This paper presents a proposal for automatic speed control of vehicles that requires working in synchronism with each other during agricultural operations. It describes the development and field tests of a control system for a slave tractor based on the master tractor speed, using a fuzzy controller. For the tests the master tractor was instrumented with GPS, encoders, computer and radio transmitter. The slave tractor was instrumented in the same way, and included also a stepper motor to act on the tractor throttle. To evaluate the system two tests were conducted. In the first, the master tractor speed was simulated using only the slave tractor. In the second test, two tractors were used varying the master tractor speed and registering the slave tractor response. In the first test the slave tractor followed the speed variation simulated with a mean square error (MSE) non-significant and a maximum mean percentage error (MPE) of 1.3%. In the second test the slave tractor followed the master tractor speed variation with a displacement (MPE) ranging in magnitude from 0.2% to 2.9%.
auto-pilot; tractor; fuzzy control; mechanized harvester