Academic literature on the topic 'Stripper harvesting'

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Journal articles on the topic "Stripper harvesting"

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Bhanage, Girishkumar Balasaheb, P. U. Shahare, V. V. Aware, K. G. Dhandeand, and P. S. Deshmukh. "Development of stripper harvester for paddy." Journal of Applied and Natural Science 9, no. 4 (December 1, 2017): 1943–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.31018/jans.v9i4.1469.

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Konkan is the coastal part of Maharashtra between Western Ghat and Arabian seacoast. Rice is a major crop grown over 3.86 lakh hectares. Stripper harvesting technology, which strips only seeds and keeps straw erect-ed in the field present bright prospect for the development of small, light, efficient mechanism by reducing number of operation with increased capacity and lesser power compared to conventional cutter bar combine harvester. The big machines like combine harvester and high capacity threshers for harvesting and threshing have limitations. A proto-type of paddy stripper harvester was developed considering the limitation of Konkan like small, fragmented land, hilly, terrace farming and high rainfall. It consisted of stripping mechanism, grain tank, hydraulic system, steering system, gear box, engine, cage wheel and chassis. The arrangement of V-belt and set of pulleys were made to transmit power from gear box to stripper rotor. The effect of forward speed and peripheral speed on shattered and un-stripped grain loss was studied. The shattered grain loss was decreased with increase in forward speed whereas decreased initially and then increased with increase in peripheral speed. The un-stripped grain loss was decreased with increase in forward and peripheral speed. The performance of the developed prototype was found better at forward speed of 2.25 km/h and peripheral speed of 19.78 m/s. During final testing of prototype, shattered and un-stripped grain loss was found 5.95 and 1.89 %, respectively. The average field capacity and field efficiency of paddy stripper harvester machine was found 0.14 ha/h and 69.38 per cent respectively.
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Chemodanov, S. I., P. A. Patrin, V. A. Patrin, and V. A. Sabashkin. "The results of stripping high-moisture wheat plant mass." Siberian Herald of Agricultural Science 49, no. 6 (January 29, 2020): 96–103. http://dx.doi.org/10.26898/0370-8799-2019-6-11.

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Studies were conducted to improve the effi ciency of feed production technology in the form of high-moisture fl attened conserved grain by means of harvesting wheat with the use of stripping tools without threshing. The research objectives included an assessment of the quality and energy consumption of a single-rotor stripper header, depending on its operating modes, for harvesting high-moisture wheat plant mass. The implementation of resource-saving technologies for the feed production in the form of wet fl attened grain is constrained due to restrictions in traditional harvesters for direct grain harvesting in the phase of the beginning of wax ripeness. To solve the problem of effi cient harvesting of high-moisture grain, stripping working tools were proposed. The use of a single-rotor stripper header was justifi ed. To assess the technological effi ciency of stripping high-moisture wheat plant mass, experimental studies were conducted with the use of a bench model of a single-rotor stripper header. The results of changes in the quality indicators and the energy assessment of stripping of Novosibirsk-31 variety wheat stands were obtained, whereby the average grain moisture was 40% and the rotation frequency of the header stripping rotor was in the range of 330-650 rpm. A comparative assessment of the results of stripping wheat stands at the beginning of wax and hard ripeness was carried out. The research results showed the feasibility of using a single-rotor stripper header for harvesting the productive part of cereal crops at the beginning of wax ripeness for fodder purposes, including fl attening and subsequent conservation as the most rational way of processing high-moisture grain. The use of a stripper header as a forage harvester adapter will increase the effi ciency of resource-saving technologies for harvesting highmoisture grain and will expand agrotechnical period for harvesting grain for feed purposes.
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Krishnan, Kartik G. "Harvesting of the Sural Nerve using a Stripper." Neurosurgery 60, no. 1 (January 1, 2007): E208. http://dx.doi.org/10.1227/01.neu.0000253650.60276.fa.

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Kim, Daniel H. "Harvesting of the Sural Nerve using a Stripper." Neurosurgery 60, no. 1 (January 1, 2007): E208. http://dx.doi.org/10.1227/01.neu.0000253661.59383.14.

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5

Aldoshin, Nikolay V., and Maxim A. Mosyakov. "The Results of the Laboratory Studies of Harvesting the White Lupine by a Stripper Header with Fingers for Large Seed Crops." Engineering Technologies and Systems 30, no. 3 (September 30, 2020): 377–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.15507/2658-4123.030.202003.377-393.

