Batteuse
Utiliser cette image
Puis-je réutiliser cette image sans autorisation? Oui
Les images sur le portail de la collection d’Ingenium ont la licence Creative Commons suivante :
Copyright Ingenium / CC BY-NC-ND (Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0)
ATTRIBUER CETTE IMAGE
Ingenium,
1968.0860.001
Permalien:
Ingenium diffuse cette image sous le cadre de licence Creative Commons et encourage son téléchargement et sa réutilisation à des fins non commerciales. Veuillez mentionner Ingenium et citer le numéro de l’artefact.
TÉLÉCHARGER L’IMAGEACHETER CETTE IMAGE
Cette image peut être utilisée gratuitement pour des fins non commerciales.
Pour un usage commercial, veuillez consulter nos frais de reproduction et communiquer avec nous pour acheter l’image.
- TYPE D’OBJET
- ENDLESS APRON/WOOD/HAND FEED
- DATE
- 1900
- NUMÉRO DE L’ARTEFACT
- 1968.0860.001
- FABRICANT
- Desjardins Cie
- MODÈLE
- Inconnu
- EMPLACEMENT
- Saint-André-de-Kamouraska, Québec, Canada
Plus d’information
Renseignements généraux
- Nº de série
- S/O
- Nº de partie
- 1
- Nombre total de parties
- 1
- Ou
- S/O
- Brevets
- S/O
- Description générale
- WOODEN FRAME, DRIVE WHEEL/ CAST IRON FLY WHEEL, RODS, TOOTHED CYLINDER, FASTENING DEVICES/ METAL SIEVE SCREEN/ CANVAS DRIVE BELTS/ LEATHER DRIVE BELTS
Dimensions
Remarque : Cette information reflète la taille générale pour l’entreposage et ne représente pas nécessairement les véritables dimensions de l’objet.
- Longueur
- 387,0 cm
- Largeur
- 103,0 cm
- Hauteur
- 142,0 cm
- Épaisseur
- S/O
- Poids
- S/O
- Diamètre
- S/O
- Volume
- S/O
Lexique
- Groupe
- Agriculture
- Catégorie
- Manutention de récolte
- Sous-catégorie
- S/O
Fabricant
- Ou
- Desjardins
- Pays
- Canada
- État/province
- Québec
- Ville
- Saint-André-de-Kamouraska
Contexte
- Pays
- Inconnu
- État/province
- Inconnu
- Période
- Inconnu
- Canada
-
La Cie Desjardins was an agricultural equipment manufacturer based in Saint-André-de-Kamorouska, Quebec. Established in 1865, Desjardins became known for its thresher, "Le Vanneur", and horse treadmills or powers. In 1911, the company expanded production into gasoline engines. - Fonction
-
Threshers separate or "thresh" grain from the head. They also separate grain kernels from the straw and chaff, cleaning the grain. Threshers were first developed in Europe in the late 18th century and mechanized the separation of grain, which was previously done by hand with tools such as flails. The first threshing machines were stationary: powered by hand or treadmill, they increased the amount of grain a farmer could separate in a day. Wheeled threshing machines began to replace stationary threshers in the 1860s and further mechanized grain harvesting. Threshers were initially built of wood and powered by horse-powered windlasses; they were later built of steel and powered by steam traction engines and gas tractors. Threshers were in turn replaced through the twentieth century by combine harvesters, which merged harvesting and threshing operations in one machine. - Technique
-
The Desjardin thresher is noteworthy because it is an early 20th century thresher that features technologies—the endless apron and fanning mill—which were first introduced in 1860s and 1870s. These technologies automated grain cleaning and straw handling. Desjardins continued to manufactured such threshers in the 20th century to serve local markets and smaller farms, which could not afford or fully take advantage of the larger wheeled threshers that were also then on the market. - Notes sur la région
-
Inconnu
Détails
- Marques
- STENCILLED ON IN YELLOW PAINT ON SIDE PANELS IS: 'A COMPAGNIE/ DESJARDINS/ ST. ANDRE [CO] KAMOURASKA. P.Q.'/ HANDWRITTEN IN BLACK MARKER ON FRONT END IS: 'A1614B'
- Manque
- From CA of 07/09/1997 by Kevin Machan: Undetermined
- Fini
- FRAME & BODY PAINTED RED/ WOODEN DRIVE WHEEL PAINTED BLUE & BLACK/ ALL METAL PARTS PAINTED BLACK/ RED CANVAS DRIVE BELTS/ NATURAL COLOURED LEATHER DRIVE BELTS
- Décoration
- FRAME MEMBERS HAVE A BLACK LINE TRIM WITH A THINNER YELLOW LINE TRIM INSIDE/ ON SOME FRAME MEMBERS YELLOW TRIM LINES CONVERGE & INTERSECT/ LEAF & STEM DESIGN, GREEN, WHITE & PINK IN COLOUR ON SEVERAL PANELS, ON ONE SIDE ONLY
FAIRE RÉFÉRENCE À CET OBJET
Si vous souhaitez publier de l’information sur cet objet de collection, veuillez indiquer ce qui suit :
Desjardins Cie, Batteuse, vers 1900, Numéro de l'artefact 1968.0860, Ingenium - Musées des sciences et de l'innovation du Canada, http://collection.ingenium.ca/fr/id/1968.0860.001/
RÉTROACTION
Envoyer une question ou un commentaire sur cet artefact.
Plus comme ceci


































































































