Friday, April 11, 2008

Applied Research Day


Yesterday (10 April 2008) was Applied Research Day at Algonquin College, where student teams showed off the technology they worked on during their final year at the college. Front and centre was Black Walnut Team 3, exhibiting the current iterations of the harvester and cracker/separator (shown in the picture), and taking up the largest footprint in the exhibition hall by far. I say Team 3, because this is the third annual iteration of students to work on machinery development. It has been a pleasure to work with each team, each bringing its own assortment of personalities and skills, working towards our goal of cost-effective farm-scale technology for black walnut nut production (I think we’ve been a reasonable partner, because I frequently hear the words ‘patient’ and ‘supportive’ applied in our direction; from our perspective these are just elements of our commitment to the emergence of a regional nut production industry).

This event marks a milestone: the completion at the College of work on the cracker/separator, and the production of an experimental harvester which we can begin to analyze practically, i.e. under field conditions, before embarking on a ‘second generation’ model. Both units will come to the farm over the summer and be exhaustively tested. Only the harvester will feed back into Team 4’s program; the cracker/separator will be taken up by the members of Team 2 who demonstrated the first proof of concept to the NNGA last year. They will work with us at the farm to define efficiency, where cost savings in manufacture can be made, and to complete (by the end of the year) the construction of the first five units which we hope to offer to the market. Bookmark this post!

1 comment:

Rod in Forfar said...

Neil:

Glad to hear the cracker is coming along. If you need a couple of bushels of well-dried nuts from last year's harvest to crack, give me a buzz.

Rod