Have had teh similiar issue with our 9300 the new M series is sitting in the shed for this year but hope it isn't still doing this, we have had to run the AC plus heat with full fan at times on the old one to find the perfect balance to keep the interior humidity at a point where this doesn't happen. was real bad in Canola at night at times.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Manufacturers that don’t fix engineering problems
Collapse
Logging in...
Welcome to Agriville! You need to login to post messages in the Agriville chat forums. Please login below.
X
-
Why so mad at the wheat broad. It has nothing to do with price. It
gives everybody the chance to sell grain without contracting 6 months
before you know if you can produce any product. If you are so good with
price forecasts, buy and sell paper, that is where the real money
is made these days.
As for dual marketing it will never work. The grain trade doesn't
want the CWB. If dual market comes into play the CWB will be shut
out of the present elevator system.
The Canola and other markets are getting to be a bad joke. You
can't sell a bushel until you have a contract months before. After
you sign you go on the list and wait. Last fall the wait time
was 3 months. Viterra's September contract where getting called in
December and maybe January and always they needed the product yesterday.
Special crops are a real mess. Once you sign, if the price goes up they
need the product. If the price drops you get on the wait list where
they hope the product spoils, or need the cash and market elsewhere.
Had a relation that is still waiting for last years mustard to be picked
up.
What really makes my laugh is all the comments that wheat board
is the reason for these other programs. If that was so, why is the
US farmer the most subsidized operation in the world. I know they
say no, but when you look at all programs and taxes, I would say
they surpass all others. Few months ago I read where one program
could be paying $80/acre on soft wheat.
One other comment I picked up off another board. 85% of grain
sold in the US are sold in to lower 1/3 of the years price.
Comment
-
I think the grain trade favours the CWB. How much
wheat would be shipped through export terminals if
open market? How much wheat would be railed
east/west w/o the CWB? Keeping feed grain prices
depressed helps feeders, who owns the big feedlots
and barns? Since handling charges are guaranteed,
who benefits? If there are any trade disputes, who pays
the bill? If there are any labour strikes, who foots the
bill?
I have lots of questions, what are your thoughts?
Comment
-
If we were getting $10-$12/ bus for wheat there wouldn't be a word spoken. However the world market isn't paying that so we have to blame somebody and we are all better marketers than the people we higher to market for us. We know when to sell and hit the high markets all the time and tap into the niche markets only, to get highest returns.
Grain companies are our partners the CWB is our enemy.
Grain company's job is to show good returns for thier share holders they do this buy increasing market share both in grain handling and input sales so they have to keep farmers comming through the door as all thier profits for the share holders have come out of farmers pockets. Hense they will give us the best deal to keep us comming.
The CWB only sells grain for us so they can't give extra breaks and make it back up on cleaning, blending, trucking, drying, fert or chem sales. They only sell into a world market and return that price back to us less the cost of doing buissness.
How can we ever make profit when we have our marketing arm selling into world market and competing against our input partners? We sell wholesale and buy retail. If grain companies could increase grain prices they could increase all other costs to us. If we could sell on own to our markets for a higher price input dealers could raise costs and show a better profit.
Accredited exporters could be selling into higher markets, if they were there, but what good does that do them they have to return profits to the CWB to be given to farmers.
Comment
-
Neither the grain companies or the CWB are my partners. Both are in the business of making money for themselves from my grain. The CWB doesn't work for the farmer any more than anyone else, in fact it's a lot less.
What keeps the grain companies in line is competition from other grain companies and a farmers ability to just say "no" to any and all of them.
There is nothing and no one keeping the CWB in line. When it comes to board grains it is a completely undisciplined market. Which is why farmers get screwed far worse by the CWB than they ever have by any grain company.
Comment
-
-
Ahhhh, I understand now what you're talking about. I have that problem in the '05 too. It gets colder in the evening, so I shut the air conditioner off, and the windows all fog up.
What I do is pack some paper towel, or a shamwow with me so that when I shut the AC off, I can give the windows a quick rubdown to soak up the condensation. Sometimes I have to repeat once, but the windows stay clear after that for the rest of the night.
Its a bit of a pain, but with the autosteer, at least I can do it on the go, so it doesn't take any extra time.
I've seen the same thing in the combine on rare occasions when temperatures drop rapidly, but it seems to be a common occurance on the 9352.
Comment
-
I have never seen a unit that doesn't fog in some conditions,
like swathing canola in evening. I always have to run heater
with air to keep the fog down. You even get it in cars and
trucks. Only design Problem I see is controls that don't
allow heat and air at the same time. Also the order of the
cores so air is cooled and dried before heating.
Comment
- Reply to this Thread
- Return to Topic List
Comment