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    #16
    Wouldn’t this be a novel project for the Canadian Grain Commission, to have all licensed elevators be required to electronically report calibration with proof of calibration, date time and employee sign off , verification, settings or calibration changes, etc.

    The monies that are made or lost are way more substantial on moisture/protein/oil/falling number etc. now than scale ticket/ electronic scales ( which used to be a problem - remember the balance beams?)

    This is worthy work for the CGC, provides value and protects the Canadian system with open and full disclosure. Would the producer lobby groups (commodity groups) support such activities ?

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      #17
      Originally posted by Rareearth View Post
      Wouldn’t this be a novel project for the Canadian Grain Commission, to have all licensed elevators be required to electronically report calibration with proof of calibration, date time and employee sign off , verification, settings or calibration changes, etc.

      The monies that are made or lost are way more substantial on moisture/protein/oil/falling number etc. now than scale ticket/ electronic scales ( which used to be a problem - remember the balance beams?)

      This is worthy work for the CGC, provides value and protects the Canadian system with open and full disclosure. Would the producer lobby groups (commodity groups) support such activities ?
      What about in this day and age and with equipment and computer programs that are available today have all equipment directly integrated into computer soft ware. If you think the scale issue is fixed you are mistaken. Ask your trucker how often weights are miss printed on tickets and do you ever check and compare what is the actual reading on bench scales compared to your cash tickets? You might be surprised at how much human error there is. They can always makeup if in your favor but highly unlikely they will say anything if in their favor.

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        #18
        Originally posted by wiseguy
        I forgot about those balance beams !

        The memories !

        I am glad tho I had a chance to haul to the elevators in our local town before they shut em all down !

        We had UGG, Pioneer, Cargill, and Sask Wheat Pool within 5 miles !

        For our Farm those were great times !
        Agree 100%, had the BEST system and smashed and burned most of them! Hauled 4 or 5.5 miles, 3 ton was enough truck.

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          #19
          And now, boys and girls, you see why our grandfathers and great grandfathers revolted against the "line companies" and set up the Pools a hundred years ago. All those stories we used to hear and quietly snicker at behind the old men's backs really weren't bullshit after all. In the end the Pools were no better than the line companies but they did provide competition to the families. The concept was revived with the farmer-owned terminals but the original shareholders have taken their money and ran, the families added those terminals to their warm embrace, and so here we are.

          The grain commission might as well fold for all the good they do. Send in your harvest samples, get your wheat graded 2 Red. Then take the same samples to the elevators and bingo, it's 3 RS. "But the GC said it's a 2." "Oh no we have to go by our grading." Pick at each load's sample with the magnifying glass and tweezers - what the hell did I bother collecting all those pails of samples for at harvest? Waste of time and gas running all over the country with samples.

          God I'm glad retirement is near.

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            #20
            Originally posted by fjlip View Post
            Agree 100%, had the BEST system and smashed and burned most of them! Hauled 4 or 5.5 miles, 3 ton was enough truck.
            The highways would definitely be better off with that system.

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              #21
              Originally posted by oldjim View Post
              And now, boys and girls, you see why our grandfathers and great grandfathers revolted against the "line companies" and set up the Pools a hundred years ago. All those stories we used to hear and quietly snicker at behind the old men's backs really weren't bullshit after all. In the end the Pools were no better than the line companies but they did provide competition to the families. The concept was revived with the farmer-owned terminals but the original shareholders have taken their money and ran, the families added those terminals to their warm embrace, and so here we are.

              The grain commission might as well fold for all the good they do. Send in your harvest samples, get your wheat graded 2 Red. Then take the same samples to the elevators and bingo, it's 3 RS. "But the GC said it's a 2." "Oh no we have to go by our grading." Pick at each load's sample with the magnifying glass and tweezers - what the hell did I bother collecting all those pails of samples for at harvest? Waste of time and gas running all over the country with samples.

              God I'm glad retirement is near.

              There are ways of helping farmers and saving or maybe getting back our industry to producers but not so sure the will of the ones we have let in charge at produce level is there. Wonder how our forefathers that realized and made a reality of CGC (In the Interest of Producers) and farmer owned elevator system got together there was a lot more of them back then and no communication like today.

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