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Farm Machinery
Machinery
Converting 3m Cambridge roller to a silage compactor.
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<blockquote data-quote="Exfarmer" data-source="post: 9137263" data-attributes="member: 1951"><p>I have argued for years this point, but it seems to have become a holy grail that clamps must be squashed to the nth. degree. I do not think their is any science behind it. Best silage was made in towers and they never saw a roller . Just need to exclude oxygen. I never compacted when we started clamping with a front end loader speed of covering was the key then and we built the clamp forward 12-15feet high in a method called the Cornish cliff . Of course then wev were clamping probably 1-200 tonnes a day and we would cover the clamp tyre the top every night and sheet the face each evening</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Exfarmer, post: 9137263, member: 1951"] I have argued for years this point, but it seems to have become a holy grail that clamps must be squashed to the nth. degree. I do not think their is any science behind it. Best silage was made in towers and they never saw a roller . Just need to exclude oxygen. I never compacted when we started clamping with a front end loader speed of covering was the key then and we built the clamp forward 12-15feet high in a method called the Cornish cliff . Of course then wev were clamping probably 1-200 tonnes a day and we would cover the clamp tyre the top every night and sheet the face each evening [/QUOTE]
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Converting 3m Cambridge roller to a silage compactor.
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