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Self Propelled 4WD 650 BU Grain Cart
"No one's ever built anything like it. It'll revolutionize the way we harvest grain," says Greg Blanchat of Blanchat Manufacturing about his giant new self-propelled 650-bu., 4-WD grain cart that he says can double or even triple harvest efficiency, getting grain out of the field fast, keeping combines and trucks running, and minimizing compaction.
The first prototype made its appearance last year. "Custom combiners are ecstatic. It's something they've always needed. Because we carry the load rather than pull it, we eliminate `dead' axles on the wagons. It's much more maneuverable, and will work through the muddiest fields, leaving almost no tracks and causing minimal compaction. It'll unload the 650 bu. load in less than 3 min. with its 16-in. dia. auger. And it still works like a tractor. If the combine gets stuck, you can pull it out with the cart."
To build the new machine, Blanchat started with a Case/IH 4-WD 2670 tractor with a 290 hp engine. He says the Case 4-WD is perfect for the conversion because of the "trunnion" or crab-type steering which steers all four wheels but doesn't articulate, like most 4-WD's. He notes that the Case 2470, 2670 and 2870 tractors, which date back to 1973 but were discontinued a couple years ago, have had some mechanical problems and so can be purchased for a good price.
Blanchat totally disassembles the tractor, cutting the frame apart and then rebuilding from the ground up, relocating the trunnions, rebuilding the Powershift transmission and driveline, repositioning the cab, and building the 650 bu. grain tank into the frame of the machine.
"It's built heavy and strong. My method of construction is to figure out how heavy each part needs to be and then I double it. I'm not in the business of selling parts. I've been a farmer and I don't like parts. All the replaceable parts on the machine are standard, readily available from Case/IH. The parts we had to special-build are so heavy they'll last the life of the machine," says Blanchat.
The cab is positioned up high so the operator can easily see inside both the hopper on the cart and inside trucks he loads out to. "It eliminates problems with over or under-filling trucks because you can see what you're doing at all times," says Blanchat, adding that the 4-wheel crab steering lets the cart move in and out from combines and trucks while loading and unloading, also helping avoid spills and saving time.
Power is provided to the cart's 16-in. unloading auger by a 5,000 psi hydraulic pump that's driven off the front of the engine. It replaced the original pump on the tractor which produced 2,250 psi. At least 3,000 psi is needed to run the auger. Blanchat says they used the bigger pump to have plenty of reserve power. The auger is con-trolled by a hydrostatic-type lever that lets the operator precisely control the flow of grain. "You can slow it down to a trickle, slow enough to fill a 5-gal. bucket with grain. Makes it easy to top off a truck, unlike most unloading augers," says Blanchat.
The cart has a hydraulic-controlled gate inside the hopper which controls the flow of grain to the unloading auger. There's a second dump gate at bottom that can be opened by hand to dump into a pit or auger hopper. "We made the bottom gate manual so it couldn't be opened accidentally in the field and dump grain on the ground," says Blanchat, noting that after dumping "less than a 5-gal. bucket of grain is left to clean out of the bottom of the hopper".
Duals are mounted all the way around so the cart literally "floats" over the field. A dual-equipped 4-WD tractor pulling a big grain cart fitted with duals would leave more ruts than the new cart, according to Blanchat. "Carrying a load is completely different than pulling a load, because it takes much less power. No matter how big a tractor you use to pull a wagon, the axles will drag on soft ground."
Another advantage of the cart is that it still has the capability to function as a tractor and can be fitted with a drawbar and pto. "If the combine gets stuck, you can pull it out with the cart, even with a full load of grain."


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1991 - Volume #15, Issue #2