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Keep Up the Good Work

Continued combine maintenance before, during and after harvest minimizes loss and downtime.

By Denny Eilers

Use the off-season to perform maintenance to lessen downtime during harvest.

Many farmers approach annual combine maintenance chores like Doug Zieman. “I keep a close eye on the machine during harvest,” he says, “and make mental notes of things to repair or replace during the off-season. It may be an auger wearing thin, a belt or a bearing.”

Zieman, of Postville, Iowa, who, with his father, Mark, harvests up to 3,000 acres of corn and soybeans each fall, evaluates the item in question. If it can make it to the end of harvest, it goes on the off-season repair list. “I like to go through the combine right after harvest, while it’s fresh in my memory,” he says.

Then, he uses the luxury of time to order needed parts and make repairs. As the new harvest approaches, he revisits his checklist “to make sure everything’s working” and to make final adjustments to minimize grain loss.

Does it pay? According to Ron Schuler, Extension agricultural engineer at the University of Wisconsin, a well-maintained and correctly adjusted combine can minimize corn kernel loss to about 1 percent and keep soybean and other small grain losses under a bushel an acre. Plus, less downtime from preventive maintenance keeps your harvest right on schedule.

Combine Maintenance Checklist

Fall harvest is around the corner. Before you hit the field, give your combine a once-over with this 12-point checklist.

Learn more about AGCO’s new preventive maintenance program, PM360.

Tags: AGCOAGCO PartsCombine MaintenancecornDoug ZiemanFarm LifeFarmLifeMark ZiemanMassey FergusonPM360Ron SchulerSoybeansUniversity of Wisconsin