Farmers Guide June 2019

Page 43

Machinery

Open Day Weather and soil monitors

Fit for the future

New products displayed from Case IH for the first time at a dealer event included weather and soil condition monitoring equipment as part of the company’s precision farming package. The FarmXtend display included RainXact rain and precipitation sensors accurate to within 1mm, SoilXact Plus which monitors soil moisture and temperature and WeatherXact Plus which measures air temperature and humidity. ...More on previous page Users can install multiple monitoring stations around the farm with data available through a smartphone app. Upgrades include DiseaseXpert to forecast disease risk for individual crops and varieties, based on current weather conditions. SprayXpert can advise chemical efficacy depending on temperature and humidity. Data can be transferred on narrow band-width across most of the UK or by 2G mobile network and battery life within each sensor is up to five years. WeatherXact is priced at £760, RainXact costs £611 and Soil Xact Plus is £480 and all products are available through the local main dealer. Pictured with the FarmXtend display are Collings Brothers Ben Wood (left) with CNH precision farming intern Nick Stapleton.

The Kuhn Aurock drill’s purchaser was at the event and, talking to Farmers Guide, he explained its benefits. Trading as JT Lines & Son and based at Eltisley, Cambs, Martin Lines farms a mix of owned, rented and contract-farmed land totalling approximately 540ha. Most is heavy and although Martin is keen to move toward minimum and zero-tillage for all cropping where possible, fields taken on more recently need time to adjust from a full inversion tillage regime. “Our focus is on reducing costs and inputs while improving soil health,” he explained. “A few years ago we were losing the battle against black-grass and although we used stale seedbeds in the autumn, when we disturbed the ground again during drilling; the black-grass quickly returned and many crops became unprofitable.” Cover and companion crops are used to maintain ground cover and, where the land is zero-tilled although some areas receive pre-emergence herbicides, others don’t require any chemical now for weed control. “When Kuhn asked if I would be interesting in trying the prototype in 2017 I was enthusiastic - especially having been involved previously testing the first Performer cultivator in the UK so I knew the company and the care that goes into designing and building its products. They are strong and robust and back-up from the dealer and manufacturer are good.” Martin explained that individual adjustment of the various elements means the drill can be set-up for all soil conditions and seed types. “We have used the drill in all situations from full cultivations to direct and zero-till drilling, mainly in challenging heavy soils. With individual coulter adjustment we can plant main and companion crops at different depths and separate adjustment of the crimp roller on the front allows us to leave a mat of cover crop to hold moisture and maintain ground cover. We have compared the crimp roller with chemical desiccation ahead of drilling, and the preserved moisture through crimping has resulted in higher yields. This has encouraged us to look at alternative crops such as soya which we aim to grow next year. We will drill it into a cover crop of rye, crimped by the drill roller and are hopeful this will increase moisture availability for the soya.” Crops planted so far include wheat, winter beans, spring barley, oilseed rape, cover crop mixes and millet and results during testing were so good that Martin didn’t hesitate to order the first production machine. “It’s excellent and my eyes have been opened as to what might be possible,” he added. “We are keen to take on more land and keeping costs down is just as important as high yields. The drill has saved us 77,000 litres of diesel so far with no loss of harvested tonnage.” Martin is replacing a Case IH Quadtrac with a 300hp Optum plus another smaller wheeled tractor. The Optum will be used for any cultivations needed and to pull the drill and is equiped with on-board tyre inflation providing instant pressure adjustment for transport and field tasks. “We pulled the prototype and our own drill using a Puma 215 but the Optum will give us power in reserve, allowing us to use lower engine revs and save fuel,” he added. Pictured with the Kuhn Aurock drill are (l-r) Martin and his son Matt who is currently studying at Harper Adams University, Collings Brothers manager Jason Weston and area sales representative Pete Chessum.

Universal drill previewed The new 6m Kuhn drill had been borrowed back from its owner who purchased it from Collings Brothers having used a prototype version since autumn 2017. The universal drill is designed for zero-tillage crop establishment but can also be set up for varying degrees of soil movement to suit soil condition and the farm’s drilling policy. The 5,000-litre hopper is available for single or dual products and dual metering allows different rates to be selected for each. New VistaFlow seed distributors allow individual rows to be switched from the cab of Isobus-equipped tractors making the drill compatible with any tramline configuration. The drill chassis is articulated so that during turns the drilling coulters precisely follow the opener discs. An integrated crop roller mounted in front is an option with pressure adjustable on the move allowing the operator to crimp rather than chop cover crops. The drill displayed had a full width central tyre packer which is recommended for zero-tillage, levelling and consolidating loose or cultivated ground. The double disc coulters are individually adjustable making the Aurock ideal for inter-row seeding of companion crops. “Having seen the drill working I’m very impressed and looking forward to having it in full production,” explained Kuhn non-inversion establishment specialist Will Waterer. “It replaces the SD drill which we offered until three years ago and we expect considerable interest at Cereals in June where it will have its official UK launch.”

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Farmers Guide June 2019 by Farmers Guide - Issuu