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The Rural Voice, 1978-07, Page 28Mud won't get this bean cutter down IBy Rhea Hamilton] Necessity is often called the mother of invention. That's not the case though for George Smyth who has built what he feels is the first bean cutter that remains undaunted by mud and weeds. After viewing an experimental model last year at Centralia College of Agricultural Technology. Mr. Smyth, of R. R. #2. Auburn, went home to the welding shop he's operated for years. and put together his own working model. It is the first new idea in bean pulling because it severes the plants gently just below the surface. The Smyth Bean Cutter's 20 inch disc cutter blades are the same as those used on a conventional disk. Each disc cuts the bean plants ahead of it. then spins the cut material to the rear. The disc cutting the adjacent row turns in the opposite direction. thereby putting two rows into one for harvesting. A windrower can be pulled behind to pull several rows into a single swath. Four or Six The compact machine. available with 4 or 6 cutters (each cutter takes one row). can be mounted on the front or rear of a tractor and operates at up to 7 m.p.h. Hydraulic motors power a chain drive which. in turn drives the vertical mounted axle for each cutting disc. The machine is made in modules with two or three cutters making up each module. Each module "floats" and is equipped with a pair of adjacent cutting wheels for uniform operating depth on uneven ground. A divider can be used to move plants out of the way so they aren't trampled by the rear tractor wheels. The bean cutter is equipped with 'a drawbar and PTO shaft extension for simultaneous "underground cutting" and multi -row windrowing of the crops. Hydraulic Pump Tractors must have a minimum of hydraulic pump capacity of six gallons and provide 2.000 psi to Dower the cutters. The macnrne nas been tried out in the area by several farmers last year when wet conditions made it almost impossible to harvest beans. Murray Wilson of Strathroy and James Hawkins. of Nile both used the cutter last year and recommend the results. They both got their beans off with little trouble at a tint e when many farmers had to abandon bean fields to the mud. Joseph Biener of Port Elgin purchased a Smyth Bean Cutter to take off 300 acres of beans last September and recommended to Mr. Smyth that hilling be kept at a minimum in most soils. Although the Smyth Bean Cutter has been in existence for less than a year the demand is already picking up mostly by word of mouth. Already the Smyths are getting letters from the U.S.A. and even from as far away as Rio de Janerio in Brazil. According to George Smyth, Americans seem to be making the most inquiries into the cutter. It was suggested by his wife Judy that some of the American demand for the machine is due to the fact that in the states there are few government subsidies for crop damage incurred by weather conditions. "Our government is spoiling us", Mrs. Smyth said sometimes it seems farmers don't bother finding another way to save their cmps but let them go because the government will pay for the lasses through subsidies and insurance, pointed out Mrs. Smyth. Inquiries about the revoluntionary bean puller have come form North Dakota, New York, Pennsylvania. and Idaho. Farm machinery in Minnesota are looking into buying the Smyth Cuttcr in volume. PG. 28 THE RURAL VOICE/JULY 1978. BELLE' S VARIETY and GIFT .• THE CONVENIENCE STORE tO tP JOSEPHINE STREET WINGHAM, ONTARIO • EVERYDAY CONVENIENCES MILK ... BREAD ... BUTTER FILMS ... MAGAZINES ... CARDS MODELS ... PAINTS ... BRUSHES CHOCOLATES ... GIFTS OPEN: Monday to Saturday 8:30 a.m.-10 p.m. Sundays 1 p.m. -10 p.m. NOW NEW ADDITION AT PEPI'S ICI[ CIF�I[AM SUNDAES MILK SHAKES BANANA SPLITS HAND SCOOPED CONES "TAKE OUT OR EAT IN" PHONE 357-3400 OPEN: Monday to Thursday - 11:30 a.m. to 12 p.m. Friday & Saturday - 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Sunday - 1 p.m. to 10 p.m. NEXT DOOR TO BELLE'S VARIETY