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USPTO: us-12642180 · published 2026-06-02 · patents · A01D 57/26· G01B 21/06· G01B 21/08

Methods and systems to measure and maintain consistent width of windrower harvested stocks

Pith reviewed 2026-06-03 12:02 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification patents A01D 57/26G01B 21/06G01B 21/08
keywords windrow widthcut stock measurementdistance sensorsgeolocationwork machineharvesting systemstock width
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The pith

A work machine measures cut stock width in real time with distance sensors plus GPS.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The patent describes a measurement system mounted on harvesting equipment that combines several distance sensors with a geolocation receiver and an onboard processor. The processor turns the raw distance readings and machine position into a calculated width for the windrow or cut stock and records its location. A sympathetic reader would see this as a way to keep harvested rows at a target width without stopping to measure by hand. If the system works, operators could adjust machine settings on the fly and build maps of field coverage. The central object is therefore the integrated sensor-processor unit that produces both a width value and a geolocation for each stock segment.

Core claim

The cut stock measurement system comprises a plurality of distance sensors that generate distance measurements between the work machine and the cut stock, a geolocation unit that receives global positioning signals, and a processor that receives both inputs, computes a stock width measurement from the distance data, and computes a stock geolocation from the combined distance and machine-position data.

What carries the argument

Processor that converts multiple distance-sensor readings and machine geolocation into a single stock-width value and a corresponding stock geolocation.

If this is right

  • The machine can log width and location for every segment of cut stock without extra manual steps.
  • Operators receive immediate numeric feedback that can trigger width adjustments during the same pass.
  • Field maps can be generated that record both coverage and width variation for later analysis.
  • The same sensor suite can support automated steering or header-height corrections tied to measured width.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • The same distance-plus-GPS approach could be adapted to other field operations that need real-time row or swath measurement.
  • Calibration routines or occlusion filters would probably be required before the system meets farm accuracy standards.
  • Linking the width output to variable-rate inputs or yield monitors would create a closed-loop harvesting record.

Load-bearing premise

Raw distance readings plus machine position alone are enough to yield an accurate, usable stock-width number in actual field conditions.

What would settle it

Side-by-side comparison in which manual width measurements of the same windrow segments differ from the sensor-derived values by more than the tolerance needed for consistent harvesting.

read the original abstract

1 . A cut stock measurement system for a work machine, the cut stock measurement system comprising: a plurality of distance sensors configured to generate distance measurements between the work machine and the cut stock; a geolocation unit configured to receive global positioning signals and generate a machine geolocation; a processor configured to receive the distance measurements and the machine geolocation, to compute a stock width measurement for the cut stock based on the distance measurements, and to compute a stock geolocation based on the distance measurements and the machine geolocation.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

1 major / 0 minor

Summary. The manuscript is a U.S. patent whose sole independent claim (Claim 1) describes an apparatus consisting of a plurality of distance sensors that generate measurements to cut stock, a geolocation unit that produces machine position from GPS signals, and a processor that receives both inputs and computes a stock-width value together with a stock geolocation.

Significance. If the claim were interpreted as a scientific contribution, its significance would be negligible: the described mapping from raw sensor readings to width and position is a standard sensor-fusion operation that requires no new derivation, calibration procedure, or performance bound. No data, accuracy metric, or field validation is supplied, so the manuscript adds no reproducible result or falsifiable prediction to the literature.

major comments (1)
  1. Claim 1 (and the abstract): the central claim asserts only that a processor can compute width and geolocation from distance and GPS inputs. Because no algorithm, error model, or validation is supplied, the claim is satisfied by any trivial implementation and therefore carries no technical content that could be load-bearing for a journal article.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

1 responses · 1 unresolved

We thank the referee for the review. The submitted document is a U.S. patent (not a journal manuscript), whose statutory purpose is to claim a novel apparatus rather than to present an algorithm, error analysis, or empirical validation. We address the single major comment below.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: Claim 1 (and the abstract): the central claim asserts only that a processor can compute width and geolocation from distance and GPS inputs. Because no algorithm, error model, or validation is supplied, the claim is satisfied by any trivial implementation and therefore carries no technical content that could be load-bearing for a journal article.

    Authors: The document is a patent whose independent claim recites a specific apparatus combination (plurality of distance sensors + GPS unit + processor) mounted on a windrower work machine to produce both a stock-width value and a geolocated stock position. Under U.S. patent law, novelty and non-obviousness are evaluated with respect to the claimed combination and its field of use, not the internal details of the processor computation. No algorithm or validation data is required in the claim language itself; those elements would appear only in dependent claims or a non-provisional filing if further protection were sought. Because the submission is a patent disclosure and not a research article, the absence of an explicit algorithm or field data does not constitute a deficiency within the document's intended genre. revision: no

standing simulated objections not resolved
  • The referee's expectation of an algorithm, error model, or experimental validation cannot be met by revision because those elements are outside the statutory requirements of a U.S. patent claim.

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No derivation chain present; circularity analysis inapplicable

full rationale

The document is a U.S. patent whose sole disclosed claim is an apparatus comprising distance sensors, a geolocation unit, and a processor that maps their outputs to width and geolocation values. No equations, fitted parameters, predictions, or self-citations appear anywhere in the text. The reader's circularity score of 0.0 is therefore confirmed; the patent simply asserts existence of the described mapping without any load-bearing derivation that could reduce to its own inputs.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 0 axioms · 0 invented entities

No scientific derivation or empirical result is present; the text simply lists hardware components whose sufficiency is assumed.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.0 · 5642 in / 901 out tokens · 22908 ms · 2026-06-03T12:02:14.025821+00:00 · methodology

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