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KVERNELAND HEADLAND NEWS

6300S DELIVERS QUALITY+ OUTPUT

It means an eight-furrow Kverneland 6300S supplied by C&O Tractors has replaced a six-furrow fully mounted plough, to coincide with an increase in tractor power at the family-run farm. The key driver is gas supply to the national grid, thanks to an on-farm 3.2MW AD plant, which is currently under-going expansion. “Our focus is to boost the AD plant by 50%, so we’ve had to gear-up tractors and equipment, to enable us to continue to get over the expanding workload in a timely fashion,” explains Nick. “Adding two more furrows and a lot more horsepower, was a logical step forward.” Up to 1,000 acres/year are ploughed for maize and sunflower production, with min-till techniques employed for those fields destined to grow cereals for whole crop forage. Field sizes range from At Frogmary Green Farm, Somerset, the move from fully-mounted to semi-mounted plough has boosted output and convenience with primary cultivations for Nick Bragg and his team.

two to 40 acres, and with narrow lanes to contend with too, the farm decided that the largest 6300S model - an eight-furrow build - would be an ideal solution rather than a larger on-land version. “We have plenty of power, thanks to a pair of Fendt 942 Vario tractors that are now our prime movers,” he says. “But we felt that going for an even larger plough would be a compromise with smaller fields.” Operator Graham Glasper, pictured, agrees, and with him being followed by a 6m power harrow for moisture preservation, the two front line tractors can comfortably run together getting maize ground prepared for the drill. “I’ve been operating the plough at its full 55cm furrow width at 23cm deep with a forward speed of around 10kph,” he says. “The tractor

runs at around 1200-1400rpm most of the time, so fuel efficiency and output are impressive when you consider I’m turning over 4.4m in one pass.” Having had a Kverneland plough on demonstration from C&O Tractors equipped with both No28 full bodies and No40 slatted bodies, it was an easy decision to choose the slatted mouldboard option for the new plough. “The quality of finish was superb, and on our varied soils, there was less dirt hanging on the boards,” says Graham. “And slats also made the plough even easier to pull.” Running in-furrow doesn’t provide any issues with matching up,

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