Seems with fuzarium infested grain if we need to store it which is most likely we should be using some sort of spreader on the auger among other things. Probably good for any grains. Anyone using one any recomendations on?
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anyone using a spreader on their auger?
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I have never heard that. Interesting...
We made a thing thAt clips on the bin lid rim and hangs down 3 feet and hits a discer blade. It spread it all the way around a 36 foot bins at the bottom cause grain would fly out the door at the start of bins. Don't do it any more. Air seems to move with the fan the same on the temperature/moisture cables the same with or without doing it. (4 cables inside with 1 down the middle.)
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You bring up a very good point Hopperbin, for more than one reason.
Maybe one should use a spreader when filling truck too! Ever think about how grain flows and why part of the reason probe samples are not official samples, even tho our price is set on them?
Where does you elevator place their probe in your truck box? Right in the center, where all the broken grain and weed seeds have gathered (aka- dkg).
Why does official samples have to be taken by a cross cut sampler when elevator sells, but a probe is good enough when they buy?
Also the reason why you should make sure elev uses the borner divider when ever they handle your sample.
From the GIPSA. USDA web site:
Grain is non-homogeneous. That is, the whole kernels, broken kernels, and foreign material that are present in any lot of grain, segregate whenever grain is handled or transported. Fine particles tend to concentrate in a region near the center of the
container and coarse particles in the outer perimeter. For this reason, avoid probing in the "spout-line" (i.e., that area of the container directly below the loading spout where fines accumulate).
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Ita kinda interesting... If we load the trailer over the slope front and back to heaping when they probe they got 1.5 dock 0.6 splits.
When we load over the slides they got 3.3 dockage 1.2 splits (yellow peas).
This was in peas but probably the same in all crops.
My boss when I was hauling grain always told me if it was a good customer load on the slopes if he was a Prick load over the CHUTES . LOL
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