I'm curious as to what prevents grain from spilling off the rollers as it feeds from the hopper. I've always thought that it would be better to mount the mill below the platform rather than on top of it for this reason.
Yikes. I would think that 40 in-lb. would have been plenty. Thats almost 500 ft-lbs. We'll see, I've got all the parts. I've got the 2" rollers.
How do you get 500 ft-lbs from 40 in-lbs? in-lbs to ft-lb is divided by 12, not multiplied...
M_C
You are a little late to the party. I pointed this out in post #37
I'm curious as to what prevents grain from spilling off the rollers as it feeds from the hopper. I've always thought that it would be better to mount the mill below the platform rather than on top of it for this reason.
Well, tested the mill.... 90 inch pounds still isnt enough. It was close though. I could dump about 2 coups in at a time and it would survive, but if I filled the hopper it would bind.
I'm going to have to get a higher torque motor and then use the same gearing to double the torque again, haha.
Good idea, I'll have to try it, I can run to lowes and pick up some sheet metal and mod my hopper.
The other option I suppose would be to increase my gap from .035 to .040 or something like that, which might help a fair amount as well.
Like my mill?What about adding a 3/8" diameter rod parallel to the rollers above them
in the hopper, add a throttle plate the width of the hopper where it's located plus the full length of the hopper. This way you will be able to restrict the grain flow to the rollers vs compacted by the grain weight in the hopper plus still utilize the mills full roller width.
Think an hourglass, you have flow but reduced as an example.
To me your torque requirement sounds too much.Well, tested the mill.... 90 inch pounds still isnt enough.Well, tested the mill.... 90 inch pounds still isnt enough.
Like my mill?
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To me your torque requirement sounds too much.
My mill does not come close to 30 in/lb running torque.
I would measure the torque requirement of your set-up without grain first, should be very low.
Cheers,
ClaudiusB
The free running torque is pretty much not measurable... besides the fact that I have no way to measure it. But it spins freely by hand.
Dry grain runs just fine, no issues what so ever, it's after the grain has been conditioned that's the issue. It might also be my impatience and running the grain while it's still a little damp after conditioning.
Carl no feed adjustment required, mill is happyPerfect!
Now slip tubing over the rod screwed to the rod on one side to produce an eccentric adjustment to vary the feed restriction.
That looks like 3/8" rod by the picture (guessing here), add 3/4" tubing with external arm to adjust and lock the setting.
What is the dimensions of your hopper, angles, height plus how many pounds will it hold?
Dry grain runs just fine, no issues what so ever, it's after the grain has been conditioned that's the issue. It might also be my impatience and running the grain while it's still a little damp after conditioning.
You can use a fish scale and a string to do it.
Measure the motor current to see how close you are to the full load current, my poor mill does it with 16-in/lb running torque.
Carl no feed adjustment required, mill is happy![]()
Hopper capacity close to 2 kg, 45° angle, not made for wet milling
Cheers,
ClaudiusB