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Grain Storage Volume

Grain volume and weight from silo or shed dimensions and crop bulk density. Free agricultural calculator for grain storage volume. Australian and US farm settings.

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New silo order is being finalised. Before the fabricator quotes you need to confirm cubic metre capacity and expected tonnes of canola at site bulk density — to know if a second bin is needed before harvest.

Grain Storage Volume
Storage
Imperial: enter feet
Receivable standard: wheat 12%, canola 8%
Silo volume = π × r² × height Tonnes = Volume (m³) × Grain density (t/m³) Grain densities (t/m³): Wheat 0.78 · Barley 0.62 · Canola 0.67 · Sorghum/Corn 0.72 · Oats 0.50
Allow 5–10% headspace for aeration. Check moisture before sealing storage — high moisture causes spoilage.
ℹ️ Results are estimates for planning purposes. Verify with current standards and a qualified professional.

1 What this calculator does

Calculates grain storage volume in cubic metres for round silos (cylinder + cone), flat-base bins and flat-floor shed storage. Converts volume to tonnes using crop-specific bulk density.

2 Formula & professional reasoning

Round silo: V_cylinder = pi x r2 x Eave height V_cone = (1/3) x pi x r2 x Cone height V_total = V_cylinder + V_cone Tonnes = V_total (m3) x Bulk density (t/m3)

Round silos have a cylindrical body and a conical hopper base. For a 45-degree hopper-bottom silo, cone height = radius. The cone adds about 10% of total volume and cannot be ignored. Bulk density varies by crop and moisture — wheat at 12% MC is ~780 kg/m3, canola at 7% MC is ~650 kg/m3. Using wheat bulk density for canola overstates tonne capacity by approximately 20%.

3 Worked examples

⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.

Basic
Standard round silo — wheat capacity
Given: Diameter: 7 m (radius 3.5 m) | Eave height: 12 m | Cone height: 3.5 m | Wheat density: 780 kg/m3
Working: V_cylinder: pi x 3.52 x 12 = 461.8 m3 | V_cone: (1/3) x pi x 3.52 x 3.5 = 44.9 m3 | V_total: 506.7 m3 | Tonnes: 506.7 x 0.780
Answer: 506.7 m3 | 395 tonnes wheat
💡 A 7 m x 12 m eave silo typically holds 380-420 t wheat depending on bulk density.
Standard
Same silo — canola capacity
Given: Same silo (506.7 m3) | Canola bulk density: 650 kg/m3
Working: Tonnes: 506.7 x 0.650
Answer: 329 tonnes canola
💡 Canola is 329 t vs 395 t wheat in the same silo — 17% less. Never apply wheat-based spec to canola planning.
Advanced
Flat-floor shed — wheat storage
Given: Shed: 30 m x 15 m | Fill height: 2.0 m | Wheat density: 780 kg/m3 | Apply 15% reduction for end-taper
Working: Volume: 30 x 15 x 2.0 x 0.85 = 765 m3 | Tonnes: 765 x 0.780
Answer: 765 m3 | 597 tonnes wheat
💡 Grain doesn't fill a flat shed square to the walls at the ends — apply 15% reduction for natural angle of repose.

4 Sanity check

Bulk densities at harvest moisture
Wheat 11-12% MC: 750-800 kg/m3 | Canola 7-8% MC: 620-680 kg/m3 | Barley 12% MC: 620-660 kg/m3 | Chickpeas: 750-780 kg/m3
Measure bulk density from the actual grain lot — moisture and variety affect it.
Manufacturer's tonne specs
Usually based on wheat at 775 kg/m3
For canola: multiply manufacturer's wheat tonne rating by 650/775 = 0.84.
Flat storage angle of repose
Wheat ~28 degrees | Canola ~25 degrees — apply 15% reduction to rectangular volume
Never exceed manufacturer's rated capacity
Structural failure under overloading
Silo structural failure is catastrophic and potentially fatal.

5 Common errors

ErrorCauseConsequenceFix
Treating silo as pure cylinder — ignoring the cone Simplifying the shape Capacity understated 5-15% Always add cone volume. For 45-degree hopper-bottom silo: cone height = radius.
Using wheat capacity for canola Applying manufacturer's wheat-based spec Canola capacity overstated by ~17% Multiply wheat-based tonne capacity by 650/775 = 0.84 for canola.
No angle-of-repose reduction for flat-floor sheds Using shed area x height directly Capacity overstated 10-20% Apply 15% reduction factor to theoretical rectangular volume for end-taper.
Used silo without structural certification Secondhand silo of unknown origin Risk of structural failure — catastrophic and fatal Every silo needs current structural certification before filling.