • minimize grain damage • Minimize quality deterioration • Heat build up from mold and insect development • Discoloration/Yellowing from heat build-up • Cracking from re-wetting of dried grains • Loss of vigor • Reduced head rice yield • Shattering losses At harvest the quality of rice is best. From then on it can deteriorate quickly:
  • 5. Harvesting systems 1. Manual system • Manual operation sometimes using tools • Labor requirement: 48 person days / ha
  • 6. Harvesting systems 2. Manual cutting / machine threshing • Labor requirement: 28 person days/ha • Capital cost appr.: US$ 1000 Optional: Winnowing or cleaning
  • 7. Harvesting systems 2. Machine cutting / machine threshing • Capacity reaper: • Capacity thresher: • Capital cost approx.: US$ 2,500 Optional: Winnowing or cleaning
  • 8. Harvesting systems 4. Combine harvesting • Cutting, hauling, threshing, cleaning in one combined operation • Capacity: > 0.5 ha/h • Labor requirement: 1 Operator • Capital cost: > $ 250,000
  • 9. When to harvest Harvest rice when: • 20-25% grain moisture • 80-85% straw colored and • the grains in the lower part of the panicle are in the hard doe stage • 30 days after flowering
  • 10. Manual cutting and hauling • Capacity: 0.07 ha/person day • Advantages – effective in lodged crop – less weather dependent • Problems – high labor cost – labor dependent, competes with other operations in peak season – winnowing/cleaning necessary
  • 11. Mechanical reaping • Capacity: 2-4 ha/d • Advantages – Fast cutting • Problems – Places crop in window back in the field – Problem with lodged crop – Complex cutter bar and conveying mechanism
  • 12. Manual threshing • Capacity: approximately 15 person days/ha • Threshing by impact • High shattering losses • Pre-drying might be needed
  • 13. Pedal thresher • Capacity: • Principle – Wire loop threshing drum – Mainly combing the grains off the straw, some threshing by impact • Advantages – Maintains the straw • Disadvantage – Needs winnowing after threshing Wire loop threshing drum
  • 14. Axial-flow thresher produced in 9 different countries used by several 100,000’s of rice farmers across Asia • Capacity: 0.3-3t/h • Threshing through impact • Large range of sizes available • With or without cleaner • Truck mounted units • Advantages – Can thresh wet crop – Compact Peg tooth threshing drum Axial flow principle
  • 15. Winnowing • Principle: lighter materials are blown away by air • Removes chaff, straw and empty grains • Hand or mechanical winnowing • Does not work for materials heavier than grain (dirt, stones)
  • 16. Cleaning • Combination of fan and oscillating sieves • Air delivered by fan removes lighter materials • Top sieves with large holes remove larger straw particles • Bottom sieves with smaller holes remove small seeds (e.g. weed seeds)
  • 17. Combine harvesting • Features – capacity: 4-8 ha/day – combines cutting, threshing, cleaning and hauling – tracks for mobility in wet fields • Advantages – high capacity – low total harvest losses • Disadvantages – Requires relatively large field sizes – Problem in terraced fields
  • 18. Stripper harvesting • Capacity: 1ha/day • Advantages – strips and collects grains only – less material to handle • Problems – problems in wet soils and lodged crop – straw treatment – does not work well with long straw – complex machine – skills required Despite strong promotion in SE-Asia the stripper harvester has not gained wide popularity because of its problems in less favorable harvesting conditions
  • 19. Losses during cutting • Shattering loss = premature shedding of mature grains from the panicle caused by birds, wind, rats, and handling operations. Certain rice varieties shatter more easily than others. • Lodging loss = plants with mature grains in the panicles fall on the ground making the grains difficult to recover. • Standing crop loss = standing plants with mature grains are left standing in the field after harvesting operations as a result of oversight, carelessness or haste.
  • 20. Losses during threshing • Separation loss or “blower loss” = mature grains that are mixed with straw or chaff during the cleaning operation. • Scatter loss = mature grains that are scattered on the ground during the threshing and cleaning operation. • Threshing loss = mature grains that remain attached to the panicle in the straw after completion of the threshing operation. High threshing efficiency will lead to low threshing loss, and vice versa.
  • 21. Recommendations for optimizing quality • Harvest at the right time and moisture content • Avoid stacking the cut crop in the field • Avoid delays in threshing after harvesting • Use the proper machine settings when using a threshing machine • Clean the grain properly after threshing • Avoid delay in drying after threshing
  • 22. Tips for manual threshing • Thresh as soon as possible after cutting • Hand thresh at lower moisture • Place a large canvas under the threshing frame to minimize shatter loss
  • 23. Tips for machine threshing • Thresh as soon as possible after cutting • Level the thresher • Set machine correctly – drum speeds in thresher (600rpm) – air flow in the cleaner – angle in the cleaner sieves
  • 25. Setting threshing drum speed Always adjust the thresher correctly. • For peg-tooth drums the drum tip speed should be about 12-16 m/sec (see Table for correct RPM). • Higher speeds result in higher grain damage and de-hulled grains. • Lower speeds increase the amount of non-threshed grain and result in grain loss. Lower speeds also decrease the throughput of the thresher. RPM Tip speed (m/s) for drum diameters of 30 cm 40 cm 50 cm 400 6.3 8.4 10.42 450 7.07 9.4 11.78 500 7.85 10.5 13.09 550 8.64 11.5 14.4 600 9.42 12.6 15.7 650 10.21 13.6 17.02 700 11 14.7 18.3 750 11.8 15.7 19.64 800 12.6 16.8 21 850 13.4 17.8 22.25 900 14.14 18.85 23.6
  • 26. Setting concave clearance Concave clearance • For most threshers clearances between peg- teeth and concave should be about 25mm. • Smaller clearance increases grain damage and might lead to clogging of straw. • Larger concave clearances reduce threshing efficiency.
  • 29. Tips for good winnowing • Place grain on a winnowing tray • Place a net or mat on the ground • Tilt the tray against the wind • Pour grain slowly at a height of about 1m • Wind will separate light from heavy grains • Recover only the heavier grains • Repeat the procedure, if needed • Use a fan or blower if there is insufficient wind.