[AT] More on weighing feed ingredients v. metering
Greg Hass
gkhass at avci.net
Wed Mar 23 16:14:02 PST 2005
The views expressed here are my own and may not reflect the views of others
on the List. Other views are welcome.
This post will cover more on one method v. the other.
A 4-hopper metering mill is what I have. When I bought it there was a
separate metering section for trace minerals but I never purchased that
attachment. I think the answer to the whole question boils down to just
one word..."volume". I grew up when most things were done by volume. When
it came time to feed grain to the dairy cows, we had several sizes of pails
such as a 10-qt., a 12-qt. and a 15-qt. The size of the pail used depended
on the amount of milk a cow gave. The more milk, the larger a pail of
grain she received. When we fed corn silage we would take a heaping silage
tub and divide that between 2 cows. For hay, each cow would receive
x-number of slices out of a square bale. (Each bale contained about 16
slices.) When we were switching over to beef cattle we used a feed
grinder with a bagger on it which bagged all the ground feed, so that was
handled in bags. As the silage went down the conveyor, we would dump in
x-number of bags per pen of cattle.
After I was in the hogs a while, I went to this meter mill. Back when
all of the grain came off the farm, volume was a fairly consistent way of
measuring. At this time, I fed all of the grain I raised to beef cattle
and bought all of the feed for the hogs. This is where the problem came
in. There is a wide variation in what a bushel of corn will weigh when
bought from our local elevators. For instance, this past fall when I
thrashed my corn and delivered it to the elevator it averaged <1% FM.
(foreign matter = broken kernels, pieces of cob, etc.) However, when corn
is purchased, it usually contains 20% FM. Although all elevators in the
area deny it, the farmers all know that when they ship out train cars full
of corn, this corn is all milled and all of the junk milled out, goes into
the corn bins containing the corn being sold back to local farmers. This
is where all of the fines (broken pieces of corn and hulls of kernels),
etc., come from. Because the corn is sold back to us by weight, we cannot
make a case in court that we are being "cheated". Because corn with all
this trash in it fluffs up, it weighs less per bushel by volume and throws
off the accuracy of our mix. Even with soybean meal, I have had as much as
6-lbs. variance in a 5-gal. pail due to the density of the meal.
The rest of my answer goes back to "volume", only with a different
definition. Meaning, due to the "larger" volumes today, volume measurement
doesn't work, ie. a bushel of grain, a gallon of gas, a barrel of oil, a
bag of cement. When I was a kid you filled a tractor with a 5-gal.
pail. Now when tractors hold up to 300 gal., no one is going to measure it
with a 5-gal. pail. My cousin sells 10,000 head of fat cattle/year. These
cattle are fed with feed trucks which are loaded with big payloaders. The
trucks are equipped with digital scales on the side of the box which can be
read by the loader operator and he dumps in the ingredients by
weight. Obviously on a scale like that, you cannot dump in so many pails
of grain or tubs of silage. Even with hay, their feed trucks are capable
of taking in and chewing up a whole round bale at a time, which makes it
hard to count slices. And the final nal in thecoffin for volume
measurement (correct me if I'm wrong) are laws to the effect that weight
must be used. When the elevator sells to me, the trucks must pass over a
scale. They cannot sell by bushel. They MUST go by weight. I had a
relative in the gravel business who used to load trucks by the
bucket. However, at least here in Michigan, now all gravel must be
weighed, and even cement palnt must use computerized batching equioment to
get the right ingredients in the cement. Even the water must be
weighed. My cousin in his feedlot has several pens of cattle which are
custom-fed for other individuals, and he must be able to show by weight how
much the cattle have been fed. He can't just say they get 5 payloader
buckets of silage and 2 of grain.
I hope my "rambling" has cleared things up a bit.
Greg Hass
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