PETE
Guest
I have my flat helicals stack in accordance with the drawings on the Hyper Mod page. I have had excellent results with this setup in dry stem beans. Unfortunately with the trend towards green stem beans which makes it easier to harvest because they stand sooooo much better I am running into this rotor rumble problem. From my conversations with Hyper II and my field observations I have come away with these conclusion- The problem is two fold- 1) The design of the P1 bars does not allow for an agressive hold on green material. 2) The flat helicals even when stacked are not aggressive enough to keep a grip on green material. This is especially true when the leading edge wears. Hyper II told me that some have had sucess with turning the heilcals around to get the sharp edge on the "live" side. R.O.M. had sucess with his N7 by widening the surface area of the flat helicals keep the green material from bunching against the cage holes (see recent post). After reading ROM's post it makes sense to me because of where I am having problems with straw building up outside the cage and plugging the cage sweep on the thresher side. The first area was the left hand concave mount where the concave and cage meet, I solved that problem by installing a cage blank in that area. The second area was where the overfeed auger is on the front of the thresher. I solved that problem by putting the overfeed auger back in without the trough, this kept the material agitated enough for the sweep arms to pull the straw away. For me with my P1 with near new chrome bars and chrome channel in the separator the next most cost effective step is to install channel helicals in the thresher. I believe the more agressive channel helicals will overcome the deficiencies of the P1 bars enough to keep the green material moving into the separator end. My original intention was to install a P3 rotor and turn my stacked flat helicals around but that project would have taken more time and $$$. Plus my flat helicals are black iron so it would only be a matter of time before I was back in there putting channel helicals in. Yes, this may be something we would want to address in the Hyper Mod site because green stem beans are here to stay and I am sure other small grain harvesters run into similar problems in wet conditions. Hyperizing is ever-green, correcting old problems and adapting to new issues. I love it! Sorry about the long post but it is fun making the best even better. Pete Hinrichsen