I deleted my whiny rant from last night about wet wheat. Now to deal with the issue.
I have very wet wheat in piles, went in at 16-20% but now with some snow mixed in its well into the 20's loading into trucks and it won't flow out of a hopper trailer after a 400 km drive.
Will it bridge off in my recirculating batch drier? Or will the heat of the grain melt the snow as it circulates and starts to dry letting it continue to flow?
I had hoped to sell it tough but it doesn't look like an option so I either have to dry it in the cold weather (another question about can I get enough propane into the drier at -15 to dry grain?) or consolidate the piles and hope it keeps till spring.
I don't have aeration available, just a batch drier. Would a continuous flow drier work better (except for the multiple passes to get it dry).
Thanks for any suggestions, especially telling me what didn't work before I have to learn it myself.
I have very wet wheat in piles, went in at 16-20% but now with some snow mixed in its well into the 20's loading into trucks and it won't flow out of a hopper trailer after a 400 km drive.
Will it bridge off in my recirculating batch drier? Or will the heat of the grain melt the snow as it circulates and starts to dry letting it continue to flow?
I had hoped to sell it tough but it doesn't look like an option so I either have to dry it in the cold weather (another question about can I get enough propane into the drier at -15 to dry grain?) or consolidate the piles and hope it keeps till spring.
I don't have aeration available, just a batch drier. Would a continuous flow drier work better (except for the multiple passes to get it dry).
Thanks for any suggestions, especially telling me what didn't work before I have to learn it myself.
Comment