A Conceptual Design and Economic Analysis of a Small Autonomous Harvester

Current trends in agricultural equipment have led to an increasing degree of autonomy. As the state of the art progresses towards fully autonomous vehicles, it is important to consider assumptions implicit in the design of these vehicles. Current automation in harvesters have led to increased sensin...

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Main Author: French Jr, William David
Other Authors: Mechanical Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/47787
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-477872021-08-14T05:30:06Z A Conceptual Design and Economic Analysis of a Small Autonomous Harvester French Jr, William David Mechanical Engineering Wicks, Alfred L. Williams, Christopher B. Meehan, Kathleen Agricultural Economics Precision Agriculture Unmanned Ground Vehicles Current trends in agricultural equipment have led to an increasing degree of autonomy. As the state of the art progresses towards fully autonomous vehicles, it is important to consider assumptions implicit in the design of these vehicles. Current automation in harvesters have led to increased sensing and automation on current combines, but no published research examines the effect of machine size on the viability of the autonomous system. The question this thesis examines is: if a human is no longer required to operate an individual harvester, is it possible to build smaller equipment that is still economically viable? This thesis examines the appropriateness of automating these machines by developing a conceptual model for smaller, fully autonomous harvesters. This model includes the basic mechanical subsystems, a conceptual software design, and an economic model of the total cost of ownership. The result of this conceptual design and analysis is a greater understanding of the role of autonomy in harvest. By comparing machine size, machine function, and the costs to own and operate this equipment, design guidelines for future autonomous systems are better understood. It is possible to build an autonomous harvesting system that can compete with current technologies in both harvest speed and overall cost of ownership. Master of Science 2014-05-01T08:00:34Z 2014-05-01T08:00:34Z 2014-04-30 Thesis vt_gsexam:1567 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/47787 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Agricultural Economics
Precision Agriculture
Unmanned Ground Vehicles
spellingShingle Agricultural Economics
Precision Agriculture
Unmanned Ground Vehicles
French Jr, William David
A Conceptual Design and Economic Analysis of a Small Autonomous Harvester
description Current trends in agricultural equipment have led to an increasing degree of autonomy. As the state of the art progresses towards fully autonomous vehicles, it is important to consider assumptions implicit in the design of these vehicles. Current automation in harvesters have led to increased sensing and automation on current combines, but no published research examines the effect of machine size on the viability of the autonomous system. The question this thesis examines is: if a human is no longer required to operate an individual harvester, is it possible to build smaller equipment that is still economically viable? This thesis examines the appropriateness of automating these machines by developing a conceptual model for smaller, fully autonomous harvesters. This model includes the basic mechanical subsystems, a conceptual software design, and an economic model of the total cost of ownership. The result of this conceptual design and analysis is a greater understanding of the role of autonomy in harvest. By comparing machine size, machine function, and the costs to own and operate this equipment, design guidelines for future autonomous systems are better understood. It is possible to build an autonomous harvesting system that can compete with current technologies in both harvest speed and overall cost of ownership. === Master of Science
author2 Mechanical Engineering
author_facet Mechanical Engineering
French Jr, William David
author French Jr, William David
author_sort French Jr, William David
title A Conceptual Design and Economic Analysis of a Small Autonomous Harvester
title_short A Conceptual Design and Economic Analysis of a Small Autonomous Harvester
title_full A Conceptual Design and Economic Analysis of a Small Autonomous Harvester
title_fullStr A Conceptual Design and Economic Analysis of a Small Autonomous Harvester
title_full_unstemmed A Conceptual Design and Economic Analysis of a Small Autonomous Harvester
title_sort conceptual design and economic analysis of a small autonomous harvester
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/47787
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