SHIELDED SNAPPING ROLLS FOR CORN HARVESTING
AN HISTORIC LANDMARK
OF
AGRICULTURAL ENGINEERING
In 1850, E. W. Quincy of Illinois patented an open-roll ear-snapping mechanism.
A series of innovations led to corn heads for combines. Harvesting corn with
corn pickers using open rolls on corn pickers after 1925 proved to be dangerous
as farmers often needed to clear stalks from the rolls.
In 1885, E. M. Aiken, Dawson, ND, patented shielded snapping rolls with flat
plates above the rolls. C. K Shedd and E. V. Collins, Ames, IA, patented a more
aggressive shielded snapping device in 1941 which was later used on sweet corn
pickers.
After 1945, the drying of high moisture corn became economic and proved to be a
key to the development of field shelling for corn. In 1952, C. Morrison, Deere
& CO., Moline, IL, successfully harvested corn with a self-propelled combine
and a corn head with shielded snapping roll units. This followed work on
shelling corn with a combine cylinder by G.E. Pickard and D.F.Hopkins, Urbana,
IL.
In 1955, John Deere commercially sold cornheads for combines with shielded
snapping rolls produced at Ankeny, IA. By 1965, corn acreage harvested by
combines exceeded that harvested by corn pickers. In 1966, 26,000 corn heads
were sold. In 1997, corn harvest was dominated by combines using heads with
shielded snapping rolls which have proven to be efficient and safe.
DEDICATED BY THE
ASABE
1977