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Introduction. Agricultural machinery and devices used for harvesting white lupines do not provide a complete collection of seeds, which leads to the violation of agricultural requirements for the harvesting of leguminous crops. It is necessary to find new technological and technical solutions to reduce losses of seeds during this process. The most perspective solution to the problem of white lupine harvesting is the application of industrial flow line technology together with the improvement of the method to comb standing plants by a stripper header. Materials and Methods. The article presents the design of a laboratory setup with experimental working bodies, which allows simulating the process of harvesting white lupines by separating the seed part of plants in the field. The empirical method based on the theory of multi-factor experiment was used to substantiate the parameters and operating modes of the stripper header with fingers for large seed crops. The algorithm and results of experimental studies to determine the completeness of seed collection are presented. Results. The results of the laboratory studies of the stripper header with fingers for largeseeded crops to determine the qualitative indicators for the completeness of the collection of white lupine seeds are presented. It is determined that the maximum completeness of seed collection is 99.5%. Discussion and Conclusion. In studying the technological process of harvesting white Degas lupine seeds by a combing header with fingers for large-seeded crops under laboratory conditions, the physical and mechanical properties of plants were experimentally studied, their morphological characteristics were clarified, and the regimen-technological parameters of the harvesting header were determined to ensure seed loss within agrotechnical requirements (0.5%).
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D. E. Wilkins, C. L. Douglas Jr., and J. L. Pikul Jr. "Header Loss for Shelbourne Reynolds Stripper-header Harvesting Wheat." Applied Engineering in Agriculture 12, no. 2 (1996): 159–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.13031/2013.25634.

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Jaroszynski, Grzegorz, and Geoffrey H. F. Johnston. "Harvesting of the sural nerve with a tendon stripper." Microsurgery 17, no. 4 (1996): 217–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(sici)1098-2752(1996)17:4<217::aid-micr8>3.0.co;2-h.

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Delhom, Christopher D., Matthew O. Indest, John D. Wanjura, Carlos B. Armijo, Randal K. Boman, William B. Faulkner, Gregory A. Holt, and Mathew G. Pelletier. "Effects of harvesting and ginning practices on Southern High Plains cotton: textile quality." Textile Research Journal 90, no. 5-6 (August 28, 2019): 537–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0040517519871942.

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The impact of the harvesting method, as well as the ginning method (saw or high-speed roller ginning), on textile quality was studied over three years of cotton production in the Southern High Plains. The Southern High Plains region is the largest cotton production area of the USA. The Southern High Plains and the Texas Gulf Coast are the only areas of the USA where brush-roll stripper harvesting is common, alongside traditional spindle picker machine harvesting. Different harvesting methods lead to differences in micronaire, maturity, length distribution, color and non-lint content within the bale. Ginning differences were primarily found to be length and length distribution related. Lint was processed into rotor-spun, carded ring-spun and combed ring-spun medium count yarns to determine the impacts of harvesting and ginning methods on textile product quality. Rotor spinning produced comparable quality yarns regardless of harvest or ginning method, while carded ring-spun yarns showed statistical differences in quality, with spindle-picked cottons having greater uniformity and higher tenacity. Combing was able to eliminate any functional differences in quality due to the pre-mill handling of the cottons at the expense of increased noil levels for stripper-harvested cottons. There were no differences in ends-down during ring spinning, regardless of harvest and ginning method, although cottons produced with high-speed roller ginning were able to be spun at higher spindle speeds, which equates to higher production speeds.
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Tekalkote, Sudheendra, and Sartaj B. Hussein. "A randomised controlled techniques saphenous vein harvest; morbidity lowering with minimally invasive technique." International Surgery Journal 5, no. 8 (July 24, 2018): 2727. http://dx.doi.org/10.18203/2349-2902.isj20182976.

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Background: The long incision is associated with significant intra-operative and postoperative complications. The use of minimal invasive saphenous vein harvesting has been advocated in an effort to minimize such wound related problems. The objective of this study was to compare the morbidity associated with long saphenous vein harvesting using the traditional open technique (A) against a minimally invasive technique using the Mayo vein stripper (B) that involves multiple short incisions.Methods: Authors conducted a prospective randomized controlled study in 80 patients undergoing first time coronary artery bypass grafting. Pain and healing was assessed on each postoperative day. Rings of long saphenous vein were subjected to organ-bath evaluation of endothelium-dependent and endothelium-independent relaxation. Three patients were excluded from the study, leaving 38 patients in Group A and 39 in Group B.Results: With respect to operative procedure, Group A had a greater length of vein harvested than Group B. There was no statistical difference in pain scores and endothelium-dependent or endothelium-independent relaxation between the two groups. However, there were significantly more infections in Group A compared with Group B.Conclusions: Harvesting vein through multiple incisions using the Mayo vein stripper is quicker, results in fewer infections and has no deleterious effect on endothelial function compared to open technique.
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Norcini, Jeffrey G., James H. Aldrich, and Frank G. Martin. "Effect of Harvest Method on Seed Yield of Coreopsis lanceolata L. and Gaillardia pulchella Foug." Journal of Environmental Horticulture 20, no. 1 (March 1, 2002): 20–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.24266/0738-2898-20.1.20.

