Corn Silage Yield Formula:
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The corn silage yield calculation estimates the potential tons of silage that can be harvested per acre based on ear count, kernel count, and kernel weight. This helps farmers plan their harvest and storage needs.
The calculator uses the corn silage yield formula:
Where:
Explanation: The equation multiplies the components of yield (ears, kernels, weight) and converts to tons per acre.
Details: Accurate yield estimation helps farmers make informed decisions about harvest timing, storage capacity, feed inventory, and marketing plans.
Tips: For best results, take multiple ear counts across the field, count kernels from representative ears, and weigh a sample of kernels. All values must be positive numbers.
Q1: How accurate is this yield estimate?
A: This provides a rough estimate. Actual field yields can vary by 10-20% due to moisture content, harvest losses, and other factors.
Q2: What's a typical kernel weight?
A: Kernel weights typically range from 0.00025 to 0.00035 lbs per kernel, depending on hybrid and growing conditions.
Q3: How many ears per acre is normal?
A: Modern corn hybrids typically produce 28,000-34,000 ears per acre at common planting densities.
Q4: Does this account for moisture content?
A: No, this calculates dry matter yield. Silage is typically 30-35% dry matter when harvested.
Q5: Can I use this for other crops?
A: No, this formula is specific to corn silage. Other crops have different yield calculation methods.