Apparatus, systems and methods for steerable toolbars
Pith reviewed 2026-06-19 21:00 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
An agricultural implement uses a controller to actuate a draft link and adjust toolbar angle to maintain alignment with the towing vehicle.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The patent claims an agricultural implement comprising a toolbar with a pin and at least one ground engaging tool, an elongate attachment with one end attached to the toolbar via the pin, a first draft link extending between the second end of the elongate attachment and the toolbar, a first actuator in operable communication with the first draft link to adjust the angle of the toolbar relative to the elongate attachment, and a controller in electronic communication with the first actuator configured to actuate the first draft link to maintain alignment of the agricultural implement with a towing vehicle connected to the elongate attachment by a hitch.
What carries the argument
The controller-actuator-draft link assembly that changes the toolbar angle relative to the elongate attachment to sustain alignment.
If this is right
- The toolbar angle can be corrected automatically to keep ground engaging tools on target.
- Misalignment stress on the hitch connection can be reduced during operation.
- The implement can respond to changes in towing direction without separate steering mechanisms.
- Ground engaging tool performance remains consistent as the toolbar tracks the vehicle's path.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The system might combine with external positioning data to handle curved paths more precisely.
- Similar angle-adjustment logic could apply to other towed farm equipment beyond toolbars.
- Actuator response times would need calibration to avoid over-correction in high-speed towing.
Load-bearing premise
The design assumes the pin joint, draft link, actuator, and hitch will allow the needed angular adjustment without mechanical binding or failure and that the controller can achieve and sustain alignment with only the listed components.
What would settle it
A field test showing whether the toolbar stays aligned with the towing vehicle during turns or over uneven ground without the draft link binding or the actuator failing to respond.
read the original abstract
1 . An agricultural implement comprising: (a) a toolbar comprising: (i) a pin and (ii) at least one ground engaging tool; (b) an elongate attachment, a first end of the elongate attachment attached to the toolbar via the pin; (c) a first draft link extending between a second end of the elongate attachment and the toolbar; (d) a first actuator in operable communication with the first draft link, wherein actuation of the first draft link via the first actuator adjusts the angle of the toolbar relative to the elongate attachment; and (e) a controller in electronic communication with the first actuator, wherein the controller is configured to actuate the first draft link to adjust the angle of the toolbar relative to the elongate attachment to maintain alignment of the agricultural implement with a towing vehicle, the towing vehicle connected to the elongate attachment by a hitch.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript is a US patent application describing an agricultural implement for steerable toolbars. Claim 1 specifies a toolbar with a pin and ground-engaging tool, an elongate attachment connected at one end via the pin, a first draft link between the attachment's second end and the toolbar, a first actuator in communication with the draft link to adjust the toolbar angle relative to the attachment, and a controller in electronic communication with the actuator configured to actuate the draft link to maintain alignment of the implement with a towing vehicle connected via a hitch.
Significance. If the described mechanical and control elements function as stated, the apparatus could enable active steering or alignment correction for towed agricultural implements. However, the application consists solely of a component enumeration and functional description with no supporting analysis, simulations, performance metrics, or embodiment details to establish feasibility or advantages.
minor comments (1)
- The provided text is limited to a single claim; if the full specification includes additional claims, figures, or detailed embodiments, they should be cross-referenced in the abstract for clarity.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for reviewing our patent application and for the recommendation to accept. The application describes a novel steerable toolbar apparatus as claimed.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: However, the application consists solely of a component enumeration and functional description with no supporting analysis, simulations, performance metrics, or embodiment details to establish feasibility or advantages.
Authors: Patent applications are governed by legal standards requiring a written description sufficient to enable one of ordinary skill in the art to make and use the invention, which the provided claims and description satisfy through detailed structural and functional elements. Empirical data, simulations, or performance metrics are not required for patentability and are outside the typical scope of such filings; the focus is on the inventive concept itself. revision: no
Circularity Check
No significant circularity
full rationale
This US patent is a functional description of mechanical components (toolbar, pin joint, draft link, actuator, hitch, controller) and their intended interactions. It contains no equations, derivations, fitted parameters, predictions, or self-citations. No load-bearing step reduces to its own inputs by construction; the text is a direct enumeration of apparatus elements. The Pith patterns (self-definitional, fitted-input-called-prediction, self-citation load-bearing, etc.) do not apply.
discussion (0)
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