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Friday Crop Report on a Thursday!

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    #37
    I’ve got two kids that work for Case and there favourite saying is
    “ im going to beat you like a chopper bearing “ haha all in fun. Must be pretty tight on that shaft.

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      #38
      Sask3 from my own personal testing and talking to neighbors the best canola combine is the New Holland. Made in the same factory as the Case, same sieve but a superior double rotor and superior chopper, you must have had a bad experience with a dealer or a combine. Neighbor down the road runs a S680 Deere and a New Holland 8.9. He says the Deere uses 500 litres more fuel in a day(seems like a lot but that is what he said) and throws over more canola, but he says he has more little problems with the New Holland. Personally only ever owned Deere's and New Holland. When the son and I go deer hunting in the fall always go to Deere and Case fields first because they have the most to eat lol. Enjoy your day

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        #39
        We run 3 NHs and yes I would agree on your comments. They are very gentle on every crop, especially lentils and peas, all to do with twin rotors. It has the best chopping system IMO.
        There isn’t much of throwing over.
        Biggest downfall is there are a lot of moving parts, this turns this and this turn that. It can get to be a high cost maintenance machine.

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          #40
          NH has a nice chopper, but lots of moving parts, and no rotor reverser.

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            #41
            Originally posted by MBgrower View Post
            NH has a nice chopper, but lots of moving parts, and no rotor reverser.
            Good point on the RR. Heard they are coming out with one. Should put the price up 100k!!

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              #42
              Last demo we had NH was 1992, TR 96 really performed BUT built much weaker than the Deere 7720's we had then. PAMI tests showed those vintage NH as top throughput, minimal grain damage and lowest losses. Wonder why they never dominated the market in last 30 years? Must be reasons they are cheaper, lack resale? Is it just the COLOR?

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                #43
                Originally posted by SASKFARMER3 View Post
                Shit rain showers all around.

                Gee, SF3, is it raining JUST on that combine, better close the hopper cover.

                Anyway you have lucked out if your remaining canola is DRY DRY DRY! Most taken at 12-14% during the scary but not snowed under weather we had. Two sunny windy days and our last field was 6.9% at the end. Hindsight easy, but screw global cooling, costing millions!
                Everyone able to get this crop, be VERY THANKFUL! One hell of a spot on earth to farm some years. Good Luck!
                Last edited by fjlip; Oct 20, 2018, 12:04.

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                  #44
                  Might have looked at the case again once they get the chopper repositioned but can't as I have zero faith in our local RME's service dept. too many bad experiences, and big blls for not much work.

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                    #45
                    Originally posted by mcfarms View Post
                    Might have looked at the case again once they get the chopper repositioned but can't as I have zero faith in our local RME's service dept. too many bad experiences, and big blls for not much work.
                    Local BTO burst his chopper shaft while being filmed on tv. New Case combine was out for 8 days in high season.
                    Claas or NH combine you can still cut with a burst chopper.

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                      #46
                      Ok guys if NH is so good why do they sell for pennies at RB after a few years.

                      Our 55 deere would run with a little work.
                      Our 995 NH is ipsco pipe.


                      Now yea the NH is better than they use to be.

                      Any ways the three Deere are moving along real nice today.

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                        #47
                        Thirsty Deere is all we hear/read. Our 9870 in canola is about 5 liters per acre over the whole day? What do others see? Case CVT drive is also blamed for more fuel over NH. On one Food Grains Bank many colors combine day, the Deere was lowest fuel used.

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                          #48
                          Originally posted by MBgrower View Post
                          NH has a nice chopper, but lots of moving parts, and no rotor reverser.
                          Haven't plugged rotors in either of our NH's in 3 years. Last two years have been big big crops too.

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