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SeedHolder.JPG
FA info icon.svg Angle down icon.svg Project data
Authors Jeffrey M. Brookins
Made Yes
Replicated No
Cost USD 38,815
OKH Manifest Download

3D Printed Seed Drill Punch for Hard Soil

Project developed by --Jmbrooki (talk) 07:05, 2 December 2014 (PST)

Abstract

  1. In the most basic form, a seed drill is a device that will position seeds in soil, without waste. This idea was an improvement over sowing seeds, where soil was tilled and seeds were thrown over the dirt. Before a mechanical device was invented, the solution was to individually plant seeds, by hand.[1]
  2. My proposed improvement is to create a seed reservoir, which will resemble a funnel, with the drill punch going through the center. This design will allow seed to be distributed into individual holes, regardless of soil compaction. While this design may not permit the fast movement of the powered-tiller designs,[2] it will allow an individual the ability to seed a field regardless of soil composition.

Bill of Materials

  1. Printed Parts
    1. One (1) Seed Reservoir
    2. One (1) Spring Support and Drill Guide
    3. One (1) Lid
  2. PVC Pipe
  3. Rope, Cord, Twine, etc.
  4. Spring

Tools needed

  1. MOST Delta RepRap or similar RepRap 3-D printer
  2. PVC Pipe for Low-Cost Handle
  3. Epoxy for Gluing Handle
  4. Spring
  5. Twine, Cord, Rope, etc.

SCAD Files and Thingiverse Link

Technical Specifications and Assembly Instructions

  • Total Printing Time was around ~25 hours. However, this was with extremely slow printing speeds.
  • Given a faster printer, this will easily be a one-day build project.

Assembly Instructions

  1. Ensure that all printed pieces fit together. Place the spring guide into the seed reservoir, then guide the drill bit through both holes, exposing the tip of the drill through the reservoir.
  2. Glue your handle to the center of the seed drill plunger.
  3. Assemble all the parts, and lace the tie downs with twine.

Common Problems and Solutions

  • A problem I ran into was that I scaled all parts to 2000%. Unfortunately, the seed drill plunger came out to large, and the corresponding holes needed to be filed down. I would recommend scaling the plunger less than the reservoir and guide.

Cost savings

  • Commercial Equivalent: $39,000+
  • Small Household Equivalent: $99.95[3]
  • OSAT Seed Drill: $13.50 - $18.50
  1. Printed Parts: $10-15
  2. PVC Pipe, 1.5in x 4ft: $2.50
  3. Spring: $1
  • Total Cost Savings from Commercial Equivalent, assuming you print 10 Seed Drills: $39,000 - $185.00 = $38,815

References

FA info icon.svg Angle down icon.svg Page data
Keywords 3d printing, seed drill, sowing, tilling, farming
SDG SDG02 Zero hunger, SDG08 Decent work and economic growth, SDG11 Sustainable cities and communities
Authors Jeffrey M. Brookins
License CC-BY-SA-3.0
Language English (en)
Related 0 subpages, 4 pages link here
Impact 900 page views
Created December 2, 2014 by Jeffrey M. Brookins
Modified October 23, 2023 by StandardWikitext bot
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