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ADJUSTING THE FORAGE HARVESTER FOR CORN SILAGE PARTICLE SIZE

ADJUSTING THE FORAGE HARVESTER FOR CORN SILAGE PARTICLE SIZE. Ronald T. Schuler, Professor Extension Agricultural Engineer Biological Systems Engineering Department University of Wisconsin-Madison. Team Forage. Corn Silage Particle Size-Factors. Machine Adjustment

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ADJUSTING THE FORAGE HARVESTER FOR CORN SILAGE PARTICLE SIZE

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  1. ADJUSTING THE FORAGE HARVESTER FOR CORN SILAGE PARTICLE SIZE Ronald T. Schuler, Professor Extension Agricultural Engineer Biological Systems Engineering Department University of Wisconsin-Madison Team Forage

  2. Corn Silage Particle Size-Factors • Machine Adjustment • Feed roll and cutterhead • Crop processor • Crop maturity • Storage • Animal

  3. Forage Harvester • Functions: • Gather the crop • Size the crop, primarily length of forage particles • Deliver crop to transport unit

  4. Typical Configuration • Crop Unit • Hay head or row crop • Feed rolls • Compressing material for cutting • Determining TLC • Cutterhead • Chopping material • Crop Processor • Crop damage • Blower

  5. Typical Configuration of Pull Type Harvester Processor Feed rolls Cutterhead Auger

  6. Feedrolls • Typically two sets • Larger, front set for feeding • Smaller, rear set to meter material into the cutterhead • Bottom rolls are fixed • Can contain metal detectors • Top rolls float • Spring pressure to grip material

  7. Feed rolls • controls the rate of feeding into cutterhead • compresses mat of material so it is easier to cut

  8. Theoretical Length of Cut • Definition - feed roll travel per knife • Recommendations • Dependent on • Animals • Feed handling equipment • Crops • Corn silage - 3/8 in.(no crop processor) • Corn silage - 3/4 in.(crop processor)

  9. Theoretical Length of Cut • Adjusting theoretical length of cut • Feed roll speed • Number of knives • Cutterhead speed • Not practical

  10. Actual Length of Cut • Longer than the TLC • Windrowed crops longer than row crops • Alfalfa feeds in a tangled mat of material • Corn stalks feed mostly straight

  11. Blower Crop Processor Cutterhead Feed rolls Crop Processor

  12. Crop Processing • Used only for whole plant corn silage • Kernels are difficult to digest • Contain starch and energy • Damaging the kernel shell allows the rumen bacteria to digest the starch • Breakup cob pieces (avoid hockey pucks)

  13. Crop Processing • In the past, very short lengths of cut were used to damage more kernels • Recutter screens also used • Increased power requirements drastically • Shortened fiber length too much

  14. Crop Processor Characteristics • 1 – 15 mm (1/16 to 5/8”)-clearance range • 5 – 25% speed difference • Speed 2500 – 4000 RPM • 3 – 6 grooves per inch

  15. Crop Processing A properly adjusted kernel processor • Damages more than 90% of the kernels • Pulverize cob pieces • Minimizes waste in the feed bunk • Allows for longer length of cut • Longer fiber • Less power consumption

  16. Crop Processor Pulleys

  17. Crop Processor Clearance Adjustment

  18. Crop Processing System Cutterhead Processing Rolls

  19. Differential speed between rolls

  20. Crop Processor - Tips for Success • Increase the theoretical length of cut (TLC) to ¾” • Processor will reduce overall particle size further • Set roll gap between 0.08” and 0.12” (2-3 mm) • Will result in 100% cob breakage and 90-100% kernel damage

  21. Don’t crop processors take A LOT of extra horsepower?? Not if set up properly! • Power consumption for • 3/4” TLC and a processor set to 0.20” (2.70 Hp-hr/ton) is only slightly higher than • 3/8” TLC with no processor (2.69 Hp-hr/ton)

  22. Roll Wear • PTFH - Rolls Wear At Center • SPFH - Rolls Wear At Edges • Helical Knives - Uneven Wear • As Teeth Wear: • Capacity Is Reduced • Plugging More Likely • Processing More Difficult

  23. Dealing with Worn Rolls • Replacement ~ $1,500 per Roll • Re-Grooving ~ 1/3 to 1/2 Cost of New • Re-Grooving Considerations: • Won’t Last As Long As Original • Can Only Be Done Once • Tolerances Not As Good

  24. WHAT TO LOOK FORIN A CROP PROCESSOR • Roll Diameter • Tooth Pitch • Ease of Checking and Adjusting Roll Clearance • Ease of Unplugging • Ease of Switching Between Corn silage and Haylage

  25. Machine Power Consumption • Gathering and feeding • 20% of total • Cutterhead and processor • 40 – 50% of total • Blowing into wagon / truck • 30 – 40% of total

  26. Reducing Power Loss • Maintain sharp knives • Keep close knife to shearbar clearance • Properly adjust processor • Keep blower band clearance small

  27. Concluding Remarks • No Processor-TLC=0.375 in. • Processor-TLC = 0.75 in and roll clearance= 0.8 to 0.12 in.

  28. Questions

  29. QUESTIONS

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