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Topic

Technologies and technical equipment for agriculture and food industry

Volume

Volume 72 / No. 1 / 2024

Pages : 57-66

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DESIGN AND EVALUATION OF A LOCALLY- DESIGNED PEANUT DIGGER

DESIGN AND EVALUATION OF A LOCALLY- DESIGNED PEANUT DIGGER

DOI : https://doi.org/10.35633/inmateh-72-05

Authors

(*) Rosalinda ABAD

Don Mariano Marcos Memorial State University

Frank Micheal JACLA

Don Mariano Marcos Memorial State University

Paul James GANOLA

Don Mariano Marcos Memorial State University

Hopolito BUCCAT

Don Mariano Marcos Memorial State University

Alliver SAPITULA

Don Mariano Marcos Memorial State University

(*) Corresponding authors:

[email protected] |

Rosalinda ABAD

Abstract

Manual peanut digging in the Philippines is still a practice due to the unavailability of low-cost mechanical diggers adaptable to local field conditions. Hence, the peanut digger design and evaluation were developed. The design involves benchmarking local field practices, ANSYS analysis of the digger blade, and CAD drawing. It is designed to dig, lift, convey, and drop the peanut stalk in a windrow. Its main parts are the main frame, digger blade, belt stalk conveyor, power transmission system, and hitching system. The draft and power requirement for a hand tractor to propel the digger is 1,387.48N and 2.0 hp, respectively. The treatments are the belt stalk conveyor speed levels at 205 rpm, 410 rpm, and 615 rpm, replicated three (3) times with three (3) plots per replication. It revealed an Actual Field Capacity, digging efficiency, and mechanical physical damage of 0.025 ha/h, 95.31%, and 0.56%, respectively. Investing in the machine is economically viable with a BCR of 2.09, a break-even point of 5.33 ha/yr, and a payback period of 1.60 years. This implies digging above the BEP accumulates profit for farmers.

Abstract in English

Manual peanut digging in the Philippines is still a practice due to the unavailability of low-cost mechanical diggers adaptable to local field conditions. Hence, the peanut digger design and evaluation were developed. The design involves benchmarking local field practices, ANSYS analysis of the digger blade, and CAD drawing. It is designed to dig, lift, convey, and drop the peanut stalk in a windrow. Its main parts are the main frame, digger blade, belt stalk conveyor, power transmission system, and hitching system. The draft and power requirement for a hand tractor to propel the digger is 1,387.48N and 2.0 hp, respectively. The treatments are the belt stalk conveyor speed levels at 205 rpm, 410 rpm, and 615 rpm, replicated three (3) times with three (3) plots per replication. It revealed an Actual Field Capacity, digging efficiency, and mechanical physical damage of 0.025 ha/h, 95.31%, and 0.56%, respectively. Investing in the machine is economically viable with a BCR of 2.09, a break-even point of 5.33 ha/yr, and a payback period of 1.60 years. This implies digging above the BEP accumulates profit for farmers.

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