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Abstract Seed of north Florida ecotypes of lanceleaf coreopsis (Coreopsis lanceolata L.) and blanketflower (Gaillardia pulchella Foug.) were sown in February 1998 and harvested manually or mechanically (portable seed stripper) at two different times during the growing season. Mechanical harvesting of both species was more efficient based on the length of harvesting time relative to the yield of clean seed but hand harvesting yielded substantially more clean seed. Date of harvest (mid-July or early October) had several significant effects on blanketflower yield and quality. The July harvest resulted in 67% higher clean seed yield, 45% higher clean seed yield rate (a measure of harvesting efficiency), 9% greater seed mass, and 95% greater germination rate than the October harvest. Date of harvesting for lanceleaf coreopsis (late June and late August) had minimal effects on clean seed yield or quality.
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Books on the topic "Stripper harvesting"

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United States. Congress. House. Committee on Merchant Marine and Fisheries. Subcommittee on Fisheries and Wildlife Conservation and the Environment. Commercial harvesting of Atlantic Coast striped bass: Hearing before the Subcommittee on Fisheries and Wildlife Conservation and the Environment of the Committee on Merchant Marine and Fisheries, House of Representatives, One Hundred Second Congress, first session, on H.R. 393, a bill to prohibit the commercial harvesting of Atlantic striped bass in the coastal waters and the exclusive economic zone, August 20, 1991--Belmar, New Jersey. Washington: U.S. G.P.O., 1991.

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The 2006-2011 World Outlook for Platform and Seeder, Reel, Straw Spreaders, Load Levelers, Weed Stripper, Grate Unit, Knife Grinders, and Stalk Walkers, ... for Agricultural Harvesting Machinery. Icon Group International, Inc., 2005.

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GOVERNMENT, US. Commercial harvesting of Atlantic Coast striped bass: Hearing before the Subcommittee on Fisheries and Wildlife Conservation and the Environment of the ... zone, August 20, 1991--Belmar, New Jersey. For sale by the U.S. G.P.O., Supt. of Docs., Congressional Sales Office, 1991.

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Book chapters on the topic "Stripper harvesting"

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"Historical Changes in Large River Fish Assemblages of the Americas." In Historical Changes in Large River Fish Assemblages of the Americas, edited by Robert A. Daniels, Karin E. Limburg, Robert E. Schmidt, David L. Strayer, and R. Christopher Chambers. American Fisheries Society, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.47886/9781888569728.ch24.

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<em>Abstract.</em>—The main channel of the Hudson River is a tidal estuary from its mouth in New York Harbor to Troy, New York, 247 km upstream. It drains about 35,000 km<sup>2</sup> and is an important navigational, commercial, and recreational system. Since the arrival of European settlers over 400 years ago, it has undergone numerous environmental changes. These changes have included channel maintenance by dredging, wholesale dumping of industrial and domestic wastes, scattered in-basin urbanization and shoreline development, deforestation of the watershed and an increase in agriculture, and water removal for commercial, industrial, and agricultural needs. In addition, the biota of the river has supported commercial and recreational harvesting, exotic species have become established, and habitats have become fragmented, replaced, changed in extent, or isolated. The tidal portion of the Hudson River is among the most-studied water bodies on Earth. We use data from surveys conducted in 1936, the 1970s, the 1980s, and the 1990s to examine changes in fish assemblages and from other sources dating back to 1842. The surveys are synoptic but use a variety of gears and techniques and were conducted by different researchers with different study goals. The scale of our assessment is necessarily coarse. Over 200 species of fish are reported from the drainage, including freshwater and diadromous species, estuarine forms, certain life history stages of primarily marine species, and marine strays. The tidal Hudson River fish assemblages have responded to the environmental changes of the last century in several ways. Several important native species appear to be in decline (e.g., rainbow smelt <em>Osmerus mordax </em>and Atlantic tomcod <em>Microgadus tomcod</em>), others, once in decline, have rebounded (e.g., striped bass <em>Morone saxatilis</em>), and populations of some species seem stable (e.g., spottail shiner <em>Notropis hudsonius</em>). No native species is extirpated from the system, and only one, shortnose sturgeon <em>Acipenser brevirostrum</em>, is listed as endangered. The recent establishment of the exotic zebra mussel <em>Dreissena polymorpha </em>may be shifting the fish assemblage away from openwater fishes (e.g., <em>Alosa</em>) and toward species associated with vegetation (e.g., centrarchids). In general, the Hudson River has seen an increase in the number and importance of alien species and a change in dominant species.
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"Historical Changes in Large River Fish Assemblages of the Americas." In Historical Changes in Large River Fish Assemblages of the Americas, edited by Robert A. Daniels, Karin E. Limburg, Robert E. Schmidt, David L. Strayer, and R. Christopher Chambers. American Fisheries Society, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.47886/9781888569728.ch24.

