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Farm Machinery
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Continuous Flow Dryer Settings for Beans.
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<blockquote data-quote="nick..." data-source="post: 7637275" data-attributes="member: 365"><p>I’ve dried thousands of tons of beans and peas in the past for dalgety with an Alvan blanch contious flow drier.as they where mostly intended for animal feed we would put 180/200 degrees heat through them and crack them and let them out wet,above 15/16% and the seeds woukd still be warm and continue to dry.was a bit of suck it and see to start with but easy enough when all figured out.for seed you need a much lower temp under a 100degrees and depending on the original moisture content you may well have to put them through 2 or 3 times.I’ve dried beens at well over 30% and when taking 15/16 % moisture out the weight woukd drastically drop from the amount that came in to the amount that left and that caused issues with some people who thought we we stealing their crop and could not see where the weight went.this was all back in the 80/90s.</p><p>nick…</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="nick..., post: 7637275, member: 365"] I’ve dried thousands of tons of beans and peas in the past for dalgety with an Alvan blanch contious flow drier.as they where mostly intended for animal feed we would put 180/200 degrees heat through them and crack them and let them out wet,above 15/16% and the seeds woukd still be warm and continue to dry.was a bit of suck it and see to start with but easy enough when all figured out.for seed you need a much lower temp under a 100degrees and depending on the original moisture content you may well have to put them through 2 or 3 times.I’ve dried beens at well over 30% and when taking 15/16 % moisture out the weight woukd drastically drop from the amount that came in to the amount that left and that caused issues with some people who thought we we stealing their crop and could not see where the weight went.this was all back in the 80/90s. nick… [/QUOTE]
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Continuous Flow Dryer Settings for Beans.
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