Abstract:
Watermelon is one of the most common economic and productive fruits grown in the eastern part of Uganda. Water Melon processing in the industry generates large quantities of by-products that are usually discarded (Mansouri, Mirzabe and Ráufi, 2017). Within those by-products, melon seeds account for 10% of total melon weight.
Thus to increase the economic value of watermelon, the best use of this discarded has been
studied in this literature. Since watermelon seed shelling is still carried out manually in most
countries thus making the process slow, labour intensive, arduous in nature, and low
productivity.
This work therefore focused on: design; construction; performance evaluation; economic
analysis of a motor operated watermelon shelling machine which can shell a variety of
watermelon seeds. A motor operated watermelon seed shelling machine was designed, fabricated and tested.
This watermelon seed shelling machine consists of an electric motor onto which a belt is
attached which transfers motion to the pulley that is attached on the Shelling disk.
The shelling disk consists of a shaft which turns to drive the shelling disk; where
The seeds are hit against the stationary drum. During testing, 12 kg of watermelon seeds were
shelled per hour with a shelling efficiency of 68.7%.
The machine had an investment cost of 1,200,000UGX, NPV of 8,763,840.48UGX and salvage value UGX 8,486.01UGX after five years. The results obtained showed that slight increase in the amount of seeds increases the shelling efficiency.