Some canola growers reported boosting their profits by more than $50,000 in 2018 simply by regularly adjusting harvester settings after measuring canola losses from the back of their harvesters.
A new Grains Research and Development Corporation (GRDC) fact sheet outlines the experiences of these growers and contains information about how to improve profits by setting up harvesters correctly, in order to minimise canola falling to the ground.
Planfarm consultant Peter Newman led a GRDC project last harvest aimed at addressing the issue of canola losses from the rear of harvesters and results from his work are contained in this publication.
“An estimated $191 million of canola is lost in this way nationally every year – based on average losses of 150 kilograms per hectare or $75/ha across approximately 2.5 million hectares of this high value crop grown across Australia every year,” he said.
“This estimate is based on measurements made by Western Australian canola growers and is consistent with what has been found in western Canada where canola harvest losses have been measured extensively.
“WA
growers involved with the canola losses project were unaware they were losing
grain until they measured actual losses using commercially available drop
trays,” he said.
“They were then encouraged to adjust their harvester settings and share their
findings and dollars saved using the Twitter handle @harvestloss.”
Mr Newman said one setting at a time should be changed and actual losses
measured again after each adjustment to assess impact.
“Harvester settings that influence canola lost include the rotor speed, the gap
between the rotor and the concave (separator), the cleaning fan speed, the
openings of the upper sieve and the openings of the lower sieve,” he said.
“It’s advisable to measure actual canola losses once or twice a day during
harvest, given changing conditions, and to involve the harvester drivers who
can pride themselves on aiming to hit the ‘sweet spot’.”
Mr Newman said all harvesters were capable of achieving minimal losses with the
right set up and settings, and the aim was not to produce the lowest losses per
hectare, but the lowest cost of harvesting per tonne of grain.
“The ideal is to find the optimum point at which harvest efficiency is high and
losses are low – the sweet spot,” he said.
The project focussed on canola losses from the rear of the harvester and did
not consider front losses