[AT] 2 row corn combines
John Hall
jtchall at nc.rr.com
Tue Oct 10 15:25:22 PDT 2017
We cheated some on hillsides this year and to be honest it was an
improvement. I've drove one sided before to pull the corn away from
standing rows as well. That works pretty good as long as the ears are
still attached good. One year the corn was literally falling off the
stalks before I ever got to it. If the rollers got offset it would whip
the stalks and sometimes sling the ear off--no joke. This year I was
very fortunate that the ears were still very well attached, never saw
the first one fall.
A field I intend on planting in corn next year is quite hilly, and it
works best from the top down. We'll have to drive the planter plenty
wide in that one!
John Hall
On 10/10/2017 12:35 PM, John Slavin wrote:
> I agree with Len, keeping the downhill open to the extent possible, always seemed to work the best. Never used a 3300, but spent plenty of time in a Gleaner E with a two row head! That may also help with planting next year in that when you get on the more severe hillsides, you need to cheat a little with the planter to help prevent the outside rows getting too close. If you really plan ahead, you can deliberately plant a little wider gap every once in a while to use as you land rows. You can also cheat a little with the combine driving a little on the uphill side of the rows. The row doesn’t have to be dead center between the snapping rollers to pass through just fine. There’s definitely a skill to operating one!
>
> John Slavin
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