Deadduck
Guest
We face this every year with our Group IV's. If you're trying to shell green pods, don't. I've found that by leaving most of the green pods intact, they don't get into the sample probe as much and therefore don't count against you as much as if you are shelling them out and have a bunch of green "butterbeans" in your sample. The man at our local grainery told me not to worry about shelling the green hulls, so I don't. As far as settings, on my 2388 with rice rotor, I'm running the concave at 4 and the rotor at or around 600 with no load, fan at 1100. I leave the shoe open enough to allow the green hulls to go through. I try to run as little return as possible. I will change my concave or speed settings if necessary with changing conditions, but I only tighten or speed up enough to shell out the dry hulls. If you're running a lOT of green hulls, you might try a dessicant such as paraquat to dry them down. I also treated most of my soybeans this year with Quadris, since we had a very wet year and disease seemed likely. I've noticed with the fungicide, the beans seemed to dry down more evenly, and very few green or shrivled beans this year. So far we have had no dockage for damage, and high test weights for August harvested Group IV's.