A New Skid Trail Pattern Design for Farm Tractors Using Linear Programing and Geographical Information Systems
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Specifications of the Optimum Skidding Model
2.2. Skid Trail Pattern Design
- Skid trails width should be 1 m wider than the skidding vehicles.
- As farm tractors were used in this study, skid trails should be planned in the areas where the uphill gradient is below 33%.
- Skid trails should be connected to forest roads using the shortest routes and at angles of 35°–45°. The connection angle can vary according to the topological features, conditions of the forest roads and wood length.
- Skid patterns should be designed to realize the transportation of wood in a downhill direction. The distance between the trails should be equivalent to two tree lengths (50 m).
- Open culverts should be constructed on the skid trail at every 50 m interval at an angle of 45° across the trails axis where skid trails exceed 100 m.
2.3. Testing the Designed Skid Trail Pattern in Field Operations
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Existing Skidding Operations
3.2. Optimum Skidding Model
3.3. The Optimization Results of the Skid Trail Patterns
3.4. Results of Testing the DSTP in the Field Study
4. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Optimum Positional Class | Floor Condition | Floor Class | Slope Group (%) |
---|---|---|---|
1st class | Not Slippery | Humic Soil | 0–11 |
2nd class | Not Slippery | Humic Soil | 12–22 |
3rd class | Not Slippery | Humic Soil | 23–33 |
4th class | Not Slippery | Thin Granular | 0–11 |
5th class | Not Slippery | Thin Granular | 12–22 |
6th class | Not Slippery | Thin Granular | 23–33 |
7th class | Not Slippery | Big Granular | 0–11 |
8th class | Not Slippery | Big Granular | 12–22 |
9th class | Not Slippery | Big Granular | 23–33 |
Density of the Skid Trail Patterns in Hectares | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Section No. | Existing Trails | Branching Pattern | Parallel Pattern | Direct Pattern |
48 | 209 m/ha | 197 m/ha | 199 m/ha | 192 m/ha |
522 m2/ha | 494 m2/ha | 498 m2/ha | 480 m2/ha | |
51 | 353 m/ha | 186 m/ha | 180 m/ha | 181 m/ha |
883 m2/ha | 465 m2/ha | 450 m2/ha | 454 m2/ha | |
Average | 281 m/ha | 192 m/ha | 190 m/ha | 187 m/ha |
703 m2/ha | 480 m2/ha | 474 m2/ha | 467 m2/ha | |
Skidding productivity for the Skid Trail Patterns in the optimum GIS model (skidding distance of 100 m) | ||||
48 | 23.10 m3/h | 61.02 m3/h | 59.67 m3/h | 61.71 m3/h |
51 | 34.32 m3/h | 64.67 m3/h | 65.06 m3/h | 65.45 m3/h |
Average | 28.71 m3/h | 62.85 m3/h | 52.37 m3/h | 63.58 m3/h |
Skid Trails Patterns | Sub-Compartment No. | Trail Length (m) | Total Log (Piece) | Total Volume (m3) | Total Number of Cycle | Average Cycle Time (s) | Total Time (s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
DSTP Test in the field | 50-A | 242 | 156 | 116 | 39 | 658 | 25,662 |
51-A | 366 | 48 | 37 | 12 | 981 | 11,772 | |
423 | 96 | 72 | 24 | 1163 | 27,912 | ||
63-D | 258 | 172 | 130 | 43 | 730 | 31,390 | |
General total | 118 | 3532 | 96,736 | ||||
Current situation | 50-A | 242 | 156 | 116 | 75 | 479 | 35,925 |
51-A | 366 | 48 | 37 | 23 | 725 | 16,675 | |
423 | 96 | 72 | 46 | 838 | 38,548 | ||
63-D | 258 | 172 | 130 | 83 | 511 | 42,413 | |
General total | 227 | 2553 | 133,561 |
Productivity and Environmental Effects | Direct Skid Trail Pattern (Field Test Values) | Existing Skid Trails |
---|---|---|
Average Productivity (100 m) | 38.99 m3/h | 29.49 m3/h |
Average Productivity (250 m) | 15.60 m3/h | 11.78 m3/h |
Average Productivity (389 m) (existing skid trails lengths) | 10.02 m3/h | 7.58 m3/h |
Sapling collapse, ha | 4203 number/ha | 6327 number /ha |
Soil loss, ha | 35.53 m3/ha (89,180 ton/ha) | 53.39 m3/ha (134,009 ton/ha) |
© 2016 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Gumus, S.; Turk, Y. A New Skid Trail Pattern Design for Farm Tractors Using Linear Programing and Geographical Information Systems. Forests 2016, 7, 306. https://doi.org/10.3390/f7120306
Gumus S, Turk Y. A New Skid Trail Pattern Design for Farm Tractors Using Linear Programing and Geographical Information Systems. Forests. 2016; 7(12):306. https://doi.org/10.3390/f7120306
Chicago/Turabian StyleGumus, Selcuk, and Yilmaz Turk. 2016. "A New Skid Trail Pattern Design for Farm Tractors Using Linear Programing and Geographical Information Systems" Forests 7, no. 12: 306. https://doi.org/10.3390/f7120306