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<em>Abstract.</em>—The main channel of the Hudson River is a tidal estuary from its mouth in New York Harbor to Troy, New York, 247 km upstream. It drains about 35,000 km<sup>2</sup> and is an important navigational, commercial, and recreational system. Since the arrival of European settlers over 400 years ago, it has undergone numerous environmental changes. These changes have included channel maintenance by dredging, wholesale dumping of industrial and domestic wastes, scattered in-basin urbanization and shoreline development, deforestation of the watershed and an increase in agriculture, and water removal for commercial, industrial, and agricultural needs. In addition, the biota of the river has supported commercial and recreational harvesting, exotic species have become established, and habitats have become fragmented, replaced, changed in extent, or isolated. The tidal portion of the Hudson River is among the most-studied water bodies on Earth. We use data from surveys conducted in 1936, the 1970s, the 1980s, and the 1990s to examine changes in fish assemblages and from other sources dating back to 1842. The surveys are synoptic but use a variety of gears and techniques and were conducted by different researchers with different study goals. The scale of our assessment is necessarily coarse. Over 200 species of fish are reported from the drainage, including freshwater and diadromous species, estuarine forms, certain life history stages of primarily marine species, and marine strays. The tidal Hudson River fish assemblages have responded to the environmental changes of the last century in several ways. Several important native species appear to be in decline (e.g., rainbow smelt <em>Osmerus mordax </em>and Atlantic tomcod <em>Microgadus tomcod</em>), others, once in decline, have rebounded (e.g., striped bass <em>Morone saxatilis</em>), and populations of some species seem stable (e.g., spottail shiner <em>Notropis hudsonius</em>). No native species is extirpated from the system, and only one, shortnose sturgeon <em>Acipenser brevirostrum</em>, is listed as endangered. The recent establishment of the exotic zebra mussel <em>Dreissena polymorpha </em>may be shifting the fish assemblage away from openwater fishes (e.g., <em>Alosa</em>) and toward species associated with vegetation (e.g., centrarchids). In general, the Hudson River has seen an increase in the number and importance of alien species and a change in dominant species.
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Conference papers on the topic "Stripper harvesting"

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Li, H., S. D. Hu, and H. S. Tzou. "A Diagonal Piezoelectric Energy Harvester on Clamped-Free Conical Shells." In ASME 2011 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. ASMEDC, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece2011-63030.

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Thin shells are common engineering structures and they have great potentials to harvest more energy from ambient vibrations. The conical shells are forced to vibrate due to the external excitation, and this kinetic energy can be extracted using piezoelectric materials. Recent sensing analyses indicate that a straight piezoelectric patch may output no voltage due to the axisymmetric of conical shells. This study is to address this issue and to overcome the zero output problems. A diagonal piezoelectric patch is proposed for conical energy transduction and harvesting. The diagonal harvester patch shows no symmetry in the longitudinal or circumferential direction for all shell modes. This configuration guarantees the energy output for all natural modes. A mathematic model of the diagonal piezoelectric harvester is given and an open-circuit output voltage of the diagonal energy harvester is derived based on the thin-shell theory and the Donnel-Mushtari-Valsov theory. Then, the distributed modal energy harvesting characteristics of the proposed diagonal piezoelectric conical shell harvester are evaluated in case studies. Numerical results prove that the proposed diagonal piezoelectric energy harvester outputs energy for all known modes. The energy amplitudes vary with the modal shapes. Next the diagonal stripe is divided into several small patches, each patch has separate electrodes. Therefore the output energy amplitudes indicate the energy distribution over the conical harvester surface. The results show that, for each mode with unit modal amplitude, the distribution depends on the mode shape, harvester location, and geometric parameters. The regions with high strain outputs yield higher modal energies.
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