Gravity tube feeders

Axalea

In the Brooder
Dec 3, 2024
32
43
41
Illinois
Hey yall, this past Friday I switched from the old faithful hanging feeders that allow 360° access to feed, to a gravity tube feeder.

Ours is made from 1 5 ft by 3 inch piece of tubing (provides storage) which couples into a 3 inch WYE with a cap on the bottom that screws in and out to allow for easy cleaning of what's at the bottom. On the Y section that they eat out of we added another 3 inch piece of tubing to control spillage and minimize rodents.

All I will say is that if you're on the fence of trying out this type of feeder and changing from the hanging types, pull the trigger and do it ASAP.

Our flock is as follows:
19 laying hens
1 rooster
3 ducks
1 peacock

Normally, I would go out with a 3 QT scoop in the morning and throw 2 scoops into the hanging feeder and of course in typical chicken fashion they'd quickly attack the feeder and.... end up spilling 70% of it. Then again at night after putting them in for bed time, I'd put another 2 scoops into the hanging feeder, which would also spill. (Which leads to rodent problems).

I switched us to this DIY gravity tube feeder (which I did not use any glue on the tubing because I was worried about leeching chemicals) and I filled it up with 4 3QT scoops of feed on Friday at around 11 am. It's now Monday at 11 am, there's still about a scoop left in the tube feeder which I will probably refill tonight or tomorrow depending on what the levels are at bedtime tonight.

There's MINIMAL and I mean MINIMAL spillage from the chickens pecking and scratching out their food, it is ALOT more rodent proof (however as I'm finding out nothing is 100% rodent proof). All my birds can access it, even my ducks.

I feel like we have already saved massively on feed given how much less I've had to put in (which is 20% all flock pellets with scratch grains 1 bag of scratch grains for every 4 bags of all flock).

If you're thinking about swapping to this design of feeder I 100000000% encourage it.

Below are pictures of our old feeder vs our new feeder (note on the old hanging feeder the insane amounts of spilled food under it)

If yall have any advice to improve or any advice to fix any errors I've got with this setup please let me know but I wanted to tell yall how much more efficient this has been even just over 4 days especially with the fact we sell our eggs a lot so saving on feed costs only makes us able to save $ for more cartons, or to put that $ towards improving the quality of life for our chickens in their coop and run
 

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I love these types of feeders! They hold a lot and have no spillage! The only thing that I would say about these is that if you have a lot of chickens you will need a few because only 1-2 chickens can eat at a time! So I would say that you should have 1 per 10 birds ish!
I agree, right now I HAVE the materials to make another 3, also one that feeds two directions off one pipe so it's a double WYE. I just haven't put them up yet, due to the fact I estimate that rodents will inevitable consume the feed before the chickens can get rid of it so I've held off. However I suppose I could make the other 3, and completely seal 3 of them at night and only leave 1 open.
 
I agree, right now I HAVE the materials to make another 3, also one that feeds two directions off one pipe so it's a double WYE. I just haven't put them up yet, due to the fact I estimate that rodents will inevitable consume the feed before the chickens can get rid of it so I've held off. However I suppose I could make the other 3, and completely seal 3 of them at night and only leave 1 open.
It looks like you could add a dish/bowl to the very bottom. That might catch the waste. Here is a slight variation that ends in a bowl. The bowl is a 6" PVC end. 3-4 hens can crowd around this feeder. You can see some waste on the ground. I use pellets. I just let the feed run out every few days. The girls then clean up the waste on the ground.
 

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It looks like you could add a dish/bowl to the very bottom. That might catch the waste. Here is a slight variation that ends in a bowl. The bowl is a 6" PVC end. 3-4 hens can crowd around this feeder. You can see some waste on the ground. I use pellets. I just let the feed run out every few days. The girls then clean up the waste on the ground.
This is genius and would be even better because my ducks would eat that bottom part right up
 
This is genius and would be even better because my ducks would eat that bottom part right up
Originally this feeder was 4' x 3". I ended up modifying it to be 3'x 4" and then deduced to 3" at the bottom. It was just parts on hand. I have a 2nd one that I use when I go on vacation. The two combined feed 11 hens for 7-9 days.
 
Really? Mold? Was it quick or was it slow? Is there any way to deter it? We have never had issues with molding at all in any form of storage or feeder
It was slow, went to fill the feeder one day and saw something strange down in the tube, dumped all the feed out and there were clumps of moldy feed. I've never had an issue with any of my other feeders (open 360, and port) but these just didn't work out. I actually completely cleaned them out, let them fully dry and refilled them, thinking maybe it was a fluke, same thing happened again.
 
It was slow, went to fill the feeder one day and saw something strange down in the tube, dumped all the feed out and there were clumps of moldy feed. I've never had an issue with any of my other feeders (open 360, and port) but these just didn't work out. I actually completely cleaned them out, let them fully dry and refilled them, thinking maybe it was a fluke, same thing happened again
well shoot, sounds like something im going to need to be on the lookout for, thanks for the advice ahead of time!
 

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