[AT] OT--- 800 IH plate planter
Greg Hass
ghass at m3isp.com
Tue Mar 31 14:01:58 PDT 2015
First off, if you don't mind telling us, how many row unit is this. Also
I take it that this is a plate planter. If so, the no.1 thing is to make
sure you have the right size plates to match the seed size. Also check
the back-up plates under the seed plates for wear. Unless they changed
from earlier plate planters, there is a hump inside the hopper that the
plate goes under. Inside this are 2 "dogs" that are spring loaded and
keep only one seed at a time from getting into the seed cells. Next in
line is a arm with a roller on the end (early plate planters just had a
point) and it to is spring loaded and its job is to make sure all seeds
are ejected from the seed cells. Make sure all these parts are free to
move and that none of the springs are broken. Most of the rest is as you
said. As for the fertilizer, both me and my brother quit applying it
with the planter years ago. One reason was we had no good way to handle
it. The main reason was because we could never get the correct amount
on. We either seemed to get 30% too much or 30% too little. It had
nothing to do with planter settings, but with humidity in the air and
the size of granules and the amount of fines in the fertilizer. For
many years we have just broadcast it with a spreader from the fertilizer
company. We only plant 20-50 acres a year so this is our cheapest way.
(It just occurred to me, I am talking dry fertilizer). All of the large
farmers around us have gone to liquid fertilizer which doesn't vary like
dry does. Also they all have new enough planters that they have flow
meters hooked to computers and gps to apply the fertilizer almost to the
pound. I simply cannot afford the cost for the limited acres I do. As an
example, last year my cousin bought a new Kinze planter; 24 row-30 inch.
It cost $150,000. I wouldn't go into all the options at this time, but
they did debate for several weeks whether to steer with just auto-steer
or have markers as a backup. They went with just auto-steer because
markers cost $14,000 (no I didn't make a mistake).
Greg Hass
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