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ARS Home » Southeast Area » Stoneville, Mississippi » Cotton Ginning Research » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #256462

Title: Experiences in high-speed roller ginning of mid-south grown cotton

Author
item Byler, Richard
item Delhom, Christopher - Chris
item Hardin Iv, Robert

Submitted to: ASABE Annual International Meeting
Publication Type: Proceedings
Publication Acceptance Date: 7/30/2010
Publication Date: 8/16/2010
Citation: Byler, R.K., Delhom, C.D., Hardin Iv, R.G. 2010. Experiences in high-speed roller ginning of mid-south grown cotton. Proceedings of ASABE Annual International Meeting. (ASABE) Paper No. 1009117. June 20-23, 2010, Pittsburgh, PA.

Interpretive Summary: The saw-type gin stand has been used in the eastern US but a high-speed roller-type gin stand (HSRG) has been developed. This HSRG has been shown to produce fiber with better length and fiber entanglements, called neps, than the traditional saw-type gin stand in the western US. Four cotton cultivars were prepared for ginning and ginned with the two gin stands, then cleaned with different types of lint cleaners. The HSRG processed cotton at the same rate as the saw-type gin stand per unit width; however the HSRG is narrower than the saw gin stand. The HSRG produced lint with better fiber length properties and did less damage to the fiber than the saw gin stand. The experimental lint cleaner behind the roller gin stand did less damage to the lint than the traditional saw-type lint cleaner behind the saw gin stand and also removed less weight from the lint. The lint from both processing streams was cleaned well.

Technical Abstract: Four cotton cultivars were ginned with a saw-gin equipment line and also with a high-speed roller-gin line. The saw-gin line using an air-jet and controlled-batt saw-type lint cleaner was compared to the high-speed roller-gin line using two versions of an experimental lint cleaner, of a basic design not used with commercial roller ginning, one design with a lint reclaimer and the other without the lint reclaimer. The high-speed roller-gin processed the seed cotton at the same rate as the saw-type gin stand per m of machine width; however, the roller-gin stand is narrower than the saw gin stand. The roller-gin line produced lint with better fiber length properties than the saw gin line. The roller-gin stand did less damage to the fiber than the saw-gin stand and the experimental lint cleaner, with or without the reclaimer, did less damage to the lint than the controlled-batt saw-type lint cleaner. Fewer Neps were created in the roller-gin line than the saw-gin line. The experimental lint cleaner did not remove as much non-lint as the traditional controlled-batt lint cleaner, about ¾ as much, but cleaned well and the measurements of the negative effects of the lint cleaner were not statistically significant for the experimental cleaner but were significant for the traditional cleaner. The fiber processed with the lint cleaner with the reclaimer had somewhat lower quality than the fiber processed with the same lint cleaner without the reclaimer. Also, the lint cleaner with the reclaimer removed nearly as much material as without the reclaimer so the reclaimer will not be included in further testing.