from coop , same as edwards , I think . stays lit to long to be a thermocoupler or air switch problem . anyone had any experience with these.
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Troubleshooting grain gaurd aeriation heater
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Throw it in the garbage once the colder nights come you will have 2 feet of froze grain around the edge of the bin due to moisture from the propane itself. Go buy a Herman Nelson heater and blow clean dry warm air into the bin. Diesel preferred due to price that propane is.
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Originally posted by the big wheel View PostThrow it in the garbage once the colder nights come you will have 2 feet of froze grain around the edge of the bin due to moisture from the propane itself. Go buy a Herman Nelson heater and blow clean dry warm air into the bin. Diesel preferred due to price that propane is.
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Guest
Originally posted by the big wheel View PostThrow it in the garbage once the colder nights come you will have 2 feet of froze grain around the edge of the bin due to moisture from the propane itself. Go buy a Herman Nelson heater and blow clean dry warm air into the bin. Diesel preferred due to price that propane is.
I'm burnin cheap, cheap, cheap natural gas
had wrote it off until I finally figured out how to use it
the secret is to only run heater at night , run fan 24/7 , if you run heater all the time it tries to dry to quick and rains inside of bin ,(sounds like your adventure you had) . don't you have NG there ??? , so it works like sweat drying , if you know what that is ? we have dried several 2000 bu bins of wheat from 21 to13.5 in 5 days this fall. just a nice little overflow system to compliment our superb dryer . we have natural gas outlets that will service all 32 hopper bins in yard . if you need help using yours or "want to throw it in the garbage" give me a call and I will take it off your hands
it is working good now , was just a pinched hose .
thanks everyone else for the constructive helpLast edited by Guest; Oct 6, 2018, 21:48.
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As far as raining inside the bin, I've had fantastic luck with an evacuation fan placed into the center hole up top. Keeps the air moving, and gives considerably less condensation.
One fella around here had westeel engineer up an additional 10hp centrifugal fan into the roof to keep condensation down. It's quite the awkward looking contraption with a massive fan and ductwork built into one of the roof panels.
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Originally posted by caseih View Postwho the **** is using propane ???.? you make too many assumptions . it has the same moisture in it as our NG dryer does , I guess . Herman nelson , that's a ****ing laugh, not to many safety controls on that , lol. lots of bins got burnt years ago till guys figured out to steer clear of those ****ing things . not to good if your fan stops, ffs .
I'm burnin cheap, cheap, cheap natural gas
had wrote it off until I finally figured out how to use it
the secret is to only run heater at night , run fan 24/7 , if you run heater all the time it tries to dry to quick and rains inside of bin ,(sounds like your adventure you had) . don't you have NG there ??? , so it works like sweat drying , if you know what that is ? we have dried several 2000 bu bins of wheat from 21 to13.5 in 5 days this fall. just a nice little overflow system to compliment our superb dryer . we have natural gas outlets that will service all 32 hopper bins in yard . if you need help using yours or "want to throw it in the garbage" give me a call and I will take it off your hands
it is working good now , was just a pinched hose .
thanks everyone else for the constructive help
It's indirect flame hooked up with an in bin thermostat safest thing there is your not doing 200 degrees your doing exactly what a hot summer day does. But go ahead be a dumbass smartass and blow your *** propane or natural gas straighten into your bin. Hahahahah omg hill billy 101 just to think your so smart.
And don't be stupid and shut your heat off at night the best drying is when you slowly raise your grain temperature throughout the bin when it's warm you won't have any frost what so ever in the bin. But go ahead do what you please.
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Originally posted by caseih View Postwho the **** is using propane ???.? you make too many assumptions . it has the same moisture in it as our NG dryer does , I guess . Herman nelson , that's a ****ing laugh, not to many safety controls on that , lol. lots of bins got burnt years ago till guys figured out to steer clear of those ****ing things . not to good if your fan stops, ffs .
I'm burnin cheap, cheap, cheap natural gas
had wrote it off until I finally figured out how to use it
the secret is to only run heater at night , run fan 24/7 , if you run heater all the time it tries to dry to quick and rains inside of bin ,(sounds like your adventure you had) . don't you have NG there ??? , so it works like sweat drying , if you know what that is ? we have dried several 2000 bu bins of wheat from 21 to13.5 in 5 days this fall. just a nice little overflow system to compliment our superb dryer . we have natural gas outlets that will service all 32 hopper bins in yard . if you need help using yours or "want to throw it in the garbage" give me a call and I will take it off your hands
it is working good now , was just a pinched hose .
thanks everyone else for the constructive helpLast edited by biglentil; Oct 7, 2018, 01:40.
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Guest
fOriginally posted by the big wheel View PostDo you even know what rhe fk a Herman Nelson is? ??
It's indirect flame hooked up with an in bin thermostat safest thing there is your not doing 200 degrees your doing exactly what a hot summer day does. But go ahead be a dumbass smartass and blow your *** propane or natural gas straighten into your bin. Hahahahah omg hill billy 101 just to think your so smart.
And don't be stupid and shut your heat off at night the best drying is when you slowly raise your grain temperature throughout the bin when it's warm you won't have any frost what so ever in the bin. But go ahead do what you please.
anybody that burned bins around here didn't have an air switch or in bin hi heat thermometer .....
i will say this slower so you understand , I. SHUT. THE. HEAT. OFF. IN THE DAYTIME
sounds like you have burnt a lot of things , like your tox o wik dryer you were spouting off to the guy looking for help on that
seems all you have is sarcastic remarks
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Originally posted by caseih View Postf
and yet , you are the dumbass , as you say , that had the two feet , yes folks, two feet of frozen grain around your hopper bin................
anybody that burned bins around here didn't have an air switch or in bin hi heat thermometer .....
i will say this slower so you understand , I. SHUT. THE. HEAT. OFF. IN THE DAYTIME
sounds like you have burnt a lot of things , like your tox o wik dryer you were spouting off to the guy looking for help on that
seems all you have is sarcastic remarks
As far as running daytime or night time if your not heating the air when humidity is high your likely pumping moisture back in whether it's day or night.
And not the indirect heaters fault if they don't have a temperature control who would t know if you don't shut off heat blowing constantly your going to have a problem. No wonder you burnt your bins down. Hahahaha
Also those direct flames you have to know how much wind your pushing through otherwise that flame can be pushed all the way into the air ducts almost directly on the grain
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Guest
Originally posted by biglentil View PostI think opposite only run it during the day, sun keeps the tin warm so no condensation. Its something dont plan on using unless I have to. A dryer on natural gas would be nice, but not worth it for 5000 bushels. Most years air is all we need here.
Checked opi cables this morninand grain temp on bottom 2 is 35 degrees, canola should be dry by the time that warm front gets through. Heat wont come up until grain is dry .Thats 5 days , canola was 14.5 goin in and list a night of heat when that hose was pinched.
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Originally posted by the big wheel View PostNever burnt anything and yes years ago tried the direct heaters propane and natural gas. Have several different yards some have access to natural gas some don't. On cold nights they would freeze the grain around the outside. Indirect heat would not 2 bins side by side.
As far as running daytime or night time if your not heating the air when humidity is high your likely pumping moisture back in whether it's day or night.
And not the indirect heaters fault if they don't have a temperature control who would t know if you don't shut off heat blowing constantly your going to have a problem. No wonder you burnt your bins down. Hahahaha
Also those direct flames you have to know how much wind your pushing through otherwise that flame can be pushed all the way into the air ducts almost directly on the grain
Gotta go combine dry canola
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