New Grain System Supports Efficiency and Expansion envelope Print up
Additional Markets

Additional Markets

In addition to grain and feed markets, InterSystems, the brand known as a worldwide manufacturer of bulk material handling equipment and industrial sampling systems, is found on a full range of products in support of other industries.

Sales and Service

Sales and Service

Check this area often for updated manuals, software updates and limited time offers.

Resources

Resources

Learn more about GSI products and specifications in our brochure library.

About Us

About Us

GSI supports agriculture around the globe with the most extensive global manufacturing footprint and dealer network in our industry. We bring our customers local solutions with global expertise.

New Grain System Supports Efficiency and Expansion

When JCW Farms decided to install a new grain system in London, Ohio, the objectives were threefold: to gain more storage capacity, improve efficiency and allow for future expansion.

JCW Farms is a 5,000-acre family farming operation based in nearby Plain City, about 24 miles northwest of Columbus. The new grain system was opened in 2016 to supplement and eventually replace the operation’s older grain storage facilities.

“We needed more capacity and wanted to eliminate some of our older facilities so we could consolidate and be more efficient,” said John Wilson, a co-partner of JCW Farms along with his wife, Christina, and son, Jakob.

The project, designed and built by local GSI dealer Sims Construction, featured five new grain bins, including two 150,000-bushel bins for storing corn, a 60,000-bushel bin for soybeans, a 40,000-bushel flat bottom wet bin and a 20,000-bushel wet hopper bin.

Other components included two grain pits for holding incoming grain from the field, three grain legs, a support tower, a 2,000-bushel-per-hour Tower Dryer and a 7,000 bph system for loading grain into transport trucks. “Our new grain site is mainly intended to dry and store corn, with the ability to also handle soybean overflow from our old system,” Wilson explained.

An important part of the system design was to have an infrastructure in place that would facilitate future expansion. That work began the following season, in 2017, when a new 70,000-bushel bin was added and, in 2019, when another 150,000-bushel bin was installed.

The London site, which Wilson nicknamed “Iron Mountain,” now has a total grain storage capacity of 650,000 bushels — nearly quadruple that of the older system — to support the farm yield goals. “We want to be a 300/100 operation — 300-bushel corn and 100-bushel soybeans. That’s the goal, moving forward.”

Besides supporting increased capacity, Wilson said the new system offers much greater flexibility and efficiency. “It’s all about harvestability,” he said. “We can harvest when we want. We’re not sitting or waiting at the elevator. We can control what and when we run. Efficiency is the big word.”

Wilson also had praise for Sims Construction. “They’re the best and great to work with — especially Dusty Hubbard, who put in a lot of extra effort.”