Category: Planters

  • Home
  • Archive by Category "Planters"
  • (Page 4)

The Advantages of Kinze Split Row Planters

Kinze
Planting split rows, or the practice of adding row units between existing row units to plant narrow row soybeans, has been around for nearly 40 years. Originally introduced by Kinze Manufacturing, Inc. in 1978, split rows were initially achieved by installing row units side-by-side on Kinze rear fold frame planters. In 1983, Kinze introduced...

Prepare Your Planter for Spring!

Kinze
Wrestling state tournaments are done and the kids are now competing for state basketball titles, but where has the winter gone? Weeks from now the tractors will return to the fields and planting for 2017 will begin! Fortunately, you put the planter away well, but you seem to remember there were...

Kinze 4900 Gives Crops the Best Start

Kinze
Watch and find out from Nokomis, Illinois farmer, Todd Stewart, why he plants with a Kinze 4900. Todd sums it up best, "From the beginning, that’s the only way you’re going to start to have the big bushels at the end, is to start right at the beginning, and we...

Upgrading Your Current Kinze Planter

Kinze
Update existing Kinze planters with the latest technologies to boost yields and extend the useful life of your planter. Retrofit kits to improve seed depth control and spacing, enable variable rate planting, reduce seed waste, and improve planting performance are available. Improve Seed Spacing Precision Upgrade to superior singulation and...

Iowa Farmer’s 4900 Planter is Part of a Long Kinze History

Kinze
“Kinze has been on our farm a very long time and I don’t see it going away,” shares Troy Adam of Richland, Iowa. “My mom and dad - their first Kinze product I believe they had - was an 840 grain cart. And I remember running that grain cart when...

Time to Put Away the Planter!

Kinze
Whew! It was a busy spring waiting on the weather and then planting within a narrow time frame. That last night of planting got late and you rolled onto the yard about 11:00 pm, but it was finished and it felt good to have all the seed in the ground. Now...