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Slideshow: Here’s a closer look at what spokespeople say sets this combine apart.

Tom J Bechman 1, Editor, Indiana Prairie Farmer

October 22, 2020

13 Slides

The combine that Claas brought to field demonstrations for the Farm Progress Virtual Experience is touted as the most powerful Lexion combine yet. The conditions at the Farm Progress Show site in Boone, Iowa, where the demos were filmed, gave the machine a workout, but it appeared to pass the test with flying colors.

Corn at the site, while not hit as hard by the early August derecho as corn in many other places in Iowa and other states, was still twisted and partially lodged. With a modern corn head and automatic adjusting features inside the machine, the Claas Lexion 8700 moved through the crop steadily, leaving very little corn behind.

You have two opportunities to get a better feel for what this combine can do using virtual technology. First, you can watch it run during field demonstrations. Visit FPVExp.com and find the link to a pass by the Claas Lexion 8700. If it’s your first visit to the FPVX website, you will need to register, but it’s quick, easy and free. Max Armstrong narrates the virtual demo, pointing out features of the new Claas Lexion 8700 along the way.

Check it out now

Or, you can check out the slideshow accompanying this story. The author rode along with Greg Frenzel, a product specialist with Claas, as the combine worked the same field in Boone the next day. Frenzel also did a walkaround of the machine to provide a closer look at various features.

Spokespeople say all models in the new Claas Lexion 8000-7000 Series are more powerful than the models they replaced. Using the APS Synflow Hybrid System, which is an upgrade to the APS Hybrid System, these combines have 10% more harvesting capacity than previous models. APS stands for Accelerated Pre-Separation.

At the same time, says Jeff Gray, product manager of field support for Claas of America, these models handle grain gently and put quality grain into the semitrailer headed for your bins or the elevator.

In fact, Claas asked an independent firm to compare grain quality from a new Lexion combine versus two competitive Class 8 combines. Samples from two soybean varieties were analyzed at the Illinois Crop Improvement Association lab. Samples from the Lexion combine matched or excelled samples from competitors in various categories, Gray reports.

Automation features available on the Claas Lexion 8700 allow it to produce quality grain with minimal grain loss while still harvesting at a high-capacity level. The 8700 that shelled corn at Boone was equipped with the Cemos automatic operating system. Frenzel notes that it automates combine adjustments, making them on the go as needed, using existing machine components and sensors.

Data from Claas indicates this results in 10% more capacity, 32% less foreign material in a grain sample and a 58% increase in grain retention versus operating the same machine without Cemos automation.

Check out these other virtual walkarounds:

Case IH 9250

Fendt Ideal 9T

John Deere X9

About the Author(s)

Tom J Bechman 1

Editor, Indiana Prairie Farmer

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