Like the title says, why not dry in one cycle?
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Why you guys talking about drying stuff twice
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Because you will cook the grain instead of drying it. The grain will stay in the dryer too long and get hot increasing the risk of fire or ruining the grain by cooking it. You have to keep the grain flowing and turning to dry properly. It is easier to dry something twice when going from 17 to 10. There is a fairly steep learning curve with a dryer but you will catch on quick when yours arrives.
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We use the two pass method on a smaller continuous flow drier for high moisture grains. It is hard to bring the canola down 6 to 7 percentage points in one pass. You are only dribbling the stuff out. Using high temperatures to dry it can cause problems. So I run the stuff through twice. do not cool. Ya loose a bit of heat but the safety and keeping it moving makes it easier to dry. At least our experiences.
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One reason why I posted this topic is I could not easily figure out the logistics of running the grain through the dryer twice, so much easier if going through once, enters from wet bin exits to dry bin, then auger into truck then auger to another bin. Redbaron what you say makes no sense to me, you say you are running continuous and running it through twice, how ever is that set up, as far as I can figure if you run continuous you must put it through once. My neighbors say that with their Farmfans they only run through once batch even with snow in sample very high moisture, never spoiled the canola, possibly they use lower plenim temperatures.
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with untestable canola in years past we ran trough twice. reason why it was going through continuous grain dryer so slow that the unload auger spins empty. We just pull out 500 BU loads out of the dry bin and stick it back into the wet bin. It can mix with the wet canola and gradually bring it up. We believe it is safer this way with less chance of damage to augers running nearly empty and less chance of fire. This year I dryed 16-17 % in one pass, but outside temps were above zero. Try doing it in subzero deg weather and I would think that you will dry untestable (18-20%) canola in 2 passes with a continous dryer. Since we are all farmers though we all do what we want though. If you are going to run canola through your dryer really slow, keep your temp down below 160 F, otherwise you can dry canola up to 180 degF as long as its moving at a decent clip. It sucks to burn down a dryer.
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