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Post by Chris Taylor on May 9, 2009 18:17:45 GMT -5
The pic should explain it all. I hope to build this is if you guys think its feasible. My thinking is that since I only run 1 combine I dont need need a separate leg for the drier. ya just switch it to the wetbin at every dump then switch it back after. Not everything will get ran through the drier but chances are if part of a field needs it the whol field will. Then no need for a separate system for beans since we only have one combine. *C means corn and S means beans
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Post by Josh Nuxoll on May 9, 2009 19:36:59 GMT -5
Chris that system will look good
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farmerguy
Full Member
Highland Farms
Posts: 267
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Post by farmerguy on May 9, 2009 22:16:35 GMT -5
Everything looks good, except I wouldn't have just one leg. I would have an auger fill the wet bin, and one emptying the wet bin into the dryer. Will the system be unloaded by augers? If so, you'll already have the augers, so you might as well use them to make harvest a little more efficient. The last thing you want is the grain system to be the bottleneck during harvest. I would set it up like this: *note: I switched the scale and pit just to conserve space. If you do go the one leg route, your wet bin won't work in its current spot.
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Post by Chris Taylor on May 10, 2009 11:13:52 GMT -5
Well I redid it. It will work this way. We will use a Sukup Cyclone Pneumatic System instead of a 2nd leg that way it should work on the first design. Jay I like your idea but I dont want trucks to make the sharp turn on the far side while loaded. It saves on tires lol I plan on doing this one. The bins will be Sukup and GSI and the Leg will be GSI
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Post by jwaldrip on May 10, 2009 21:05:58 GMT -5
wat program are you making these on? they look really sweet
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Post by Chris Taylor on May 10, 2009 21:19:50 GMT -5
thanks! Just regular MS Paint lol
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Post by asuntken on May 11, 2009 20:58:54 GMT -5
Using an air system was a good idea. You want two legs. Shutting off feed to or from your dryer will eventually bite you. Once you start a dryer you need to keep it running at capacity because normally that is your bottleneck, especially if you ever expand.
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Post by rysiracusa on May 17, 2009 15:44:22 GMT -5
Looks good Chris
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