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These machines are mainly used in sowing seed cleaning stations, in cleaning sections of flour mills and in barley classification lines for malt plants. They pick up admixtures and impurities varying in size from grain in their
shape and length.
The trieur units are applied within the cleaning process usually after the stones separating machines. They separate foreign matter in indented drums. Grain is fed into the revolving drum and the shorter kernels, being caught in the dents, are carried up along the drum circumference into the trough and out from the machine. Longer kernels which don't fit into the indents or fall back during their movement up remain in the drum to be transported to the machine delivery end.
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On separation of smaller admixtures (grain halves, weed seeds etc.) grain remains in the drum. On separation of longer and bigger admixtures
(oats, ergot, maize, etc.) these remain in the drum and grains is carried up.
According to their purpose the trieur drums are marked as:
- A - for separation of longer and bigger impurities
- B - for separation of shorter impurities
- C - retreatment of longer and bigger impurities (extension of the 'A' drum)
- D - retreatment of shorter impurities (extension of the 'B' drum)
Units are made in B, AB, BD and ACBD combinations.
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