T__langan
Guest
I guess anything is possible, but I have a hard time believing that bean straw would spontaniously combust like wet hay will. Wet hay will heat and what causes it to combust is being packed so tight - the heat from all the bales builds up to the point where it gets so hot it just goes. Bean straw in a combine is not packed and there wouldn't be enough of it to get hot enough - at least I wouldn't think so. Could it have been a small rock gone through - threw a spark and ignited dust sitting somewhere inside - dust pile sitting in there smolderingIJ We had a bearing go out on the main clutch shaft of the M3 we used to own while cutting beans. When we stopped, we could smell something burning, but looked all over the machine but couldn't find where it was comming from. After convincing ourselves it wasn't coming from the combine, we quit for the day. Next morning, we commenced to disassembling the trouble spot - when we removed the bearing housing it instantly combusted into flame. Here bean dust inside had been ignited by the bad bearing and smoldered all night long due to lack of O2 until we took it apart and it got some air. We felt very fortunate it didn't get it's air during the night and burn the combine, the shed it was in, and all the other machinery in the shed! Perhaps something of this nature is what is happening to your machine. Better take a peek out the window right now to see if she ain't smokin'! Best of luck!