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New Super Series Gleaner combine

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AndrewGubbels View Drop Down
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    Posted: 11 Aug 2010 at 10:45pm
Hey guys I just got back from service training and Launch on the new combines.  I did not get a chance to take any photos at the launch but at the training I got some good shots of the combine in the training area.  This one does not have the new updated 380 bushel grain tank extensions. 



New look to the decals and shields on the combine.  Everything moves and removes just excellent.



New 30" Diameter rotor.  it went from 4350 square inches cleaning to 6050 square inches of cleaning. 



New SCR engine.  This creates 398 peak opperating hp.  This will use the DEF fluid.



New radiator with bigger opening slots to flow more air through to bring the small dust right on through.  Along with the flipper and dual flippers over the oil cooler.



More new styling.  I think this is awesome.



New 4 section concave that is wider also.  SO more threshing area.



More auger on the distribution augers along with bigger diameter accelerator rollers.  Along with this they have the bigger drive gears on the side of the combine.



One more shot of the side of the combine.  ALso Some other changes I did not get a photo of are it does have a double v belt on the chopper drive now.  One other thing I really like is to remove the top drive shaft for the rear fead chain you do not have to remove the sprockets!!  THey put a removable plate.  This will be great for working on the machine.  There are many other improvements that have been developed over the past couple of years on the r76 and r66 that were made for this combine. 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote morton(pa) Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 11 Aug 2010 at 11:26pm
I'm sorry, but I can't help but notice RED where ORANGE used to be on the Gleaner Combines. I saw one of those new Hesston bailers painted Red with AGCO on the side of it earlier this week...I felt like I was going to be sick.

Other then that, it looks like a GREAT combine, at least from the outside. I can't vouch for much with the pictures of the inside cause I haven't the slightest clue the difference in 1 from the next!
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Bill_MN Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 11 Aug 2010 at 11:34pm
i like the old-style gleaner logo above the windshield, kind of like the real old gleaner-baldwin era machines, a neat touch
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote JohnCO Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 12 Aug 2010 at 12:14am
Wow, quite a machine.  11 ton grain bin capacity, wow!
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote darrel in ND Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 12 Aug 2010 at 2:33am
Thanks for posting the pictures, Andrew. I am really looking forward to seeing the machine in action.  I worked on Gleaners for 14 years (1986-2000), and have a great appreciation for them.  Darrel
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote MI8050 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 12 Aug 2010 at 4:33am
That looks like a sweet rig Andrew.  What does "Tritura" mean?  I'm referring to whatever that word is right above and ahead of the unloading auger....I like the old Gleaner logo on the cab too, thats cool, old meets new.  I like the paint scheme, it looks fresh.  As much as I hate to see the orange fading from AGCO on the Gleaner machine, one must recall that AC bought the brand at one time and put their touches on it too.  I am glad to see that AGCO had the good sense to keep the brand alive and improve on it yet again.  I switched to a red rotor machine this year but will certainly entertain a silver rotor next go-round!  (the red one was cheap)  :)
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote AndrewGubbels Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 12 Aug 2010 at 7:15am
That is one thing they stressed over and over again was that GLEANER Combines are hear to stay!!  The tritura is latin for Thresher. In field tests they went against a deere and case combine on the wheat run and it combined More with a cleaner grain sample.  Alot less compaction and burning 20% less fuel.  I would say it is an impressive machine!!

Andrew
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote ILGLEANER Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 12 Aug 2010 at 8:12am

Andy, what makes it different internally,then the 76? I see it has more concave area,Is it mostly hp? Is there any real drastic changes to the guts of the combine?

                                                       IG
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DrAllis Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 12 Aug 2010 at 4:47pm
Rotor and cage are 30 inches in diameter instead of 25 inches.......accelerator rolls are larger in diameter for more capacity.....cleaning fan has been changed as well (I assume larger in diameter) for more air which has been needed since 1996 with the longer sieves. I sure hope the feeding system is up to the task of delivering the crop to the new more hungry processor.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote ILGLEANER Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 12 Aug 2010 at 5:36pm

398 hp out of the small bock. I sure hope they havent brought out another N6. Wander why they didnt put the 7 cylinder in it? I still dont understand why they didnt redesign the outside of the combine to make it look more modern. I hope it eates up everything

