Seeing lots of pictures of guys blowing heat up the arse end of combines to thaw out sieves, and plenty of stories of guys pulling sieves clean out of machines to take home and thaw out in the shop.
Honest question. Has anyone ever attempted supplemental heat on the cleaning fan intake?
I was thinking about it today... When its COLD, the snow will blow through, but when you're in that "danger zone" you melt the snow threshing, only to blow cold air over top of it when separating thereby freezing the sieves off.
There are three decent sources of heat on the combine: (1) hydraulics, and (2) engine, and (3) intake air after the turbocharger.
Kill the engine fan which is a parasitic power draw, and cool all three of those with the cleaning fan... Would it be enough of a heat bump to keep the sieves clean?
Honest question. Has anyone ever attempted supplemental heat on the cleaning fan intake?
I was thinking about it today... When its COLD, the snow will blow through, but when you're in that "danger zone" you melt the snow threshing, only to blow cold air over top of it when separating thereby freezing the sieves off.
There are three decent sources of heat on the combine: (1) hydraulics, and (2) engine, and (3) intake air after the turbocharger.
Kill the engine fan which is a parasitic power draw, and cool all three of those with the cleaning fan... Would it be enough of a heat bump to keep the sieves clean?
Comment