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New Holland adds CR10 combine to harvest lineup

With the same technology as the CR11, the CR10 offers farmers an option in the class 9 combine segment.

Rachel Schutte, Content Producer

August 28, 2024

2 Min Read
New Holland CR10 combine
ADDING OPTIONS: The CR10 offers a new combine size that’s built to meet the capacity needs of many North American farmers.Jen Koukol

New Holland Agriculture debuted its new CR10 combine at the 2024 Farm Progress Show in Boone, Iowa. The new machine joins the previously launched CR11 to provide farmers with the next generation of harvesting technology in a class 9 combine.

“The CR10 raises the bar for productivity and efficiency to lead the pack in the fastest growing combine class segment in North America,” states Curtis Hillen, cash crop segment lead for New Holland Agriculture North America. “It brings together power with groundbreaking technology to empower farmers with unprecedented capabilities to help reduce their total cost of harvest.”

The CR10 brings efficiency to harvest season, offering 635 horsepower in the 12.9-liter FPT Cursor 13 engine, a 455-bushel grain tank and an unload rate of 4.5 bushels per second. The drivetrain features a two-speed hydrostatic transmission.

With its extended 24-inch twin rotors and Dynamic Feed Roll system, the combine optimizes threshing and separation performance.  The CR10 guarantees high throughput with minimal blockage – even in areas with heavy weed pressure and uneven crop maturity.

The optional IntelliSpread feature uses radar to sense and automatically adjust to achieve full-width and uniform residue spreading.

The CR10 will be available to growers with a limited rollout in 2025. It’s compatible with the New Holland 9200 Series corn headers and MacDon FD261 FlexDraper.

Related:Case IH introduces 2 new large-capacity combines

2025 FR Forage Cruiser

In addition to the new combine, New Holland also launched updates for the 2025 FR Forage Cruiser self-propelled harvester.

New updates include cab enhancements to boost comfort and productivity, a blockage detection and prevention system, and the CustomSteer system, which speeds up headland turns.

FOrage_cruiser_RS_1800x1012.jpg

Updates have also been made to the wear parts in the crop flow of the machine. This increases the service life and reduces the cost of ownership.

These enhancements can be found on the four-model lineup, from the 544-maximum horsepower FR550 to the 911-maximum horsepower FR920.

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Combines

About the Author

Rachel Schutte

Content Producer, Farm Futures

Rachel grew up in central Wisconsin and earned a B.S. in soil and crop science from the University of Wisconsin - Platteville. Before joining the Farm Futures team, Rachel spent time in the field as an agronomist before transitioning to the world of marketing and communications. She now resides in northeast Iowa where she enjoys raising bottle calves and farming corn and soybeans alongside her husband and his family.

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