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Forage harvester (Click for video) A forage harvester – also known as a silage harvester, forager or chopper – is a farm implement that harvests forage plants to make silage. [1] Silage is grass, corn or hay, which has been chopped into small pieces, and compacted together in a storage silo, silage bunker, or in silage bags. [2]
June 2009 silo filling on Ken Mahalko's dairy farm near Ruby, WI, using a John Deere 4020, New Holland forage harvester, and Gehl forage wagon. 2009 has been a dry spring so there's not much plant material on the ground. Fresh-cut grasses have a moisture content of about 90% which in a silo would result in silage juice liquid leaking out the ...
semi-mounted potato harvesters for building with tractors: KKU-2A "Druzhba" Ryazan Combine Plant, the production is not engaged, the building leased GOMSELMASH: Gomel, Byelorussia: 1930: foragers, trailed forage harvesters: KSK-100, KS-2,6: GOMSELMASH Dalselmash: Birobidzhan, Russian SFSR: 1938: forage harvesters crawler: KSG-3,2: The plant ...
Corn combine harvester with grain cart (click for video) The modern combine harvester, also called a combine, is a machine designed to harvest a variety of cultivated seeds. Combine harvesters are one of the most economically important labour-saving inventions, significantly reducing the fraction of the population engaged in agriculture. [1]
This was also the year of the TA 150 forage harvester, with heads able to harvest maize, forage and grain crops. 1975 New combine range: models M 92, M 112, M 132 and M 152. 1981 At a time of intensive development, the company built a new plant in Breganze and started a partnership with Fiat group doomed to last 20 years. The modern production ...
A German combine harvester by Claas Power for agricultural machinery was originally supplied by ox or other domesticated animals . With the invention of steam power came the portable engine , and later the traction engine , a multipurpose, mobile energy source that was the ground-crawling cousin to the steam locomotive .
A Fortschritt E 512 in 1978 A late 1980s E 512 – its paint was olive-green, because it was cheaper to produce than blue paint. In the early 1950s, the GDR combine harvester production had shifted from stationary threshing mashines and pulled harvesters to the self-propelled combine harvesters of the E 170 series, a modified version of the S-4 Stalinets combine harvester.
Despite Fendt's relatively late entry into the forage harvester market, the Katana 65 quickly established itself in the market: By 2013, only two years later, the number of machines produced had already reached 100 units. [1] The second forage harvester from Fendt, the Katana 85, went into production in the same year. Equipped with a 12 ...