HARVESTER AUTOMATION AND PRECISION AGRICULTURE TRIALS IN QUEENSLAND 2006
By M. ESQUIVEL, L. CABEZAS, B. HERNÃNDEZ, S. MARRERO, F. FERNÃNDEZ, E. PONCE, L. QUINTANA and L. GONZÃLEZ
DURING the 2006 harvest season, research engineers from Cuba trialed harvester
automation and precision agriculture (PA) equipment from TechAgro in three
harvesters in the Herbert, Burdekin and Mackay districts of Queensland. The
equipment had been developed specifically for sugarcane harvesters over more
than five years in Cuba and Brazil. It was fitted and ran on CAMECO 2500 and
3510 harvester models, being validated over a broad range of field conditions,
which varied from extremely wet green cane in the Herbert following a major
rainfall event; heavy clay flood irrigated profile and burnt cane in the Burdekin;
to green cane in light sandy soils in the Eton area of Mackay. Equipment trialed
included automatic base cutter control, yield monitor and harvester benchmark
system software. The automatic basecuttter system demonstrated an ability to
work in all conditions and allowed settings to be easily made by operators in
different crop and soil conditions. The yield monitor provided valuable data for
yield mapping, being the preliminary step to understanding and managing field
variability, while benchmarking makes it possible to evaluate several parameters
of harvester efficiency over the time or space.