                                               IG

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote AllisFreak MN Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 12 Aug 2010 at 5:42pm
Where's the massey decal??
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Dale-OH Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 12 Aug 2010 at 6:56pm
The 398 HP is a bulge at 1950RPM it is rated at 370HP at 2100RPM. I dont think this engine will have any problem, we have noticed them in tractors to be very strong. I agree with Andy that they have made the changes to make this a different machine.  I had the chance to talk with a couple of the dealers who first hand have seen this combine in the field and they told me it was  a beast.  These are actual dealers on one on one with no company people around Honest opinions.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Kcgrain Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 12 Aug 2010 at 7:44pm
Hate to be the one to rain on Agcos parade here, but a larger diameter rotor makes it less efficient as a rotary machine and more of a conventional with a rotor styled thresher. This new "launch" is exactly what I figured it to be a marketing scheme to revive the gleaners name. Rotors work on the principle of centrifical force the greater the force the more capacity a machine has, a large diameter rotor has less centrifical force than a smaller rotor and if you dont believe me put a set of dice on an old 33 rpm record player , slide them to the out side of the record and the dice will ride , put them toward the center and they will fly off the record. John Deere pulled this when they brought out the 9000 series conventional combine, tell every one it has a new bigger cylinder for more capacity and run at a slower speed for a better sample what they forget to tell everyone that although the rpm is indeed slower, the tip speed is greatly increased for more damage. Unfortunatly I learned this from Allis Chalmers at the College of Knowledge, the old AC people were still around gleaner when the 9000 came in to being, and everything that they said was wrong with the bigger diameter cylinder is now exactly what agco has done, so either we are to believe that Allis Chlamers, one of the original developers of the rotor, was wrong, or the engineers from agco have forgot there own research.I hope they keep the transverse rotor around it was a great design, but I do not see this as the answer ..
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote DrAllis Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 12 Aug 2010 at 8:46pm
I imagine the larger diameter gains them more concave distance/length from front to rear which helps with more % of seperation at the beginning instead of depending on the cage to do more %. I run 320 rpm in a lot of corn with a 25 inch diameter rotor......a 30 inch diameter rotor will need to run at 267 rpm to have equal peripheral speed (2093 FPM) which is fine and will work OK. With wider spaced rasp bar teeth and hi-wire concaves I don't ever seem to have issues with grain damage in corn/soybeans. I know what I'd like to see in the new processor....a "round-bar" concave like the Lexion has as an option. More whole cobs and less plugging with leaves and even less kernal damage....round bars....like an old corn sheller has, only closer together.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote N6PETE Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 12 Aug 2010 at 11:38pm
I see they still have those blasted reverse bars in there. Maybe with the CDF they need them but I have found they do nothing but rob horsepower and grind cob.

Hope this is the beginning of Gleaners return to being a major player in the combine market although it seems that AGCO is very good at rescuing defeat from the brink of success.

JMHO
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote AndrewGubbels Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 13 Aug 2010 at 6:07am
THe combine I took photos of was a canadian special.  It did not have a variable speed for the header drive and it had reverse bars along with some filler sections on the cage.   


As was said earlier about the capacity.  THe rotor is bigger.  along with the concaves bigger.  From 4300 some odd inches to 6045.  The engine has been used at this horsepower in the tractors actually. The dt275b they have been running very well.  I tried getting some photos of the fan I could not get them to turn out clean under neath.  It is alot bigger.  THe angle of the blades has changed also the way it looks.  The Accelerator rollers are spinning faster to help also with more product.  They are bigger diameter. THey were showing some very impressive video of the combine in multiple crops harvesting at really fast rates. It seems to be feeding very well!  As Dale said the people that have seen the combine in action have no complaints!  I am looking forward to getting one in the field!

Andrew
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote GS7 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 13 Aug 2010 at 7:08am
Hey Guys,

We're giving dealers a few days to review materials before we start posting new content. Please bare with us in the meantime. Tritura is latin for "to thresh" and is the name of the new, larger processor (Rotor, A-rolls and fan are all larger).

The larger rotor actually is more efficient. We are harvesting more grain with less fuel than the R76 by a good margin. The larger rotor allows the same tip speed at lower RPMs while it also produces a better fly wheel action.

This is not a marketing ploy. It is a new machine and the people that have seen it attest to that.

I'll come post when we put the new content on www.gleanersuper7.com


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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote gleaner1 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 13 Aug 2010 at 7:55am
I agree with you Kcgrain on the larger diameter rotor. I'm almost positive around the time the cdf rotor came out, Agco claimed that they were maxed out in capacity and increasing the diameter would do nothing, this was less than 10 yrs ago.   you guys need to go to combineforum.com   usually more gleaner info on there.     hard to tell from pics but i sure hope they increased the door size near the concave,  as this should have been done 20 yrs ago.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Byron WC in SW Wi Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 13 Aug 2010 at 9:24am
AGCO orange tractors outsold red and yellow ones in greater margin than Gleaner does.  AGCO had it's own dealer network where Gleaner piggy backs off from AGCO dealers.  With AGCO dealers being shoved to MF do you think Gleaner will rise in popularity or MF?  AGCO stated several times that the orange tractors would not go away as long as people bought them which turned out to be a lie.  Do you really think that the Gleaner combine will remain as a Gleaner? 

