Broken paddle detection system for elevator of combine harvester
Pith reviewed 2026-05-20 16:32 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
A force sensor on the grain elevator detects missing paddles by spotting when a paddle fails to throw its expected load of grain.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The controller determines the occurrence of a broken or missing grain paddle when the measured force of grain thrown onto the sensor falls below a pre-determined value, and alerts the operator to the fault.
What carries the argument
A force sensor that registers the impact of grain thrown by each passing paddle; the controller flags a missing paddle when the expected force spike is absent.
If this is right
- Operators receive an immediate alert when a paddle fails, allowing repair before the elevator jams.
- The same sensor already used for yield monitoring now also performs paddle diagnostics.
- No extra mechanical detectors or visual cameras are required inside the housing.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The method could extend to other chain-driven conveyors that throw material past a fixed sensor.
- Thresholds might be made adaptive by tracking average force over recent paddles to reduce sensitivity to changing crop conditions.
Load-bearing premise
Force readings from missing paddles can be told apart from normal changes in grain flow, paddle wear, or sensor position without frequent false alarms or missed faults.
What would settle it
Record sensor force traces during normal harvest with known intact paddles and again after deliberately removing one paddle; check whether the threshold reliably separates the two cases across typical grain moisture and flow rates.
read the original abstract
1 . An agricultural vehicle comprising: a grain elevator including a housing and a series of interconnected grain paddles positioned within the housing that are driven in an endless loop; a sensor positioned to either directly or indirectly detect a presence of the grain paddles and output signals based thereon; and a controller that receives the signals output from the sensor and determines the occurrence of a broken or missing grain paddle of the interconnected grain paddles as a function of the signals transmitted by the sensor; wherein the sensor measures a force of grain that is thrown by each grain paddle onto a measurement portion of the sensor, wherein the controller determines the occurrence of the broken or missing grain paddle when the measured force exceeds a pre-determined predetermined value, and wherein the controller alerts an operator of the system to the occurrence of the broken or missing main paddle.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript describes a broken-paddle detection system for the grain elevator of a combine harvester. A force sensor measures grain impulses delivered by successive paddles; a controller declares a broken or missing paddle and alerts the operator when the measured force exceeds a pre-determined threshold.
Significance. A reliable, low-cost paddle-failure detector would reduce unplanned downtime in harvesting operations. The architecture is simple and could be implemented with existing elevator hardware, but the complete absence of any validation data, false-positive rates, or field-test results prevents assessment of practical utility.
major comments (1)
- [Abstract/Claim 1] Abstract/Claim 1: the detection rule states that a broken or missing paddle is declared when measured force exceeds a pre-determined value. Physically, removal of a paddle eliminates the grain impulse that paddle would have produced, so the sensor reading should drop rather than rise. No compensating mechanism (secondary jamming, altered trajectory, or mounting geometry) is supplied that would invert this relationship; the stated decision rule is therefore inconsistent with the described sensing principle.
minor comments (1)
- [Abstract] Abstract: duplicated wording 'pre-determined predetermined value'.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful reading and for identifying the inconsistency between the stated detection rule and the underlying sensing physics. We agree that the current wording in the abstract and Claim 1 is physically incorrect and will be revised.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract/Claim 1] Abstract/Claim 1: the detection rule states that a broken or missing paddle is declared when measured force exceeds a pre-determined value. Physically, removal of a paddle eliminates the grain impulse that paddle would have produced, so the sensor reading should drop rather than rise. No compensating mechanism (secondary jamming, altered trajectory, or mounting geometry) is supplied that would invert this relationship; the stated decision rule is therefore inconsistent with the described sensing principle.
Authors: The referee is correct. Removal of a paddle removes the corresponding grain impulse, so the force signal is expected to decrease, not increase. The manuscript contains no description of any secondary effect that would reverse this relationship. We will therefore revise the abstract, Claim 1, and all related text to state that a broken or missing paddle is declared when the measured force falls below a pre-determined threshold (or equivalently, when an expected impulse is absent). revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity; purely declarative patent claim with no derivations or fitted parameters
full rationale
The patent contains no equations, derivations, parameter fitting, or citations. The central detection rule is asserted directly as a functional description of the controller without any reduction to prior results or self-referential inputs. The claim is therefore self-contained by construction and exhibits none of the enumerated circularity patterns.
discussion (0)
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