The old New Hollands had trouble keeping the crop from suddenly favoring one rotor which then would slug the machine. Not fun to unplug an old TR70. How has that problem been addressed on the current New Hollands?
+SilverGleaner The reason that might happen, at least in my opinion, is the rotors being out of sync. If one rotates faster, it will draw more crop than the other. Hopefully they added some form of mechanism that synchronizes the two rollers.
@@Zamolxes77 I don't think the problem had anything to do with one rotor spinning faster. I don't know how that is even possible. But I don't know. There were never many around my area.I do remember a TR70 slugging so bad the sides of the machine were swelled.
Greetings from Canada!
Amazing video thanks for the upload!
Two pipes turning, grinding and rubbing against one another does this to you?
The old New Hollands had trouble keeping the crop from suddenly favoring one rotor which then would slug the machine. Not fun to unplug an old TR70. How has that problem been addressed on the current New Hollands?
+SilverGleaner The reason that might happen, at least in my opinion, is the rotors being out of sync. If one rotates faster, it will draw more crop than the other. Hopefully they added some form of mechanism that synchronizes the two rollers.
Notca problem in australia
@@Zamolxes77 I don't think the problem had anything to do with one rotor spinning faster. I don't know how that is even possible. But I don't know. There were never many around my area.I do remember a TR70 slugging so bad the sides of the machine were swelled.
Haha, my pleasure mate ;)
thnx f that i was wondring how cobines work
Sure aint no gleaner
Thank goodness for that
Less grain on grain threshing than a single rotor! Common sense.