CAT dealers, from what I understand, aren't giving up the Lexion combine.  Eventually you'll be able tot get a Gleaner but only in MF red. 

On combines: How many years before the small guy can't keep his own combine?  Eventually these 20-30 year old machines are going to wear out.  There is no one on Earth anyone will be able to keep a Super 7 full in my neck of the woods where the average field size is under 10 acres and many of them under 3.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote ILGLEANER Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 13 Aug 2010 at 10:39am
 I am with you Byron. Its a matter of time. The AGCO people are a bunch of liars. This combine is no more talked about then the: Long live the family farm was just a couple of years ago. I have quit worrying about what they are gong to do. I am switching to another color on everything we have as the time comes.  I never thought I would see the day this farm  didnt have orange and silver. But the working tractors are all a different color other then a 9745 that we use a little. If I could give the A85 to a Deere dealer I would,but cant even get anyone to trade for it.  This new S7 now has bigger internal parts, that they sayed  a few years ago wasnt possible,now they do it(they were lying then ,or there lying now). So I get the A85 which isnt that bad of combine,but you can see that isnt going to exist now.(they cant sell masseys to gleaner guys).  How many people would buy a new  chevy with a duramax in a 92 body with the price of all of the 2011? Not very many.  They need to add new customers,at the same time keep the old ones,not run off the existing ones they have now.
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Edited by ILGLEANER - 13 Aug 2010 at 10:46am
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote AndrewGubbels Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 13 Aug 2010 at 11:54am

I guess everyone to there own but I am excited for the new combine and very impressed with what its potential is.  As an employee for an agco dealer it feels we really get alot of sh*t for things out of our hands. I try to make the best out of what we have to work with.  It seems we have to work twice as hard and twice as many hours before we even get a customer to look our way just because of everyones negative attitude.  I really am begining to wish every fricken tractor made was painted the same color.

