The paper code cannot be redeemed when browsing in private/incognito mode. Please go to a normal browser window and enter the code there
This content is copyright protected!
However, if you would like to share the information in this article, you may use the headline, summary and link below:
Title: Watch: Cross beet demo day
Cross Engineering held a demonstration day where a wide range of cultivation and beet equipment was demonstrated. Michael Collins has a look at what was new on the day.
The reader loyalty code gives you full access to the site from when you enter it until the following Wednesday at 9pm. Find your unique code on the back page of Irish Country Living every week.
CODE ACCEPTED
You have full access to farmersjournal.ie on this browser until 9pm next Wednesday. Thank you for buying the paper and using the code.
CODE NOT VALID
Please try again or contact us.
For assistance, call 01 4199525
or email subs@farmersjournal.ie
If would like to speak to a member of our team, please call us on 01-4199525
Reset password
Please enter your email address and we will send you a link to reset your password
If would like to speak to a member of our team, please call us on 01-4199525
Link sent to your email address
We have sent an email to your address.
Please click on the link in this email to reset
your password. If you can't find it in your inbox,
please check your spam folder. If you can't
find the email, please call us on 01-4199525.
Email address not recognised
There is no subscription associated with this email
address. To read our subscriber-only content.
please subscribe or use the reader loyalty code.
If would like to speak to a member of our team, please call us on 01-4199525
You have no more free articles this month
We hope you've enjoyed your 6 free articles. To continue reading, sign in to your account, use the code or subscribe to get unlimited access for 30 days.
This content is available to digital subscribers and loyalty code users only. Sign in to your account, use the code or subscribe for just €1 to get unlimited access for 30 days.
This content is available to digital subscribers and loyalty code users only. Sign in to your account, use the code or subscribe for just €1 to get unlimited access for 30 days.
Cross Engineering held a demonstration day where a wide range of cultivation and beet equipment was demonstrated. Michael Collins has a look at what was new on the day.
The Cross Engineering produced Beaver twin row harvester
Cross Engineering in Rathangan, Co Kildare held their beet demonstration day on Sunday 8 October. A lot of Cross cultivation products were demonstrated including sub-soilers, trailed furrow-presses and rollers. Beet harvesting, washing and chopping equipment was also demonstrated to the sizeable crowd in attendance. Conditions on the day for beet harvesting were ideal with all beet pulled very clean in the heap.
The most recent update to the Cross range is to their twin-row beet harvester, the Beaver HD Super. The controls on this machine have been upgraded from cable to electric over hydraulic, meaning there is no longer cumbersome cables running into the cab but a single electric cable. A joystick controls all major functions on the machine. Speaking to Jason Cross, this has a number of advantages.
“The joystick can be placed on either the left- or right-hand side in the cab depending on operator preference. The joystick is more comfortable to use and takes a lot less work than the individual levers previously fitted.
“There is also steering-override fitted which steers the machine from the drawbar. In the case where the machine detects the machine is just pulling one drill of beet this can be over ridden and the machine can be controlled manually.”
Optional free-flow return is another option available on the harvester. The biggest advantage of fitting this, according to Jason, is to get the beet tank to drop quicker after emptying a load into a trailer. All hydraulic rams on this machine are powered from the tractors hydraulics while the turbines are PTO driven.
Cross engineering have sold three harvesters to the UK, New Zealand and Canada. The twin row machine is retailing for €75,000 + VAT and €65,000 + VAT for a single row machine.
Cross Engineering in Rathangan, Co Kildare held their beet demonstration day on Sunday 8 October. A lot of Cross cultivation products were demonstrated including sub-soilers, trailed furrow-presses and rollers. Beet harvesting, washing and chopping equipment was also demonstrated to the sizeable crowd in attendance. Conditions on the day for beet harvesting were ideal with all beet pulled very clean in the heap.
The most recent update to the Cross range is to their twin-row beet harvester, the Beaver HD Super. The controls on this machine have been upgraded from cable to electric over hydraulic, meaning there is no longer cumbersome cables running into the cab but a single electric cable. A joystick controls all major functions on the machine. Speaking to Jason Cross, this has a number of advantages.
“The joystick can be placed on either the left- or right-hand side in the cab depending on operator preference. The joystick is more comfortable to use and takes a lot less work than the individual levers previously fitted.
“There is also steering-override fitted which steers the machine from the drawbar. In the case where the machine detects the machine is just pulling one drill of beet this can be over ridden and the machine can be controlled manually.”
Optional free-flow return is another option available on the harvester. The biggest advantage of fitting this, according to Jason, is to get the beet tank to drop quicker after emptying a load into a trailer. All hydraulic rams on this machine are powered from the tractors hydraulics while the turbines are PTO driven.
Cross engineering have sold three harvesters to the UK, New Zealand and Canada. The twin row machine is retailing for €75,000 + VAT and €65,000 + VAT for a single row machine.
Grimme is a specialist in potato planting, harvesting and handling machinery. Although the potato industry is confined to a few regions in Ireland, Grimme still has good market share.
Save to a collection
Recent collections
This article has already been saved
This article has been saved
Create a collection
Subscriber only
This content is available to digital subscribers only. Sign in to your account or subscribe for just €1 to get unlimited access for 30 days.SIGN INSUBSCRIBE FOR €1
SHARING OPTIONS: