Charitra
Parthasarthy
Monday, July 24, 2006 (New
Delhi):
As India continues on the path of
development, mechanisation is changing the way farming
is carried out in the country.
Sundararam Verma
who works as a scout for the National Innovation
Foundation spends most of his time looking for
innovations in farming.
He walks through village
roads, knocking on doors of farmers and co-villagers in
search of new and innovative ideas that may have found
their way into the farms.
"I am a farmer. I use
threshers myself, which is why I discussed with several
people to find out the best types of thresher
available," says Sundararam Verma, Scout, NIF.
In his search, Sundararam visited a farm where
he found a thresher, which was attached to the tractor,
and was superior to the conventional ones.
He
found that Madanlal had designed a thresher that could
thresh it all as any and every crop could go into the
machine and the grains are thrown out clean and
clear.
"When I heard about Madanlal's thresher, I
went and met him. I saw his machine and realised that
it's better than the conventional ones. I then put his
innovation forward to NIF," adds
Sundararam.
Traditionally, the job involved a
manual process to separate the chaff or straw from the
grain.
Eliminating
constraints
However, threshing is now done by
huge machines called threshers, which have a blower that
sucks in the straw and throws out the clean
grains.
But such threshers had a constraint, as
the machines couldn't thresh all crops particularly
peanuts whose shells would get stuck inside the machine.
However, Madanlal's innovation changed all
that.
"First, I tested threshing peanuts in my
machine. I realised they were getting stuck inside. So I
doubled the number of blowers in the machine and
increased the RPM."
"There were still a few
problems and I realised that it was a problem caused by
the mesh inside. I ordered one from Jaipur and fitted it
in my thresher. Now, it works perfectly and can thresh
all crops," says Madanlal, innovator.
Farmers who
once had to thresh peanuts with their hands can now look
at buying Madanlal's improved thresher.
However,
the innovation comes at a price of close to Rs 2 lakh.
The innovator justifies the high cost, as his
machine not only does it thresh all crops, including
peanuts, but it also consumes around 3.5 litres of
diesel per hour whereas traditional threshers consume
around 5-6 litres per hour.
Although Madanlal
has not been able to increase the quantity of crop
getting threshed in his machine, he says that the grain
that comes out is cleaner compared to the output of old
threshers.
The threshing season in India is just
about over. But come the time for the next harvest, the
innovator is sure that a lot more farmers, like Sundaram
Verma will be knocking on his doors once again.
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