Beans planted

/ Beans planted #1  

bigtiller

Super Member
Joined
Feb 1, 2006
Messages
7,539
Location
central Iowa
Tractor
John Deere 2720 John Deere 3039R John Deere Z545R
Beans planted Friday with this 36 row planter. 30 acres took less than an hour.

36 row planter.jpg
 
/ Beans planted #3  
WOW! That would be neat to try.

Of course, it may take us longer to plant ours but ..... we are almost ready to pick ours :)


I have been to Ames, Iowa and some of the farms out there are HUGE
 
/ Beans planted
  • Thread Starter
#4  
Oh My!!!

Any idea what sort of ground speed is obtained?

Steve

I don't know but I would guess about 5 to 7 mph. Maybe faster in places. With that fancy transmission, they set the desired rpm and the computer does the rest.
 
/ Beans planted #5  
Why didn't you hook that 2720 up to it? Would make a good picture.
 
/ Beans planted #6  
I don't know but I would guess about 5 to 7 mph. Maybe faster in places. With that fancy transmission, they set the desired rpm and the computer does the rest.
We run a 16 row planter and plant soy beans at 5.5 mph and corn at 5.25. The limitation is the planter not the tractor. Plant too fast and you mess up the seed population. And just want to say there's more too it than set rpm and go. Don't get me wrong the auto steer is great but you still have a lot to do.
That is an impressive planter but man I can't imagine running it. A 16 row is tough enough to keep an eye on making sure everything is working that nothing gets plugged that your seed population for each row is correct. I bet his productivity is much higher in bigger fields.
 
/ Beans planted #7  
We run a 16 row planter and plant soy beans at 5.5 mph and corn at 5.25. The limitation is the planter not the tractor. Plant too fast and you mess up the seed population. And just want to say there's more too it than set rpm and go. Don't get me wrong the auto steer is great but you still have a lot to do. .

I remember watching a show on RFD-TV that discussed JD planters that were capable of "high" ground speeds. A Google search turned up this article: John Deere Planter Answers Need for Speed.

Steve
 
/ Beans planted #8  
Around here they run 8-10 mph with 24 - 36 even 48 row planters . Quite impressive to see 120 ft. of planter coming at you . The seed spacing and germination are perfect . These planters cost more than a nice house .
 
/ Beans planted
  • Thread Starter
#9  
I think it must be harder to tell exactly where the end of the planter is because it is so far away from the operator. The first row seams to be a little further away from obstacles like the fence, power poles and tight corners.
 
/ Beans planted #10  
My large farmer friend uses all JD GPS guided planting equipment. They have experimented a lot with speed. They are at 4.5mph. Best seed placement at that speed. Not quite as critical with beans as it is with corn.

Here's a Drone shot of their planters at work planting beans. They should finish this week. Planted 10,742 acres of corn. Not sure what the total is on beans but will be around 17,000 acres.



160508_081110_18.jpeg
 
/ Beans planted
  • Thread Starter
#11  
My large farmer friend uses all JD GPS guided planting equipment. They have experimented a lot with speed. They are at 4.5mph. Best seed placement at that speed. Not quite as critical with beans as it is with corn.

Here's a Drone shot of their planters at work planting beans. They should finish this week. Planted 10,742 acres of corn. Not sure what the total is on beans but will be around 17,000 acres.

That should be enough acreage to raise a family.:thumbsup:
 
/ Beans planted #12  
That should be enough acreage to raise a family.:thumbsup:

Yep. Doug and wife, his three grown children an their families and a dozen employees with families. :)

Pretty cool to watch tractor/planter go across field with steering wheel tilted up and operator sitting cross legged and arms folded. :)
 
/ Beans planted #14  
That photo looks like one from South America. Very nice. A few 24 row planters around but mostly 16 and under.
 
/ Beans planted #15  
They've got two double row planters only used for beans. They are the two in the front being pulled by 300+hp center pivot tractors. Total overkill. But they don't have any smaller tractors. Those large tractors are normally doing heavy tillage and pulling grain carts.

The next three are 24 row. The last one is 12 row.

How many Million do you see there? :)
 
/ Beans planted
  • Thread Starter
#18  
That is impressive. But I want to know how long it took to stage it all, load it all, and clean up afterwards. :)

I don't know what any of that means, but they were here less than an hour. In that hour the hopper was filled from a nurse trailer, the planter was unfolded and put to work, then folded back up, seed spacing and depth were checked and finally, howdy dos were offered and away he went to the next field.
 
/ Beans planted #19  
I was just thinking that most projects at my place require as much time to get ready as to actually do the work. The classic case is painting -- finding everything and dragging it out, then cleaning up an storing it all, seems to take as much time as the painting. So I was curious if the prep required two hours of handling seed bags or an hour of washing equipment. Apparently not -- thanks.
 
/ Beans planted #20  
No seed bag handling.

But try to imagine how many critical parts are on a 24 row planter.

The planters are computer monitored and with GPS, require multiple computer systems running on the tractor. Setup includes telling the computers what field you are in, what grain you are planting and at what population rate. I'm sure there is more but I'm too naive to know them. :)
 
 
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