This is our prototype machine and what it shown is taking place in George IA, the same town that our mfg plant is. We were experimenting and that is why you see the front end loader trying to increase the fill % to increase capacity. What we found in this case is that we were unloading at 22-23 thousand BPH regardless of wether we were "trying real hard" or simply backing up to the pile, sitting there and letting the grain flow into the auger itself. We ship these via semi without special permit
@agtrucker -Thanks for looking agtrucker. This is about a mile from the Sudenga factory in George, IA. Our local Co-Op is nice enough to put a pile of grain on the ground for us just about every year.
@uberbadnoob6699666 Front wheel assist doesn't hurt, but ultimately, the loader was there just for the fact of testing. Gravity does most of the work. See the note from UlmerCraig above.
Thanks for the comment Slorn22. The Ultra Scoop is a beast, but 6' of the intake auger is removable so the unit fits on a road... I wouldn't say it is convenient to meet traffic however! Once these units find homes, they rarely move more than around the grain pile/yard.
@townkid75 I was actually referring to the truck. From this angle from the camera it looks as though the load weight is not being properly spread out to all the axles. Also, unless that's a light and low volume capacity trailer, you're way overloaded.
@Slorn22 -OH! Thanks for the clarification! Yes, we totally loaded the truck improperly, fortunately, we were only going to a location on the same property... That's what you get when you put a bunch of Engineers in charge!
Yes, a belt certainly has it's place. The drag chain/auger combo used in the Ultra Scoop tend to be less finicky maintenance wise. The loader is optional. This was our prototype and we wanted to abuse it a bit.
Interesting enough machine. There's an outfit in MN that makes a belt conveyor unit that'll do 26000 bph +. It also doesn't require an extra loader to nurse it up to capacity.
is that a white 2-155 cause we have 2 whites on our farm a 2-105 and a 2-135 thee fine machines
johndeerecollector93 4 months ago
This is our prototype machine and what it shown is taking place in George IA, the same town that our mfg plant is. We were experimenting and that is why you see the front end loader trying to increase the fill % to increase capacity. What we found in this case is that we were unloading at 22-23 thousand BPH regardless of wether we were "trying real hard" or simply backing up to the pile, sitting there and letting the grain flow into the auger itself. We ship these via semi without special permit
UlmerCraig 11 months ago
Where is this taking place?
agtrucker 11 months ago
@agtrucker -Thanks for looking agtrucker. This is about a mile from the Sudenga factory in George, IA. Our local Co-Op is nice enough to put a pile of grain on the ground for us just about every year.
townkid75 11 months ago
what if u use afront wheel assist on these u could get up in pile better with out using a bobcat?
uberbadnoob6699666 11 months ago
Comment removed
townkid75 11 months ago
This has been flagged as spam show
@uberbadnoob6699666 Front wheel assist doesn't hurt, but ultimately, the loader was there just for the fact of testing. Gravity does most of the work. See the note from UlmerCraig above.
townkid75 11 months ago
lol! I hope you guys didnt drive on the highways loaded like that. From the camera angle it looks like you loaded it right on the traps.
Slorn22 1 year ago
Thanks for the comment Slorn22. The Ultra Scoop is a beast, but 6' of the intake auger is removable so the unit fits on a road... I wouldn't say it is convenient to meet traffic however! Once these units find homes, they rarely move more than around the grain pile/yard.
townkid75 1 year ago
@townkid75 I was actually referring to the truck. From this angle from the camera it looks as though the load weight is not being properly spread out to all the axles. Also, unless that's a light and low volume capacity trailer, you're way overloaded.
Slorn22 1 year ago
@Slorn22 -OH! Thanks for the clarification! Yes, we totally loaded the truck improperly, fortunately, we were only going to a location on the same property... That's what you get when you put a bunch of Engineers in charge!
townkid75 1 year ago
wats the bushel -ton. converstion
JR1351 1 year ago
Comment removed
townkid75 1 year ago
@JR1351 2000 divided by 56 lbs per bushel = 35.714 bushels per ton.
Slorn22 1 year ago
Do you not find it odd that Corn, Wheat etc, is still measured in "Bushels"?
Look at a machine doing the same job at the docks unloading or loading a ship and you will get some idea how huge these machines are!
I am a real fan of "B-I-G"!
mrbluenun 1 year ago
@mrbluenun what else are you gunna measure it in exactly?...
Vaneps0 1 month ago
I want one!!!
MadSmokerBBQ 2 years ago
Yes, a belt certainly has it's place. The drag chain/auger combo used in the Ultra Scoop tend to be less finicky maintenance wise. The loader is optional. This was our prototype and we wanted to abuse it a bit.
sudengaequip 2 years ago
Interesting enough machine. There's an outfit in MN that makes a belt conveyor unit that'll do 26000 bph +. It also doesn't require an extra loader to nurse it up to capacity.
byronpg03 2 years ago
We own the smaller version, man, that thing with move grain!
daveh3434 3 years ago 3
never seen something similar. its great
Samson1891 3 years ago 5
me neither, but yea what a great idea!
evillekcf 3 years ago
never seen something similar. its great
Samson1891 3 years ago