Concept blurs line between planter, seed drill

Horsch has created a concept to bring the advantages of a planter to smaller-seeded crops

Published: February 16, 2024

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The row unit on the Solus 1047 SX looks more like a corn planter than a seeder.

Is it a planter or a drill? If a concept machine created by Horsch eventually comes to the market, someone might have to invent a new category.

“We’re trying to mix and trying to get the best of both worlds, which is a seed drill and a corn planter,” says Laurent Letzler, who manages Horsch Canada and attended Agritechnica in Germany.

The Solus 1047 SX was on display at the Horsch booth and many people looked closely at its unique design.

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The goal is to provide the quality of singulation to small-seeded crops that is currently possible with corn and soybeans, and to plant them with the same precision, while maintaining the centre fill tank and the high-speed, high-volume planting possible with a drill.

“We are at a point where we have good placement with our seed drills, but we can go further,” Letzler says.

That includes dropping seed into the trench created by the double discs and double gauge wheels common with planters.

A challenge of getting planter equipment into a drill is having enough space to maintain narrow row widths required for canola or wheat. The Solus solves that by staggering the longer row units to get to either a nine- or 10-inch spacing.

“Because with a 10-inch spacing, imagine the potential. You do your cereals on 10, do your beans on 20 and your corn on 30. So it could be a one-machine-fits-all,” Letzler says.

The Horsch Solus SX concept could seed cereals and small oilseeds, along with corn and soybeans, at optimum row widths with one machine. photo: John Greig

A bank of tires runs across the front of the planter row units. The tires help carry the weight of the heavier row units, but also provide some smoothing of the seed bed in front of the row units.

“We also realize that the uniformity of the seeding depends a lot of the uniformity of the seed bed.”

Horsch officials point out that the unit is currently a concept, but it seeded 1,000 hectares of winter wheat this fall.

Horsch’s Leeb 5.230 VT sprayer on display at Agritechnica. photo: Horsch video screengrab via YouTube

Self-propelled sprayer updates

Horsch has updated its Leeb sprayer, which is the company’s most popular product in Canada.

The sprayer with the front cab has more horsepower in its VL model and is now available in an 8.7-litre engine with either 460 or 400 horsepower.

The company is also selling a new Leeb VT model with adjustable track widths and 5,000- or 6,000-litre capacity.

About the author

John Greig

John Greig

Senior Editor, Livestock

Editor of the Cattleman's Corner section of Grainews.

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