MSU cotton gin
serves educational, research purposes
By
Linda Breazeale
MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Researchers and students from many educational
levels are gaining information at Mississippi State
University from a fully functional cotton mini-gin, the only
operational gin on a college campus.
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GLEANING
INTEREST - Natasha Hunter, kneeling, and fellow
high school students Allen Robinson and Kristy
Poole watch cotton move through a mini-gin at
Mississippi State University as Eugene Columbus, a
senior research associate with MSU's agriculture
and biological engineering department, explains the
process. The agriscience survey students visited
the only operational gin on a college campus during
a recent field trip.
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Eugene Columbus, senior research associate with MSU's
Agricultural and Biological Engineering Department, said the
3-year-old gin has been useful in teaching students and in
ginning research cotton from the Mississippi Agricultural
and Forestry Experiment Station farms. The mini-gin has the
ability to accommodate producers' and industry's needs by
processing cotton samples too small for a commercial cotton
gin to process.
"The
cotton gin is designed to take MSU's education a step
further by offering an experience not available anywhere
else," Columbus said. "Graduates of MSU's gin management and
technology program gain the technical and business knowledge
necessary to operate in the cotton industry."
MAFES
researchers use the gin to process some of their larger
research plots. Samples are taken to evaluate moisture
content, yields, U.S. Department of Agriculture classing and
fiber quality. The mini-gin, which can process one bale an
hour, also will be used to help evaluate a new cotton-picker
this fall in a joint research effort by MSU's Extension
Service and the North Mississippi Research and Extension
Center. Cotton Incorporated is funding the study.
The gin
laboratory, located in the Pace Seed Lab at MSU, is valued
at $2 million. The university was able to construct the
equipment for less than one-eighth that cost.
"The
gin cost MSU less than $250,000 to build, thanks to several
donations by the Southern Cotton Ginners Association and
Foundation and by several gin companies and individuals,"
Columbus said. "Those donors recognized the need for this
type of educational opportunity on a university
campus."
Columbus
said gins have changed very little operationally over the
years, but he still has goals for expansion and improvement
on the mini-gin.
"Plans
to improve the facility include adding a suction unloading
system to allow us to take cotton from trailers. We want to
add Programmable Logic Controllers to monitor cotton flow,
shaft speeds and process throughput," Columbus
said.
Two
noncommercial, small-scale gins exist in the United States,
both in Mississippi: the MAFES-Agricultural and Biological
Engineering mini-gin and one at the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's Cotton Ginning Lab in Stoneville. A third gin
is under construction at the University of
Georgia.
Linda
Jack, a teacher at Starkville High School, recently visited
the mini-gin with students in her agri-science survey class.
They were able to watch cotton through plexiglass sides as
it made its way through the ginning process.
"This
is a good way for students to learn about the textile
industry and how it affects Mississippi agriculture. They
also gain insight into career opportunities," she said.
Once at MSU, students can pursue a bachelor's degree in
agricultural engineering technology and business with an
emphasis in gin management and technology.
"Graduates
from the gin management and technology emphasis are uniquely
qualified for fiber processing industries," Columbus said.
"They have the necessary experience and educational
background to effectively manage complex ginning systems.
Half of our graduates are working in cotton gins and the
others are in agriculture-related jobs.
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Released:
April 21, 2003
Contact: Eugene Columbus, (662) 325-3282
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