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Writer's pictureRadhika

Harvesting Made Easy With Harvester Machine

The Harvester, summary for combine harvester machine, is a necessary and complex machine created for practical harvesting of mass amounts of grain. Modern combine machine can cut a swath over a field more than 50 feet wide.

The name originates from combining three primary harvest purposes – reaping, threshing and winnowing. Corn, soybeans, wheat, oats, rye, barley, flax, sunflowers etc can all be harvested with a header designed for that special grain.


Hiram Moore from the USA patented the first combine in 1935. Early variants were horse-drawn, supported by models that were pulled behind a farm tractor. The 20 century saw the initiation of the self-propelled combine, and by the 1980s they worked to come furnished with on-board electronics to include operation and yield data.

Let's understand its evolution here.


With the passing time, these machines are better than ever. Safe and efficient grain collection depends on picking the right combine harvester for the job. Equipment manufacturers, including John Deere, Case IH, Fieldking, New Holland, and Claas, continue to develop technology and design to match farmers’ demands. Latest designs offer grain tanks as long as 485-bushels with unloading speeds of 6 bushels per second. Modern apps allow growers to remotely control combine performance. Self-propelled harvesters were designed to use less fuel than those drawn behind a tractor, and new designs continue that course, with innovations that improve traction, operator response, and in many cases offer a specific gear for road travel.


Whether new or used, combine machine require decent care and preservation. Today’s machine is designed to run at 100% function, but reaching that goal needs daily care and knowledge of the machine’s construction and electronic features.


Usual care begins ere the harvest, with a pre-season review and special care to trouble spots that see extreme wear during use.

The pre-season inspection should also include an assessment of the previous year’s harvest. A wet field harvest will add mud coats on combine elements. A dry season harvesting will create dust accumulation.


Worn grain covers are one of the first causes of cereal loss, as much as 50% according to a fresh study by Iowa State University. Precise calibration and support can minimize that result and improve corn collection. Combines come with basically two types of grain platforms. The common platform features an auger with a steel floor. The draper floor uses a belt to support the plant into the harvester to separate the grain. A flex draper uses flex cutter bars that self-adjust as the head passes over uneven ground or small obstacles.

Flex draper users publish less grain loss and less problems with securing from wet plants.

Adjusting a combine to run at peak position is an art. A simple change to one part can affect the operation of several more. Authorities say to get the greatest from your crop, make regular use of the combine’s operator’s manual and make only one adjustment at a time. It’s best to begin with the recommended settings, then adjust as crop conditions change.


The most significant factor in any combine harvester is safety. Know the crop, know the machine, and know the operator’s borders. Then use them all to their most excellent capacity for a lavish return.​


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