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#1 (permalink) |
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New Member
Join Date: May 2008
Posts: 13
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Thinking about using a corn furnace to heat the place. I have enough land to grow my own fuel however, processing corn cobs to just the kernels is another thisng. I have been trying to find a machine to do this. I have only found "antiques", small volume units, or something from overseas.
Any ideas on building one? Thanks! |
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#3 (permalink) |
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Bronze Member
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Waterford WI. Southeast part of state.
Posts: 74
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Could you grind the whole cob course and make it work. Just a thought. Also some New Idea pickers had shellers on them. Farmers have modified them to shell out of corn cribs.
Renovator |
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#4 (permalink) |
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Super Member
Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: Silver Creek, NY
Posts: 5,621
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How many acres are you looking at planting? You can find decent old combines with corn head for under $2k. They are too small for most farms now but for a 50-100 acre farm they are still a good size. I bought a JD 3300 with 2 row corn head and 10' grain head for $1k and it was in good condition. The grain head needed some work but the combine ran and was still being used. The guy sold it because he bought a class larger. I havested 40 acres of oats with it that first year and was going to harvest corn with it last year but I got hurt and the combine ended up sitting in the barn. This year I have 40 acres of corn growing and will be harvesting that unless we get flooded with rain. Then I might have to hire someone with a RWA equipped harvester.
Either way the combine will shell the corn as it harvest it and are fairly inexpensive.
__________________
![]() God must love stupid people; He made so many
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#5 (permalink) |
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Member
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 44
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look on eBay, antique stores, farm auctions, they made hand sheller for corn for shelling the seed corn when they used open populated seed, instead of hybrids
corn shellers - Google Image Search apparently one can still buy some new, about half way down on the page. Grinders, grist or feed mills and Corn Shellers at Strombergs |
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#6 (permalink) |
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Member
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 44
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the basic workings of a corn sheller, is a disk of rotating disk with nubs or protrusions on it and a tapered channel that guides the cob into the disk working the kernels off the ear, and usaly dropping the kernels in one chute or box and the cob else were.
basic cross section view of the small hand powered unit and the larger box type units, http://www.fao.org/docrep/T1838E/T1838E14.GIF |
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#7 (permalink) |
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Elite Member
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CORN/MAIZE THRESHING MACHINE,CORN SELLER MZ-268 - Trade Leads - Zhaoqing Fengxiang Foodmachinery Co.,Ltd
the problem with most of the above listed shellers is, as far as i can tell, they are required to be hand fed. (other than the larger tractor versions) id want to see the inside of a modern working combine and see if i couldnt duplicate the method/design it uses.
__________________
Steve - TC33D 4x4 FEL, dual rear remotes with toys |
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#8 (permalink) |
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Member
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 44
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a basic cross section of a thresher, the harvesting section of a combine,
http://www.fao.org/docrep/T1838E/T1838E11.GIF here is of a Japanese thresher, cross section, no cleaner on it, http://www.fao.org/docrep/T1838E/T1838E12.GIF Low-volume huller & thresher designs from Al Dong Google patents, search for thresher, combine harvester, harvester, grain, cleaner separator or combinations of the words, Google Patents your basic thresher cylinder, is a round cage that has "rasp bars' on the out side, (kinda looking like a off set angle iron {1/2 leg x 2" leg}, with diagonal grooves on it) to beat the grain as it hits it and is pushed through the space between it and the, "concave" a cage with bars that jsut clear the cylinder and the space is adjusttable between the two for crop clearance, for some specialty crops there is what is called a spike tooth cylinder and it like it says had teeth on it beat the grain out of the heads, the majority of the grain fall through the concave, (on to what was called a PAN or augers), the straw is kicked out behind the cylinder, (there is usaly a "beater" that spins with a few blades on it that help knock the grain out of the straw, the straw continuous on to the "straw walkers" which are saw toothed screened U shaped troughs that have a saw tooth (large tooth) look on top that work on a crank that makes it look like there jumping up and down (but there balanced on the crank one is going up one is going down, but they finish shaking the grain out of the straw, then the grain slides down the troughs under the walkers and off the pan on to the "sieves" screens, that shake back and forth with a fan under the screens that blow the chaff out and the grain falls through and (deepening on how it is set up, possibly thought a second or near the back a courser screen and the grain and chaff that come off of this area is re threshed, and the grain that come out of the "first" or if there is a chaffer (courser second screen) the clean grain comes out from there, the cleaner part is basically jsut a fanning mill, the old combines had solid screens (one size of screen) jsut like a cleaner, Modern have adjustable sieves, a special screen that can be adjusted for the grain type, |
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#9 (permalink) |
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Veteran Member
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: MN
Posts: 1,217
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Minneapolis Moline made the favored corn shellers from 1940-1970's. Look up a MM D corn sheller. They use a cage, not the combine setup. More efficient for corn.
Sell for about $200 around here, use 30 hp or so...... --->Paul |
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#10 (permalink) |
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Silver Member
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Crosby Texas
Posts: 117
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We had a corn sheller just like the one BHD posted the link to and it worked well. You could modify it to turn slowly with an electric motor by putting a large pulley on the sheller and with the gear reduction a 1/2 HP motor would probably do the trick It needs to turn about 60 rpm, but turning by hand will shell a lot of corn and give you some exercise too.
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