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Types: Aeration Fan

143 results

  • 2018 Grain Guard GGF-80711 7.5 hp Aeration Fan
    Lot 82

    2018 Grain Guard GGF-80711 7.5 hp Aeration Fan

    Quill Lake, SK, CAN

  • Flaman 40501 7.5 hp Aeration Fan
    Lot 86

    Quill Lake, SK, CAN

  • Flaman 40501 7.5 hp Aeration Fan
    Lot 88

    Quill Lake, SK, CAN

  • Keho 2 hp Aeration Fan
    Lot 50

    Middle Lake, SK, CAN

  • Caldwell F18-31 3 hp Aeration Fan
    Lot 79

    Mayfair, SK, CAN

1-60 of 143

What are aeration fans?

Aeration fans are high-output air movers attached to grain bins, silos, and storage structures to push or pull air through stored grain. By maintaining consistent airflow, they regulate temperature and moisture, preventing spoilage, mold growth, insect activity, and hot spots in corn, wheat, soybeans, canola, and other stored crops. They are a core piece of post-harvest equipment for farms, commercial grain elevators, and cooperatives.

Most units fall into three categories: axial fans (high airflow, lower static pressure — ideal for shallow grain depths and cooling), centrifugal fans (higher static pressure for deep bins and natural-air drying), and inline centrifugal fans (a hybrid suited to medium-depth bins). Horsepower typically ranges from 1 HP on small farm bins to 40+ HP on commercial-scale grain bin fans.

Why buy used aeration fans?

Aeration fans are mechanically straightforward — an electric motor, a housing, and a blade or impeller — which makes them a strong used-equipment category. A well-maintained used grain bin fan can deliver another decade or more of service at a fraction of the cost of new, and that math matters when you're outfitting multiple bins or replacing units across an elevator site.

Buying used also lets operators expand drying and storage capacity ahead of harvest without long lead times. At Ritchie Bros., aeration fans frequently sell alongside related grain-handling equipment — grain dryers, grain elevators, augers, and grain bin jacks — so buyers can source matched systems from a single auction event. That's a practical advantage for farmers and elevator managers building out or upgrading a storage operation in a single buying cycle.

Top aeration fan brands

A handful of manufacturers dominate the North American market, and their machines hold value well on the used market.

Sukup

Sukup is one of the most recognized names in grain bin fans and drying equipment. Their axial and centrifugal lines — including popular 5, 7.5, 10, and 15 HP centrifugal models — are known for solid construction and parts availability through a wide dealer network.

GSI (Grain Systems Inc.)

GSI aeration fans are common on commercial-scale bins and elevators. Their centrifugal and inline centrifugal models pair well with GSI bins and dryers, making them a frequent pick for buyers expanding an existing GSI setup.

Brock

Brock fans are widely used in commercial grain storage. Their centrifugal units are built for high static pressure and deep-bin applications, and they hold up well in continuous-duty environments.

Caldwell and Farm Fans

Caldwell axial fans are a staple for cooling and lower-static-pressure jobs, while Farm Fans (now part of GSI) units remain in active service on countless farms and are still well-supported for parts.

What to look for when buying used aeration fans

Aeration fans are durable, but the details matter. Before bidding, work through these checks:

  • Motor condition: Check the nameplate for HP, voltage (single-phase vs. three-phase), and RPM. Inspect for burnt windings, scorched paint near the housing, and signs of moisture intrusion. Three-phase motors generally outlast single-phase units in heavy use.
  • Bearings and shaft: Spin the fan by hand if possible. Listen for grinding or roughness, and check for shaft play. Bearing replacement is doable but factor it into your purchase price.
  • Blade or impeller integrity: Look for cracks, missing balance weights, corrosion, and pitting on centrifugal impellers. An unbalanced blade vibrates heavily and shortens motor and bearing life.
  • Housing and transition: Rust-through on the housing, damaged inlet cones, or a bent transition piece will hurt airflow and static pressure. Surface rust is cosmetic; structural rust is not.
  • Static pressure rating and CFM: Match the fan to your bin depth and crop. A fan that's undersized for a deep corn bin won't move enough air to dry or cool effectively, regardless of how well it runs.
  • Control panel and wiring: Inspect the magnetic starter, overload relays, and any thermostat or humidistat controls. Replacement controls add cost.

Buy used aeration fans at Ritchie Bros.

Ritchie Bros. regularly lists aeration fans from Sukup, GSI, Brock, Caldwell, and Farm Fans across farm dispersals and agricultural auctions in North America. Buyers can review detailed condition information, motor specs, and photos before bidding through live on-site auctions, timed online events, and Marketplace-E. Because aeration fans often come to auction alongside grain dryers, bins, augers, and other post-harvest equipment, it's a practical place to assemble or upgrade a complete grain storage system in one buying cycle.

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