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My local elevator

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    My local elevator

    Broke a record the other day for daily delivery.

    17475 tonne surpassed previous record by 600t top job.

    Prices nudging up here again.

    #2
    Must be fairly big elevator....

    Comment


      #3
      Filling bunkers I assume? How many conveyers or augers for unloading?

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by Blaithin View Post
        Filling bunkers I assume? How many conveyers or augers for unloading?
        Bunkers yep dunno 10 maybe more

        Another site did 21000 t or thereabouts

        Sample stand slow point

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by malleefarmer View Post
          Bunkers yep dunno 10 maybe more

          Another site did 21000 t or thereabouts

          Sample stand slow point
          Do you have to sample and have it assessed before you dump? Does quality factors decide where you dump in what bunker?

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by wmoebis View Post
            Do you have to sample and have it assessed before you dump? Does quality factors decide where you dump in what bunker?
            Yep protien, screenings retention oil etc etc.

            Think 6 wheat segregation 4 barley maybe 5

            1 canola 2 bean ithink.

            Right to rail line 90 kms to port trucks to port think about 80 shorter route.

            Vitterra/glencore selling unused elevators here a mate bought 12000 tonne site unused for 14 years $66,000
            Last edited by malleefarmer; Dec 12, 2020, 21:57.

            Comment


              #7
              After an expansion, one of the near by terminals was quite tickled about doing 4000 tonnes per day. That's close to 100 super-b's. Two pits.

              It's fastest and easiest to grade wheat if it's all a good #1 or bad feed. It's the borderline stuff that slows the whole process down. Canola is easy(usually).
              One of our locals adopted a kiosk stýle delivery approach. Drive up to the probe and enter information into a kiosk, they probe, wait your turn to get on the scale/pit, enter more info at another kiosk, dump, enter your done, take printed kiosk 'slip of paper", leave. Only thing I don't like about it is there is no printed elevator receipt right then and there but you do get a digital one via email(and maybe text). What about "agreed upon" bla bla bla and grade etc disputes? Seems they want to speed up deliveries and have sacrificed the time it takes to interact with the producer/hauler. They grade it as they see it anyway, and alot of times the deals are cut with the "grain reps" not the "graders". If they want to call my wheat barley I dont care as long as I get paid for the agreed upon price based on our very representative samples.
              Last edited by farmaholic; Dec 12, 2020, 22:31.

              Comment


                #8
                Ive got exact same machine in combine as 3levator for protien/oil moisture.

                Have bushel weigher and sceenings testers

                So roughly we know grade before it goes in.

                And with vitterra dynamic binning or upgrading usually good result.

                Start a paddock of low protien look for buyers with flat price.

                Bit of mucking around sell8ng wheat in oz to attain best best price but thats deregulation of markets.

                Comment


                  #9
                  https://www.stockjournal.com.au/story/7046335/tailem-bend-breaks-grain-receival-record/?src=rss https://www.stockjournal.com.au/story/7046335/tailem-bend-breaks-grain-receival-record/?src=rss

                  Better quantify all this.

                  I have a elevator 16 kms to my east which is were my kids schooled andmother lives. Maybe 45000 tonnes site but im going against frieght going there and limited segregations maybe 2 for wheat 2 for barley.

                  Once full shuts until some is trucked out. Often only a day. A “c” class site.

                  My preffered elevator is the one above 26 kms to my west.

                  Never get full got hundreds of acres constantly building new pads for bunkers.

                  May take 1/2 million tonnes. Tis a “b” class site. Stuff from above mentioned local site gets shifted to this one when full.

                  Storage and handling etc cheaper at the mega sites.

                  It’s actually a lightning rod for prices some years close to port going west, so suits exporters and packers but also lets say 4to 500 kms from very active domestic markets plus locally we have one feed mill uses 1000t wheat a week.400 t barley. Another mill about 2/3 the size mega chicken farm factories and piggeries the same and beef feed lots all within 100 kms.

                  Chicken and pig farms popular by corporates out here so darn hot and dry for 7 months of the year little humidity so stuff all disease.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    I know jazz questions my wisdom but we get no charges until 28 th feb then $1.20 per month.

                    Fumigated etc your wheat is graded and sits in h1 st@ck h2 apw asw gp or feed wheat stack.

                    You get paid on what you deliver if it outturned a 1% lower in protien stiff shitze if it out turns higher buyer has a win but they buy from the stacked average of the grade.

                    Doubt this is hard for you guys to grasp, been like this for last whatever 22 yrs.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      You got us beat Mallee. That’s like dumping a super b every 3 minutes for 24 hours. The elevators here couldn’t do a fraction of what yours are doing. They only hold 20-50,000 tonnes anyway. Closest thing for high capacity is some of the big feedlots in the states processing high moisture corn. Some pretty cool videos on YouTube.

                      Interesting how things are done in different places.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Originally posted by woodland View Post
                        You got us beat Mallee. That’s like dumping a super b every 3 minutes for 24 hours. The elevators here couldn’t do a fraction of what yours are doing. They only hold 20-50,000 tonnes anyway. Closest thing for high capacity is some of the big feedlots in the states processing high moisture corn. Some pretty cool videos on YouTube.

                        Interesting how things are done in different places.
                        Hope you saw the link so ya know im not bullshittting

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by malleefarmer View Post
                          Ive got exact same machine in combine as 3levator for protien/oil moisture.

                          Have bushel weigher and sceenings testers

                          So roughly we know grade before it goes in.

                          And with vitterra dynamic binning or upgrading usually good result.

                          Start a paddock of low protien look for buyers with flat price.

                          Bit of mucking around sell8ng wheat in oz to attain best best price but thats deregulation of markets.
                          In my opinion there is too much emphasis put to visual(subjective grading) characteristics of wheat than objective characteristics. Maybe Aussie growing and harvesting conditions produce a more consistent wheat quality. Disease, unfavoranle weather and difficult harvests can wreak havoc on quality.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Originally posted by farmaholic View Post
                            In my opinion there is too much emphasis put to visual(subjective grading) characteristics of wheat than objective characteristics. Maybe Aussie growing and harvesting conditions produce a more consistent wheat quality. Disease, unfavoranle weather and difficult harvests can wreak havoc on quality.
                            When you are talking visual (subjective grading) are you referring to the frost and mildew? It would be hard to assess those factors by machine. This is one area where universal training would help not sure how many farmers or elevator staff understand or been shown/trained how to properly use the standards and guides. Heck I've been in elevators where they don't even know where they are or they have been so contaminated they are a half a grade out.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Originally posted by woodland View Post
                              You got us beat Mallee. That’s like dumping a super b every 3 minutes for 24 hours. The elevators here couldn’t do a fraction of what yours are doing. They only hold 20-50,000 tonnes anyway. Closest thing for high capacity is some of the big feedlots in the states processing high moisture corn. Some pretty cool videos on YouTube.

                              Interesting how things are done in different places.
                              I am guessing that there are several trucks unloading at once. If I remember correctly there were conveyor unloads at each pad so probably dumping at more than one pad at a time.

                              Comment

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