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Video: CLAAS LEXION World Record Harvest: 675 tonnes of wheat in eight hours.

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  • joedales
    Senior Member
    • Dec 2006
    • 1027

    Video: CLAAS LEXION World Record Harvest: 675 tonnes of wheat in eight hours.

    CLAAS LEXION Night Shift - The whole Guinness World Record story
    CLAAS threshes to a world record.


    Seventy-five years after CLAAS launched the first combine harvester onto the European market, a LEXION in England set a new world record in combine harvesting. Under the supervision of the Guinness World Records jury, a commercially available LEXION 770 with track roller unit harvested the record crop of 675 tonnes of wheat in eight hours.



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  • furrowtickler
    Senior Member
    • Dec 2004
    • 21874

    #2
    2008, again, but worse IMO. Cash out now and watch SHTF. Oh yea, Fert could be 30% cheaper come spring, JMO. Nothing - ever - goes up foever - just an observation from the past.
    Put it this way - does anyone think that Warren B ever paid tripple the value for something that was not there long term??? Certain people create wealth long term and some shoot the moon at Vegas - Good luck - I know who I will follow.

    Comment

    • monte
      Senior Member
      • Feb 2000
      • 209

      #3
      I can't stand to watch the news these days. Everyone is so nervous.
      It is going to be an interesting few months.

      Comment

      • MLamirandeRM
        Member
        • Oct 2011
        • 45

        #4
        In addition to the problems in Europe, we now have more instability in the US. The failure of the U.S. Congressional super committee to reduce the budget deficit by $1.2 trillion now puts the focus on whether Congress can pass an extension of emergency unemployment assistance and temporary payroll tax cuts that expire on Dec. 31. Any failure to extend unemployment benefits would amount to a reduction of 0.2 to 0.3% on 2012 GDP. The payroll tax would be about a 0.5% hit if not extended and both would dent consumer spending, but despite the politics in Washington, something should give by Christmas. All of these macro-economic concerns put heavy pressure on commodity markets again this week as investors may be avoiding agricultural commodities until the outlook changes to a more positive one for the US and EU. Grain futures moved lower and remained oversold as the bulls continue to struggle to find new positive news.

        Michelle - Farms.com Risk Management

        Comment

        • hedgehog
          Senior Member
          • Oct 2009
          • 619

          #5
          its all very well, but who can afford the depreciation?

          Comment

          • buzz
            Senior Member
            • Jul 1999
            • 260

            #6
            Nice video

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