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RentModern harvesters are essential to farmers worldwide for harvesting crops quickly and efficiently, thereby sustaining the global food supply.
Read More (About Harvesters)Mechanical harvesters have been used since the 1800s to bring in crops more quickly and efficiently. Over nearly 200 years, advances in engineering and design have dramatically reduced the time and labor required for this crucial task. Modern combines are the culmination of this progress, allowing operators to cut, thresh, and clean crops with a single machine.
Recent developments have introduced continuously variable transmissions (CVTs), data-gathering and monitoring sensors, camera systems, hillside leveling technologies, crop-processing refinements, and precision ag features that automate steering and other aspects of combine operation. These innovations help operators work more efficiently, protect grain quality, and make better decisions based on real-time field data.
Cyrus McCormick patented a mechanical reaper in 1834, and Hiram Moore patented one of the earliest combine harvesters in 1835. In 1891, William J. Conroy received a patent for his forage harvester. In 1937, Massey-Harris Chief Engineer Thomas Carroll and his team designed the Massey-Harris No. 20, widely regarded as the first commercially successful self-propelled combine.
Comparing McCormick’s horse-drawn mechanical reaper to today’s machines highlights how far harvesting technology has come. His implement relied on roughly two horsepower from a team of horses, while modern models like the Claas Lexion 8700 Terra Trac combine harvester can deliver up to 577 horsepower—nearly 290 times as much power. The 8700 Terra Trac’s hybrid threshing system also offers up to 10% higher throughput than previous designs.
Leading agricultural machinery manufacturers—including Case IH, Claas, Gleaner, John Deere, Massey-Harris descendant Massey Ferguson, New Holland, and others—have continuously refined combines and other harvesters to improve capacity, reliability, and operator comfort.
Recent advancements increasingly rely on digital technology to enhance what was once a largely mechanical process. Today’s harvesters use sophisticated onboard computers to optimize ground speed, engine load, and other parameters in response to terrain and crop conditions.
GPS-based guidance and auto-steering systems help keep machines on precise paths, reduce overlap, and lower operator fatigue. Integrated sensors and monitoring systems track yield, moisture, and machine performance in real time. Together, these tools make harvesting more efficient, more consistent, and easier to manage across large acreages.
The main Harvesters category on TractorHouse.com is wide-ranging and organized into the following subcategories:
When shopping for farm equipment, it helps to understand that a combine is a specific type of harvester. Combine harvesters are complex machines designed to reap, thresh, and clean grain crops, producing grain for human consumption or animal feed. The broader term “harvester” can refer to any machine used to harvest crops—such as grain, cotton, or forage—whether it performs multiple functions in one pass or a single task.
Additionally, forage headers are commonly categorized into row crop, rotary, and windrow styles, each suited to different crops and harvest conditions. These headers are used to harvest grasses, maize, and other forage plants for processing into silage or haylage.
Choosing the right harvester head is a crucial decision that affects the efficiency and profitability of an operation. Important factors include crop type, field conditions, expected yields, budget, and the desired flexibility to handle multiple crops.
Growers should assess which header types best match their needs:
By matching header design to specific crops and conditions, producers can enhance throughput, minimize losses, and optimize the use of their combines and forage harvesters.
TractorHouse.com features thousands of listings for new and used harvesters for sale. These include models from top manufacturers like Case IH, Claas, Drago, Geringhoff, Gleaner, John Deere, Mac Don, and New Holland.
If you already have a model in mind and need a farm equipment loan, explore your harvester financing options with CurrencyFinance. It’s free to apply. The experts at Currency help qualified applicants find loans up to $500,000 with flexible repayment terms and little or no down payment required.
Then, you can bring your harvester home with the heavy-haul experts on the FR8Star network. Explore your harvester transport options and request a free freight quote.
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