- Run unloading auger empty for at least one minute.
- Open the clean grain and tailings elevator doors, rock trap, and unloading auger sump.
- Make sure all bystanders are at least 50 feet away
- Optional: Remove the head/grain platform from the combine prior to self-cleaning
- Start the combine and separator.
- Adjust cleaning shoe fan to full speed for maximum airflow and alternately open and close cleaning shoe sieves electronically
- Adjust rotor to full speed for maximum air suction and alternately open and close concaves
- Operate the combine this way for at least two minutes for self-cleaning.
- Optional: Drive over end rows or rough terrain to dislodge material during operation
- Clean any material left in the rock trap.
- Use a leaf blower or air compressor to remove material from exterior of the combine, focusing on the head, feeder house, axle and straw spreader at the rear of the machine.
- Remember to close the doors to the rock trap, clean the grain elevator, and the unloading auger sump.
Another optional step you can take to more thoroughly clean your combine is to pack around 1.5 cubic feet of wood shavings (livestock bedding) into the sump. Once packed turn on the unloading auger and empty the shavings. Dan Smith, Regional Outreach Specialist for the Nutrient and Pest Management Program along with Kevin Jarek, Extension Outagamie County Agriculture Educator produced a detailed how-to video on cleaning a combine.
In 2019, Nick Arneson and Dr. Rodrigo Werle with Wisconsin Cropping Systems Weed Science Lab and Dan Smith, Regional Outreach Specialist with Nutrient and Pest Management Program conducted a case study where 31 samples of debris from 9 different combines were collected. When these samples were mixed with potting mix and soil, and tended to in a greenhouse, 97% of the samples contained viable weed seeds. The percent of samples with a particular weed seed present is illustrated in the following graph. Additionally, 9 of the 31 samples contained viable soybean seeds, and 15 of the 31 samples contained viable corn seeds.
The combine areas contained the following approximate quantities of total weeds emerged in percentages: head/grain platform samples: 49%, feeder house: 30%, rock trap: 19% and rotor: 2%. Harvest is a busy time of year and you may be pressed for time. If this is the case, the results of this study indicate that prioritizing the head and feeder house of the combine would provide the most impact in reducing weed spread for your time.
A few additional tips on reducing the spread of weed would be to try and remove as many weeds from the field before harvest and consider a location when cleaning that reduces a possibility of the weed seeds spreading. Additionally, harvesting fields that have the least amount of weeds or are the most “clean” before more heavily infested fields will also help prevent the spread of weeds.
Herbicide resistant weeds will continue to grow as an issue for producers. Taking a half hour between fields at harvest to clean your combine could potentially save you time and input costs in the future you would have spent on controlling difficult population of weeds.
Source : wisc.edu