Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
549434 Applied Ergonomics 2012 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

A hand operated maize dehusker–sheller to be operated by farm women was designed and developed to dehusk and shell the maize cobs using ergonomics (anthropometric, strength and physiological workload). Axial-flow maize dehusker–sheller with 540 mm cylinder length and 380 mm diameter required 3.03 N-m torque on cylinder shaft while operating at 5.6 m s−1 peripheral speed and 100 kg h−1 feed rate by feeding cob one by one. This torque was 30% of isometric torque obtained at front position of handle (greatest distance) with lowest crank length. The heart rate of subject while operating the maize dehusker–sheller at 54 rpm (5.6 m s−1) was 142 beats min−1. The output of 60 kg h−1 was obtained at the feed rate of 80 kg h−1. Two subjects can operate the machine for an hour with a rest pause of 15 min by swapping the operation.

► Ergonomics is essential for developing gender friendly equipment. ► 30% of lowest isometric torque enables the farm women for its smooth handling. ► Hand cranking speed of 50–55 rpm may be taken for design of equipment. ► Development and testing simultaneously are good practice. ► Ergonomic designed equipment reduced physiological and economic costs over others.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Human-Computer Interaction
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