Title: Economics of Forage Harvest and Storage Systems
1Economics of Forage Harvest and Storage Systems
2Is it Time to Replace my Forage Harvester?
- Is labor availability an issue?
- Is timeliness a problem with your current
equipment? - Are your repair costs high?
- How many acres of forages do you harvest?
3Solutions to Labor Scarcity and Poor Harvest
Timeliness
- Purchase higher capacity forage harvester
- Change crop rotation
- Custom hire
4Are your repair costs high?
- Current forage harvesters are designed to be more
reliable and have fewer repairs over their
lifetimes than older models - Newer models of pull-type forage harvesters have
an expected life of 2,500 hours compared to 2,000
for older models - Newer models of SP forage harvesters have an
expected life of 4,000 hours compared to 2,500
for older models
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7Forage Harvester Comparisons
- 2-row towed (25,900)
- 2-row self-propelled (159,900)
- 3-row self-propelled (165,600)
- 6-row self-propelled (236,600)
Prices from Univ. of MN, Minnesota Farm
Machinery Economic Cost Estimates for 2001
8Managing Machinery Costs
- Variable costs are those which occur from
operating the machinery - repairs
- labor
- fuel
- lubrication
- Fixed costs are those which result from owning
the machinery - depreciation
- interest
- insurance
- housing
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12Field Capacity (acres/hour)
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15Silage Storage Alternatives
- Tower silos
- Bunker silos
- Silage bags
16Tower Silo
- Silage can be 50 to 65 moisture
- Packing of silage due to weight from top
- Various sizes available (50-4000 tons)
- Minimal exposure to weather
17Bunker Silo
- Sizing is very flexible
- Silage can be of higher moisture than tower
- Requires more labor to pack down
- Requires plastic and tires to cover
- Increased exposure to weather
18Silage Bags
- Normal size 150-200 ft. long by 9 ft. diameter
- Minimal amount of labor required
- May wear out tractor more quickly
- Spoilage due to weather or rodents
- Easy to regulate silage removal
- Takes up space
19Summary of Silo Cost Factors
- Structure
- Equipment (tractor and special equipment)
- Labor (How much time and when does action occur)
- Fuel and lubricants
- Plastic
- Dry Matter Loss (direct loss of silage value)
20Annual cost of storage of 384 tons DM
Source Choosing Forage Storage Facilities,
B.J. Holmes, Univ. of Wisconsin
21Annual cost of storage of 3,072 tons DM
Source Choosing Forage Storage Facilities,
B.J. Holmes, Univ. of Wisconsin
22Silage Cost Management Resources
- www.uwex.edu/ces/crops/uwforage/storage
- Includes a spreadsheet and documentation to
analyze costs of different storage choices - www.silo.org/costcomparison.xls
- Spreadsheet tool that allows for comparison of
costs of tower, bunker, and bags