ProGrain 10′ Extractor Grain Bag Unloader | 540 Direct Drive | 80 HP MIN
PRICE DOES NOT INCLUDE SETUP OR SHIPPING – PRICED FOB FACTORY
Back Freight $1,500
Pro Grain E-1610 Extractor Grain Bag Unloader
The Pro Grain Extractor is fast and reliable, efficiently extracting grain from bag to truck at approximately 10,500 BU/HR. Easy to set-up, operate and maintain makes the Pro Grain Extractor an essential part of getting your grain to market. With a heavy-duty design, we back our extractors with a 1-year limited warranty.
Specifications | |
Bag Size | 10′ |
PTO | 540 Direct Drive |
Capacity (BU/hr) | 10,500 BPH |
Main Auger Size | 16″ |
Cross Auger Size | 9″ |
HP Required | 80 HP |
Required Flow | 15 GPM Min @ 2,200 PSI |
Warranty | 1 Year Limited |
Harvest Challenges
- Want to harvest faster?
- Want control over weather?
- Want a better grade?
- Want to control when to market your grain?
- Want to farm more acres?
- Want to farm with less man power?
- Want to reduce money spent on trucks and trailers?
Bagging Your Grain
- Keep harvest moving; time is money during harvest and bagging grain allows farmers the flexibility to manage harvest challenges such as weather or transportation logistics
- Can increase harvest efficiency by bringing harvest storage requirements directly to the harvest operation in the field
- Improves the farmers ability to control and plan commodity marketing; marketing crop for top dollar
- Reduces the need to sink capital into additional transportation fleet equipment
- Reduces the need to manage additional harvest labor constraints
- Storage solution for rented land without need to sink capital into permanent storage
- Unlimited additional storage capacity for handling high yield crops
- Improves ability to avoid weather related harvest constraints
- Store your grain in bags for about 7 cents per bushel
- A reliable storage solution, transport grain after harvest, freeing up valuable time at harvest without sacrificing grain quality
- Expand the harvest window, start harvest operations earlier in the season and running later into fall by bagging grain that is higher than average moisture