 
Andrew
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Ron Eggen Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 13 Aug 2010 at 12:47pm
Thanks for the info Andrew !  Even though I and most of the viewers of this page don't need or can't afford a new Gleaner, we still enjoy hearing about them.  Do you know if a new model will be offered by Ertl or someone else ?   That would be what I am interested in and will be purchasing.  Thanks !
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote AllisFreak MN Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 13 Aug 2010 at 4:24pm
You can thank AGCO for the negative attitude.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Andrew(southernIL) Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 13 Aug 2010 at 7:04pm
ILGLEANER how are you liking your green tractors? Do you like them better than the AGCOs you had or do all these new tractors pretty well have all the same stuff in them? You could do like some guys near here that were big time White people that had to buy a new AGCO do to no more White and had  it painted the White colors so it would fit in on their farm...lol, just kidding thats a little drastic thing to do to a brand new tractor but they did it.  
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Ryan Renko Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 13 Aug 2010 at 7:20pm
I'm just excited to see photos finally!!! The transverse Gleaner is all a true AC fan can still cling to as theirs, so I'm hoping its a sucess!!!  Ryan
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Andrew, I appreciate the photos and your dedication to your job  at the dealership and the agco co, and my reply about the new and improved combine is not pointed towards you, but you have to realize when some one like me has to spend close to a 1/4 of a million on a new combine and heads we are not going to take the topic lightly. This is real money, real work that has to pay for it and as I get older I get more and more fed up with marketing genies that know nothing about a combine, never ran one never set one never PAID for one filling everybodys head with there new and improved. I appreciate the fact that that is the combine your dealership has to sell, but unfortunatly it is not the combine I have to buy. If Agco was so determined to really make this a new and improved version of the transverse rotor, they would have clean paged the design, much like Deere had with the 9000 series, NH did with the CR series. A rebadged N7 with a new engine and cab isnt new and improved. Rotors no matter whose, love HP and lots of it, the capacity of the machine is more dependant on the HP and the cleaning area than the actual threshing area, the original N7 had 270 hp but anyone that ever had one knows the power of an AC 516 was well over 300 with the p pump intercooler etc the way it was set up for that combine. Now almost 40 yrs later we have a new and improved N7 body with a 385 hp engine and a bigger tank, woopie.Marketing wanted more threshing area for the literature, so we give it a new larger rotor, the numbers are bigger so its improved. Is this any different the the constant battle between Ford Chevy and Dodge on who has the larger Diesel? Its pathetic to me that these company people really think that buyers of there products are so dumb that because chevrolet has 5hp more than a ford or 75# more payload capacity that we will buy it, and this mentality has flowed into the tractor and combine markets, if you had a gleaner and you believe agco is going to remain building a real gleaner that you will buy this new N7, and if your already switched to another brand like we have than this new N7 will mean nothing, and a bunch of great reviews at the intro means nothing either. When New Holland brought out the gemini series of tractors they had a focus group and the group told NH and its engineers that they wanted a 2 door cab, so NH has 2 doors, less than a year later CaseIH retooled the Maxxum, and took away the 2 doors, when I went to the intro of the new MX series tractors at the Case Plant in Racine you have to listen to the 1/2 hour speel on the new tractors before they take you to the plant, the "new" maxxum was in the lobby and the bus load from our dealership was getting the companys marketing blast about how great of a tractor this machine was, when they went to a Q&A session the very first question asked was why did Case take away the 2 doors, the farmers in this area really liked the 2 door cab, Cases reply was that there focus groups the famers surveyed didnt want 2 doors they only wanted one so Case took it away, I told the company guy that that was a funny answer because NH just brought out the Gemini and there farmers wanted 2 doors, so why dont you just tell us the truth that as a cost savings you elimented the second door, instead of BS about focus groups, Q&A stopped with no reply and we went to the plant, just to have the same company man give us the tour of the plant and the new MX line of tractors, when we came to cab assembly the comapny rep was telling us about this new process CaseIH had invented to bond the glass to the cab, no more rubber seals to leak over time and this new process tooks years of development and was state of the art in tractor manufacturing, I laughed and told the group a new process that Allis Chalmers had pioneered in 1982 with the intro of the 8000 almost 20 years prior, the Case guy was POed big time and another dealer that was with us said well AC was always 20 yrs ahead of everyone, needless to say the company guy was done with his BS about what Case IH had done. My point here is these companies always fill ya full of a bunch of BS about these so called new products, and I hope I am wrong , I hope the super 7 is a killer and keeps the Gleaner name alive, as a lasting legacy to Allis Chalmers inovation, but I am afraid my hunch is correct.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote luxford Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 Aug 2010 at 10:43pm
Personally i love the gleaner design, and i appriciate its shape - i much prefer it over the NH, JD or other Red ones.
I wish i could buy a combine here for 1/4 million US dollars? - They would need over 1000 Rotor hours on them to get down that low - try 500-700 000 if you want a new one. i like the changes, i think the gleaner rotor did need to be made bigger - it wouldnt have worried me if the machine was made wider either - already run the wheels out wider than the machine, so whats the difference.. (besides shipping of course).
i doubt if the machine needs more horsepower - i am not sure about corn - dont touch the stuff, but certainly in small grains it is more than enough - horesepower is really the limiting factor for our harvesting capacity - Certainly cleaning area is, however the Gleaners ability to remove MOG prior to hitting the shoe increases its capacity immensely. - On a good day in wheat - there is still hardly a combine around that could hold a candle to a R72. i realise you guys do mostly corn/soy so have other issues... We do mostly wheat, so that is what we want a combine to be able to handle. 
The down fall for gleaner - at least in this country (Australia) has been dealerships. i spoke to a guy yesterday trading his R75 (i was thinking of buying it also) for a 9870 - the reason for swapping is not how the body looked, the cab or the capacity - but rather when you spend the money buying new and there is an issue, you want to be able to make a phone call - and have it fixed properly and fast. The local John Deere dealer can offer that service, the local AGCO one.. probably not. basically the dealer set up can not support the machines properly.. i know the gleaner is easly to work on - i run them - however everyone is busy - no one wants to be stopped fixing the machine yourself - especially if you run a few, or trucks etc also - so good dealer back up is essential, And Sadly they often fail in this area.
 
 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote luxford Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 14 Aug 2010 at 10:45pm
sorry Horsepower is RARELY the limiting factor in our area, not really the limiting factor..  unless of course you dont have enough to carry a full box!!!
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Matt (NEIA) Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 15 Aug 2010 at 1:28am
I must say i like the looks of them, i just hope they don't do to Gleaner what they did to Agco, i can see in a few years Gleaner being painted Massey Red and named a different series of Massey Combine as a "Company Stratagy"  much like the phasing out of Orange tractors was. 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote AllisChalmers37 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 15 Aug 2010 at 1:47am
Well, as morton(pa) origionally said you notice that the red decals have replaced the orange ones that have been there since Allis-Chalmers owned Gleaner. I hate to ask a question in an answer but I noticed that the word AGCO is no where to be found on the machine. Did they just do away with the AGCO line of tractors or are they eventually going to get rid of the AGCO name completely?
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