«Previous    Next»
Airflow Cornhead "Saves 2 To 4 Bu. Per Acre"
“Our new Cressoni Air-Flow blower sends a high volume of air directly to the row units to keep loose kernels from falling to the ground. It can save 2 to 4 bu. per acre,” says Stewart Peterson, manufacturing rep with North Country Marketing, Inc. in West Fargo, N. Dak.
  The Air-Flow system is available as standard equipment on all new Cressoni cornheads. It makes use of a high volume, pto-driven blower that mounts on one side of the head. An 8-in. dia. flexible hose leads from the blower to a main manifold, from where four 2-in. dia. metal lines equipped with nozzles lead to each row unit. The nozzles are located between the snap rolls and the bottom deck plate, and blow shelled corn back into the head.
  The blower will handle 6 and 8-row 30 or 22-in. heads. A 12-row head requires mounting a second blower on the opposite side of the head.
  “We’ve tested it for two years in really dry conditions, where we were harvesting corn at 15 percent moisture or less,” says Peterson. “When such dry corn goes through the head a lot of kernels get shelled off the cob and fall through the deck plates and onto the ground. The blower is belt-driven off the head’s existing pto drive. It doesn’t require much additional power because it concentrates air between the snap rolls in a confined space.”
  The company also offers an optional Roto cross-cut stalk chopper that’s built into the snap rolls. A 6-row Cressoni header equipped with a Roto cross-cut chopper and Air-Flow blower sells for about $58,000; without the chopper; $48,000.
  Contact: FARM SHOW Followup, North Country Marketing, Inc., 1740 West Main Ave., West Fargo, N. Dak. 58078 (ph 877 915-8790 or 701 277-1022; stew@northcountrymarketing.biz; www.northcountrymarketing.biz).


  Click here to download page story appeared in.



  Click here to read entire issue




To read the rest of this story, download this issue below or click here to register with your account number.
Order the Issue Containing This Story
2012 - Volume #36, Issue #2