• You will need to login or register before you can post a message. If you already have an Agriville account login by clicking the login icon on the top right corner of the page. If you are a new user you will need to Register.

Tough sledding ..MAV

Collapse
X
Collapse
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • furrowtickler
    Senior Member
    • Dec 2004
    • 21938

    Tough sledding ..MAV

    Wheat is take able , but humidity was at 89% last night by 9 pm
    Was up to 26 gal/hr lol
    Saturday wheat wheat was dry , before the 15 Th rain of this harvest , I averaged 16.5 gal / hr all day .
    The Mav eats some power but still far better than any case spreader
    I am spreading the full 45 ft and everything is chopped very well .

    Kinda hard to see but , it spreading full width .
    The only downside.... was the cost . Absolutely crazy , but we had to do something. Those 1970’s spinners on a class 9 were a terrible joke
  • helmsdale
    Senior Member
    • Nov 2014
    • 2127

    #2
    With all the modern tech on these new combines, it utterly stuns me when I drive around and see the number of machines that STILL cannot spread the width of the cut!

    Comment

    • furrowtickler
      Senior Member
      • Dec 2004
      • 21938

      #3
      That’s the issue with most North American made combines ... they are designed mostly for corn and soybeans then retrofitted for small grains .....
      there is very very little MOG in corn and soybeans, hence no need for proper choppers from factory unless special order b/S at a huge cost already over a very overpriced corn / soybean machine
      With added aftermarket parts , concaves , rotors , beater , choppers they work ok . But it’s a huge added expense on top of combines way overpriced

      Comment

      • furrowtickler
        Senior Member
        • Dec 2004
        • 21938

        #4
        That is why Lexions are taking over in many areas that have decent dealerships.
        They are specifically built for small grains and are set up to handle those crops efficiently

        Comment

        • farmaholic
          Senior Member
          • Sep 2010
          • 17482

          #5
          Our Ghetto Massey has a MAV, utterly destroys dry cereal straw. In tough conditions it still chops but most of it isn't pulverized to next to nothing.

          They are really spinning too, chopper rotor balance is very important.

          But ya, quite the chopper.

          Click image for larger version

Name:	20190906_161451.jpg
Views:	1
Size:	91.4 KB
ID:	767725

          Comment

          • hobbyfrmr
            Senior Member
            • Feb 2008
            • 3178

            #6
            Originally posted by farmaholic View Post
            Our Ghetto Massey has a MAV, utterly destroys dry cereal straw. In tough conditions it still chops but most of it isn't pulverized to next to nothing.

            They are really spinning too, chopper rotor balance is very important.

            But ya, quite the chopper.

            [ATTACH]4863[/ATTACH]
            Here is a safety tip, remind the extra people on your crew or around the combine DO NOT STAND BEHIND THE COMBINE. My neighbor has a Massey like that, he lost a blade it shot out and they realized the danger of the MAV chopper!

            Comment

            • helmsdale
              Senior Member
              • Nov 2014
              • 2127

              #7
              We used to have a straw storm on a 750 Massey. We were petrified of one of those blades coming out, being that the spin horizontally. Combine always caught up to truck to unload, and truck always pulled away when done.

              Comment

              • wd9
                Senior Member
                • Nov 2000
                • 3196

                #8
                Why are you putting straw thru the combine if you only want the grain?

                Bugs are more then happy to break down the straw for you.

                Comment

                • jazz
                  Senior Member
                  • Jul 2018
                  • 9308

                  #9
                  Originally posted by farmaholic View Post
                  Our Ghetto Massey has a MAV, utterly destroys dry cereal straw. In tough conditions it still chops but most of it isn't pulverized to next to nothing.
                  Are you chopping flax straw with it? We ran ours through the ol JD chopper this yr but it was sprayed with glyphosate and reglone first. I hate bunching and burning.

                  Comment

                  • farmaholic
                    Senior Member
                    • Sep 2010
                    • 17482

                    #10
                    Originally posted by jazz View Post
                    Are you chopping flax straw with it? We ran ours through the ol JD chopper this yr but it was sprayed with glyphosate and reglone first. I hate bunching and burning.
                    No, Combine seems to twist the straw up into ropes and it is too hard to put through the chopper, plus our seed drill doesn't like flax straw!

                    I think you must be running a stripper header WD9? Once again our seed drill can go through quite a bit of straw but does have it's limitations. Guys around here with SeedMasters and Seed Hawks try to minimize the amount of standing and "long" residue on their fields.

                    Blades have to properly be bolted in and torqued. There are stepped spacer bushings and a heavy bevelled washer that has to be properly installed. The "slight" bevel needs the convex side against the stepped bushing so the knifes don't bind or break the stepped bushings. If the bushings break and the bolts flop around they can break and shit comes flying out the back. Yup dangerous

                    Comment

                    • Reply to this Thread
                    • Return to Topic List
                    Working...