By
Bonnie Coblentz MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Mississippi State University dedicated a miniature
cotton gin in late May that will help both students and
researchers in their study of cotton. The
fully-operational machine has clear plexiglass sides that
allow viewers to watch the flow of cotton through the foot-
wide gin. The cotton gin lacks a drier on the front and a
press on the back to be like a commercial gin facility. It
is housed in one room of the Pace Seed Lab. The mini
gin will be used to strengthen the Gin Management and
Technology emphasis in MSU's Agricultural Engineering
Technology and Business major. Jerry
Gilbert, head of MSU's Agricultural and Biological
Engineering Department, said work began three years ago to
create a demonstration gin with internal operations that can
be viewed. Eugene Columbus, Mississippi Agricultural and
Forestry Experiment Station agricultural engineer,
supervised the project. "It will
be a tremendous teaching aid and research tool that our
students will have available to them on campus in a
laboratory or lecture setting," Gilbert said. "They can have
direct contact with a full-size gin and from that
experience, become more familiar with ginning without having
to leave campus." Gilbert
also praised the gin's ability to accommodate producers' and
industry's needs by processing cotton samples too small for
a commercial cotton gin to process. The
Southern Cotton Ginners Association was one of the projects
financial supporters. Lee Todd, executive vice president of
the association, was present at the dedication and said his
organization has a vital interest in the success of the
program. "This
year we anticipate a 19 million bale crop that we will gin
with about 1,000 gins throughout the Cotton Belt," Todd
said. "We need to have trained personnel to run this
equipment, and we must continually upgrade the educational
level of the gin operators." Vance
Watson, MAFES director, called the gin a successful
partnership between the Experiment Station, the College of
Agriculture and Life Sciences, and industry. "We
wanted a gin that we could all be proud of and that can be
used for research and development," Watson said. "No other
university facility in the world has a gin like
this." Tim
Burcham, faculty advisor for students in the Gin Management
and Technology emphasis, said the cotton gin is a great tool
that takes MSU's education a step further by offering an
experience not available anywhere else. "Technical
and business knowledge are necessary to operate in this
industry," Burcham said. "What we're really going to be
producing is graduates who will serve the state of
Mississippi and make us all proud." The
cotton gin is part of the seed processing equipment in
MAFES. It will be operated under the direction of the
Agricultural and Biological Engineering Department. Academic
instruction involving its use will be handled by the College
of Agriculture and Life Sciences. Released:
June 5, 2000
Mississippi
Agricultural News:
Mini Cotton Gin
To Enhance Teaching
Contact: Dr. Jerry Gilbert, (662) 325-3280
Visit: DAFVM
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