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NOTTINGHAMSHIRE FARMERS GRAIN CLEANER TAKES
THE BUGS OUT OF DRYING
A new grain cleaner is proving a highly
effective solution to the problem of removing bugs and weeds
from thousands of tons of grain and pulses dried under contract
each year by Nottinghamshire farmer Peter Onions.
Mr Onions, who farms 450 arable acres at
Shelton Lodge, near Newark, has an OPICO Model 595 Quiet Fan
batch dryer equipped with a Sky-Vac grain cleaner. A new replacement
machine is on order.
In addition to drying his own crops the
machine is used throughout the year for contract work. "We've
sufficient grain storage to act as trouble shooters for all
the big grain merchants as well," says Mr Onions. "We
handle everything - all cereals, linseed, oil seed rape, beans
and peas."
The work entails taking in a lot of rejected,
dirty grain for cleaning and drying. "A lot of mills now
require completely bug-free grain, so we put all this through
the drier, heat it up a fraction which kills the bugs, then
take them out with the Sky-Vac."
"The grain cleaner does a brilliant
job, and is also very effective for pulling out nasty green
weeds, especially from oil seed rape."
Mr Onions is now on his seventh OPICO machine.
"We use the machine all through the year, apart form December
when everything stops for Christmas turkeys. We're taking in
150 tons of milling wheat now that's at 16.5-17 per cent moisture
content. As we finish a contract for one merchant, so somebody
else rings up with a reject load. The machine's never idle for
more than a couple of days."
Great care is taken to ensure that the machine
is operating at maximum efficiency, which means it must be filled
to maximum capacity. "We go to great lengths to ensure
that the dryer is level," says Mr Onions. "This enables
us to fill an articulated lorry with two 12.5 ton loads from
the dryer."
Reliable and efficient
The dryer's reliability is 100 per cent,
say Mr Onions -"otherwise we wouldn't use it." It
is also extremely efficient. "The computerised control
system is fabulous. The gas it saves is unbelievable."
Ease of operation is another important factor.
"The great advantage is that you can leave the machine,"
says Mr Onions. With wet wheat, for example, the dryer keeps
going until midnight sometimes. "I can leave the machine,
have some supper, take a bath and then turn the dryer off at
11.30 p.m. in my pyjamas! The men come in at 6 am so it doesn't
stand idle for long. It's just a matter of organisation."
Depending on how much work is done and the
type of crop it has been used to dry, each OPICO machine is
kept on the farm for two or three years before being traded
in for a new one. "It depends on how many beans we put
through. Beans are a killer. If we don't do a lot of beans we
keep the dryer three years, sometimes four."
The machines also hold their price well,
says Mr Onions. "Other batch dryers have come and gone
but they were copies of the OPICO and imitations aren't usually
very good."
Cleaner working environment
The new Sky-Vac grain cleaner is purpose
built and designed to fit easily on all standard pto drive OPICO
grain dryers whether new or existing.
It removes trash, dust and fines from the
working environment. Grain cleaning is improved, as is sample
quality and bushel weight.
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