Agricultural system and method for determining a position of a gauge wheel of a row unit for a seed-planting implement
Pith reviewed 2026-05-15 20:02 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
A rotational sensor mounted at the row-cleaner location uses a two-arm linkage to measure gauge-wheel arm rotation and determine planting depth.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The method receives data indicative of a rotational position of the gauge wheel arm, the data being generated by a rotational sensor supported relative to the frame and coupled to the gauge wheel arm via a linkage assembly, the rotational sensor being supported on the frame at a location at which the row cleaner is supported on the frame, the linkage assembly including a first sensor arm and a second sensor arm connected in series between the sensor and the gauge-wheel arm.
What carries the argument
Two-arm linkage assembly mounted at the row-cleaner support point that transmits rotation of the gauge-wheel arm to a remote rotational sensor.
Load-bearing premise
The linkage must remain rigid and free of play or wear so that sensor angle continues to map directly to gauge-wheel height without additional calibration.
What would settle it
Measure whether the sensor output deviates after the linkage joints are loosened by a known amount or after documented field wear.
read the original abstract
11 . A method for determining a position of a gauge wheel of a row unit for a seed-planting implement, the row unit comprising a frame, a disk opener supported relative to the frame, the disk opener configured to form a furrow within a field across which the seed-planting implement is traveling, a row cleaner supported on the frame forward of the disk opener relative to a forward direction of travel of the row unit, the row cleaner being configured to reduce residue on the surface of the field in front of the furrow, and a gauge wheel arm supported relative to the frame, the gauge wheel arm comprising an upper portion and a lower portion disposed at an angle relative to each other about a rotational joint, the gauge wheel arm being rotatable relative to the frame about the rotational joint, the gauge wheel being rotatably coupled to the lower portion of the gauge wheel arm and being configured to roll along a surface of the field, the method comprising: receiving, with a computing system, data indicative of a rotational position of the gauge wheel arm, the data being generated by a rotational sensor supported relative to the frame and coupled to the gauge wheel arm via a linkage assembly, the rotational sensor being supported on the frame at a location at which the row cleaner is supported on the frame, the linkage assembly including a first sensor arm extending between a first proximal end and a first distal end, with the first proximal end of the first sensor arm being coupled to the rotational sensor, the linkage assembly further including a second sensor arm extending between a second proximal end and a second distal end, the second proximal end of the second sensor arm being coupled to the first distal end of the first sensor arm, the second distal end of the secon
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript discloses a mechanical arrangement and associated method for determining gauge-wheel position on a seed-planting row unit. A rotational sensor is mounted on the frame at the row-cleaner location and connected to the gauge-wheel arm through a two-arm linkage assembly; rotational-position data from the sensor are received by a computing system and mapped to gauge-wheel height.
Significance. If the kinematic mapping remains accurate under field conditions, the arrangement permits sensor placement in a less exposed location while still providing real-time depth information for furrow formation and seed placement.
major comments (1)
- [linkage assembly description] The central claim that sensor rotation directly yields gauge-wheel position rests on the assumption that the two-arm linkage and gauge-wheel arm joint maintain fixed geometry. No stiffness specifications, joint-play tolerances, or wear allowances are supplied in the description of the linkage assembly, so even modest angular deflection would break the one-to-one mapping.
minor comments (1)
- [abstract] The abstract text is truncated mid-sentence at 'the second distal end of the secon'; the full sentence should be restored for clarity.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful reading and for identifying the implicit assumption in the linkage kinematics. We address the single major comment below.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [linkage assembly description] The central claim that sensor rotation directly yields gauge-wheel position rests on the assumption that the two-arm linkage and gauge-wheel arm joint maintain fixed geometry. No stiffness specifications, joint-play tolerances, or wear allowances are supplied in the description of the linkage assembly, so even modest angular deflection would break the one-to-one mapping.
Authors: The disclosure presents the linkage as a rigid kinematic chain whose geometry is preserved under normal field loads; the one-to-one mapping follows directly from that rigid-body assumption. We agree that the text would benefit from an explicit statement of this assumption. A short clarifying sentence will be added to the description of the linkage assembly noting that the arms and joints are configured to maintain fixed geometry during operation, thereby preserving the kinematic relationship. revision: partial
Circularity Check
No derivation chain or fitted parameters present
full rationale
The document is a patent disclosing a mechanical linkage assembly and rotational sensor placement for reading gauge-wheel arm angle. No equations, no first-principles derivations, no parameter fitting, and no predictions are claimed. The mapping from sensor angle to wheel height is asserted by geometry alone; any rigidity assumption is an engineering premise, not a self-referential computation. Consequently no circular step exists.
discussion (0)
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