Overview & Specs

GSI 1220 Portable Grain Dryer (1200 Series) — What It’s Like to Run One

The GSI 1220 is part of the 1200 Series portable continuous-flow dryers—built as a single module with two-stage drying and designed for farms that need flexibility during harvest without moving to a permanent tower setup. It’s often considered when you want a practical footprint, predictable site planning, and the ability to operate in different drying approaches depending on conditions.  

On Aglist, this page is meant to do more than list numbers: it helps you compare published performance and then use real owner feedback to judge day-to-day usability, consistency, and the ā€œlittle detailsā€ that matter in Canadian harvest reality.


The 1220’s sweet spot in the 1200 Series

The 1200 Series is described by GSI as a single-module configuration using two vane axial fans and two heaters, each with its own plenum in a 67/33 split, and it’s not expandable.  

That makes the 1220 a ā€œchoose it right the first timeā€ model—ideal when your goal is a complete portable package rather than a future stack.


Published drying rates (GSI reference)

Dry & Cool (shelled corn)

  • 25% → 15%: 350 BPH  
  • 20% → 15%: 560 BPH  

Full Heat (shelled corn)

  • 30% → 15%: 430 BPH  
  • 25% → 15%: 590 BPH  
  • 20% → 15%: 950 BPH  

Note: These are published capacities at 5-point removal, which makes it easier to compare models consistently.  


Grain path and holding capacity (why yard flow feels different)

Grain columns

  • 14ā€ x 20’ long grain columns  

Holding capacity

  • Total holding capacity: 544 BU  
  • Grain column holding capacity: 470 BU  

This matters in real harvest logistics: more internal holding capacity can smooth out stop-and-go moments when trucks arrive in waves or when bin transfer is the true bottleneck.


Load/unload hardware and metering control

Loading (top auger)

  • 8ā€ top auger, 7.5 HP, rated 3,800 BPH  

Unloading (bottom auger)

  • 8ā€ flight / 10ā€ tube – 7.5 HP  

Metering

  • Meter roll drive: VFD, 1 HP  
  • Maximum capacity (mechanical potential): 2,800 BPH  

Heat and airflow package (what to verify before purchase)

Heater capacities (max)

  • Top heater: 1 Ɨ 5.5 million BTU/hr  
  • Bottom heater: 1 Ɨ 3.0 million BTU/hr  

Fans

  • Top fan (3-phase): 1 Ɨ 15 HP, 40ā€  
  • Bottom fan (3-phase): 1 Ɨ 12 HP, 28ā€  

Power reference (so the dryer fits your site)

For the 1220, the published electrical references include:

  • Single phase, 230V (min/max amps): 191/246  
  • Three phase, 208V (min/max amps): 125/202  
  • Three phase, 230V (min/max amps): 116/187  
  • Three phase, 460V (min/max amps): 61/93  
  • Three phase, 575V (min/max amps): 54/81  

Footprint and transport planning (portable means ā€œknown dimensionsā€)

  • Transport length (hitch to discharge auger): 29’2ā€  
  • Transport width: 8’  
  • Transport height: 13’5ā€ (11’9ā€)  
  • Approx. transport weight: 9,800 lbs  
  • Installed length: 27’2ā€  
  • Installed height (excluding foundation supports): 14’6ā€  

Reviews on Aglist — the part buyers actually search for

Specs help you shortlist, but reviews help you decide. The most useful owner feedback usually answers:

  • How consistent the dryer feels when conditions change overnight
  • Whether it’s easy to operate during long harvest days
  • How much routine attention it needs (cleanout, checks, adjustments)
  • How well it fits a real yard layout (bins, augers, truck flow)

If you’re adding reviews to this model page, encourage reviewers to include crop type + moisture situation + what workflow they ran—those details make the page genuinely helpful and drive ā€œreviewsā€ searches.


GSI 1220 FAQ — Real-World Use, Setup & Reviews (Canada)

Who typically chooses a GSI 1220 instead of a larger portable model?

The 1220 is often picked when a farm wants portable continuous-flow drying but also wants to keep the setup manageable—yard placement, site power, and daily operation that doesn’t feel oversized for the acreage and harvest pace.


What should I focus on first: specs or reviews?

Start with specs only to confirm the dryer fits your workflow. Then use reviews to answer the ā€œownership questionsā€ that specs don’t cover: how consistent it feels, how much attention it needs, and how it behaves when weather changes during harvest.


What makes a review genuinely useful for the GSI 1220?

The most helpful reviews include:

  • crop type and typical moisture situation (rough range is fine)
  • what operating approach they ran and why
  • one clear benefit and one honest drawback
  • a short note about their yard flow (bins, transfer, truck timing)This turns a review into a real buying signal rather than a generic comment.

Dry & Cool vs Full Heat — how do operators usually decide?

Most decisions come down to storage plan and labour:

  • If you want grain to be easier to manage for storage right away, operators often lean toward a workflow that prioritizes cooling as part of the process.
  • If you’re trying to push drying pace during a tight weather window, many farms use a workflow that emphasizes speed and handle cooling/logistics after.Your best choice is the one that matches how fast you can move grain into storage and how often you’re running late-night loads.

What are common site-planning mistakes that reduce performance?

Even a good dryer can feel ā€œslowā€ when the yard setup is the real issue. Typical problems:

  • poor grain handling flow (bottleneck from dryer to bins)
  • awkward auger angles or long moves that reduce smooth feeding
  • underestimating electrical readiness (service size and wiring run)
  • fuel delivery logistics not planned for peak harvest days

What should I check first when buying a used GSI 1220?

Start with items that can cause downtime or expensive repairs:

  • stable heat operation (no erratic behaviour)
  • fan condition (smooth startup, no vibration/noise issues)
  • metering consistency (steady flow without surging)
  • corrosion or neglected cleanout areas
  • electrical compatibility with your yard (so you’re not forced into a retrofit)

What questions should I ask the seller before traveling to view it?

Ask for:

  • why they’re selling and how it was used each season
  • maintenance notes (even basic records help)
  • any issues they’ve had to ā€œwork aroundā€
  • a short video of it starting up and running
  • what power/fuel setup it was connected to previouslyThese answers quickly separate strong units from risky ones.

How do I compare the 1220 against similar models without getting stuck in tables?

Use this shortlist method:

  1. Pick models that match your harvest pace (how fast grain arrives)
  2. Remove models that don’t fit your site realities (power + layout + storage flow)
  3. Let reviews decide which one is easier to operate and maintainSpecs narrow down; real owner feedback usually makes the final call.

What maintenance habits do owners mention most when they talk about reliable seasons?

The best ā€œno dramaā€ seasons usually come from simple habits:

  • quick daily checks (airflow path, moving parts, unusual sounds)
  • consistent cleanout routine, especially when switching crops
  • keeping small critical spares available during harvest
  • writing down ā€œknown goodā€ operating routines for common conditions

Why does Aglist emphasize reviews for equipment like grain dryers?

Because most people searching online aren’t looking for a brochure—they’re looking for confidence. Reviews capture the details that matter on real farms: consistency, usability, and how the unit fits into a Canadian harvest workflow.


GSI 1220 Reviews & Ratings

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