Farm Progress

Alignment of moisture testers to the new 149 MHz/UGMA technology

Increase your profitability by matching the elevator results through alignment of all moisture testers across the farm operation prior to this year’s harvest

Author: Roger VanderKolk, DICKEY-john Global Analytical Product Manager

During harvest and the conditioning process, the average farming operation uses at least three sensors/testers to measure grain moisture. These include a factory-installed moisture sensor on the combine, a moisture sensor tied to the grain dryer, and a standalone moisture tester, usually a handheld tester. The proliferation of all these grain moisture measuring devices indicates the importance grain moisture management has in a farm’s profitability.

Increasingly, producers in today’s economic climate are recognizing that simply owning and using a grain moisture tester is not sufficient. The moisture sensors and testers must deliver the same result across the various platforms matching the elevator results in order to maximize profitability. “Alignment” is the key to increased profitability.

Alignment as a concept ensures that every moisture measurement a producer makes is tied to a reference measurement. In the majority of farming operations, the reference measurement is the moisture tester used at the point of sale, such as the elevator. Producers that adhere to Alignment have calibrated all moisture sensors and testers throughout their operation, such as the combine or dryer sensor, to match the elevator.

 

The DICKEY-john GAC 2500-AGRI Grain Analysis Computer, an affordable bench-top moisture tester that utilizes 149 MHz technology to provide elevator-like results.

Moisture sensors and testers typically provide a method to add or subtract a moisture bias when compared to a reference measurement. However, because grain was once a living organism, it can and does behave differently between fields, among different varieties, and even from week to week. Setting a bias at the beginning of the season can thus lead to moisture problems.

Alignment minimizes this profitability loss issue by ensuring that all sensors match the reference measurement throughout the entirety of the harvest and conditioning process by using the same technology as a field calibration tool.

Producers have been using portable moisture testers to calibrate moisture sensors in the field for decades.

 

The new DICKEY-john mini GAC® 2500 handheld moisture tester with 149 MHz technology to match the moisture testers at the elevator.

Portable moisture testers, which range in price from $250 - $2,000, provide accurate results that allow the producer to calibrate the sensor in the field to a reference instrument. However, the recent adoption of 149 MHz / UGMA technology at elevators around the world will lead to situations where Alignment will not be achieved across the farming operation.

Producers that have embraced Alignment have recognized this loss potential and have upgraded their moisture testers accordingly.

A bench top UGMA moisture tester now sits in a building near the dump pit or dryer.

 

The DICKEY-john GAC® 2500-UGMA Grain Analysis Computer, GIPSA-Certified as UGMA-Compatible. Utilizes the latest 149MHz technology to deliver repeatable NTEP certified results with faster analysis time.                                              

These producers are also using the new DICKEY-john mini GAC® 2500 to calibrate the combine and dryer moisture sensors in the field. The mini GAC® 2500, the first and only handheld moisture tester based on 149 MHz / UGMA technology, provides the producer with confidence that all the moisture sensors in his operation are aligned.

Finally, Alignment dictates that all the sensors are tested more than once; simply calibrating the combine and dryer moisture sensors at the beginning of the harvest is not sufficient. Producers who have adopted Alignment calibrate these sensors daily to overcome any potential changes in grain conditions. Test Early! Test Often!

To ensure Alignment of every moisture sensor in their operation, producers should upgrade their moisture sensors and testers to the new 149 MHz / UGMA technology prior to this year’s harvest.

Subscribe to receive top agriculture news
Be informed daily with these free e-newsletters

You May Also Like