fbpx
Print this page
Friday, 04 February 2022 08:55

Is Proceed a game-changer?

Written by  Mark Daniel
Vaderstad’s Proceed precision drill can be used to establish cereal crops, canola, sugar/ fodder beet, peas, maize and even large seed crops like sunflowers. Vaderstad’s Proceed precision drill can be used to establish cereal crops, canola, sugar/ fodder beet, peas, maize and even large seed crops like sunflowers.

Following a three-year development programme, Swedish implement manufacturer Väderstad suggests its latest precision seed drill is one of a kind and a game changer.

The recently showcased Proceed precision drill can be used to establish cereal crops, canola, sugar/fodder beet, peas, maize and even large seed crops like sunflowers. Interestingly, the company reports that trials in wheat have shown that seed rates can be halved, without any reduction in yield.

Over the three-year development period, numerous trials have taken place in Sweden, the UK, France and Germany.

Lars Thylén, director product management and business development at Väderstad, suggests that by combining the key facets of planting depth-precision, in-row precision, end-of-row precision and seedbed optimisation, the result is a quick, even emergence and vital crop population – where each plant is provided conditions needed to reach full potential.

Post-seeding trials in winter wheat, at a seed rate of 150 seeds/m2, showed an increase of 102% in plant biomass, 72% in root biomass and 62% more shoots per plant, compared to a modern seed drill.

Flagged as a onestop solution for all crops and conditions, the new machine is said to be equally at home on ploughed land, minimum- tillage situations, planting into cover crops or direct drilling. Planting units are arranged in two banks, allowing row spacing of 22.5 or 25cm in cereals. Working in multiples of these numbers, the machine can be set up to drill at 45 or 50cm for beet crops or canola, or pushed out to 75cm for maize, cotton and sunflowers.

Ahead of each row unit, the press wheels are said to be dual-purpose, serving to carry the weight of the machine and also creating soil consolidation for optimal planting conditions. Seed is delivered from a central hopper with a 3,000 litre capacity, with the option of delivering fertiliser during planting via the company’s FH2000 front-mounted hopper system.

Seed metering from the central hopper is by way of a modified version of Vaderstad’s PowerShot singulation system, which takes control of each seed to the soil. Leaving the short seed tube, each seed is received by a stop wheel that ensures optimal seed-to-soil contact at selected depth across the full working width of the drill.

Each row is electronically- driven and controlled using the I-pad-based, E-Control System. This offers functions such as row by row shut off, variable rate application, dynamic tramlining, individual calibration, alongside realtime monitoring and control.

The expected full release date is scheduled for the latter part of 2022.

More like this

Vapormatic joins JD's parts range

John Deere has expanded its repair and replacement part offerings, with the Vapormatic brand officially added to its range of ‘Alternative Parts’ in New Zealand.

GPS in control

In a move that will make harvesting operations easier, particularly in odd-shaped paddocks, Kuhn has announced that GPS section control is now available on the FC 9330 RA mower conditioner, the GA 13231, and GA 15231 four-rotor rakes.

Featured

Feds make case for rural bank lending probe

Bankers have been making record profits in the last few years, but those aren’t the only records they’ve been breaking, says Federated Farmers vice president Richard McIntyre.

National

Fonterra unveils divestment plan

Fonterra is exploring full or partial divestment options for its global Consumer business, as well as its integrated businesses Fonterra…

Fonterra appoints new CFO

Fonterra has appointed a new chief financial officer, seven months after its last CFO’s shock resignation.

Machinery & Products

GPS in control

In a move that will make harvesting operations easier, particularly in odd-shaped paddocks, Kuhn has announced that GPS section control…