Headers Upcoming Auctions

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    About Headers

    A combine harvester is only as good as the header you have attached to it. Fortunately, there’s a wide selection of mounted and trailed headers available, whether you’re harvesting corn, peas, soybeans, sunflowers, cereals, grains, or other crop types.

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    29 - 56 of 373 Listings

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    Cutterbar TypeFlex
    Location: Polo, Illinois
    Seller: Brookville Farm Equipment
    Number of Rows6
    Row Spacing30 in
    Location: Leesburg, Indiana
    Cutting Width12 ft
    Location: Delta, Colorado
    Serial Number430982041
    Location: Plainville, Kansas
    Cutting Width36 ft
    Location: Mulberry, Indiana
    Serial Number1480106U015294
    Location: Whittemore, Iowa
    Seller: DM Auctions
    Cutting Width20 ft
    Location: Ludlow Falls, Ohio
    Cutting Width24 ft
    Location: Hayes Center, Nebraska
    Serial NumberUNKNOWN
    ConditionUsed
    Location: Cedar Falls, Iowa
    Number of Rows12
    Row Spacing30 in
    Location: Idaville, Indiana
    Seller: Bartel & Company
    Number of Rows12
    Row Spacing30 in
    Location: Mulberry, Indiana
    Number of Rows12
    Row Spacing20 in
    Location: Mott, North Dakota
    Seller: Plains Grains & Agronomy
    Number of Rows16
    Row Spacing30 in
    Location: Idaville, Indiana
    Seller: Bartel & Company
    Cutting Width25 ft
    Location: Wahoo, Nebraska
    Cutterbar TypeFlex
    Location: Loyal, Wisconsin
    Seller: Weaver Ag & Turf
    Cutting Width40 ft
    Location: Newark, Illinois
    Seller: Kendall County Equipment
    Number of Rows6
    Row Spacing30 in
    Location: Herrick, Illinois
    Seller: Buchanan Auction Company
    Number of Rows6
    Row Spacing36 in
    Location: David City, Nebraska
    Cutting Width45 ft
    Location: Langdon, North Dakota
    Serial NumberUNKNOWN
    ConditionUsed
    Location: Gibsonburg, Ohio
    Serial Number1KM0659GKNN141019
    Location: Dalhart, Texas
    Serial Number1KM0659GLMM138391
    Location: Dalhart, Texas
    Serial Number1KM0659GTMM137974
    Location: Dalhart, Texas
    Serial Number1KM0772GENN140028
    Location: Dalhart, Texas
    Serial Number1KM0772GALM137497
    Location: Dalhart, Texas
    Serial Number1KM0772GCLM137495
    Location: Dalhart, Texas
    Number of Rows8
    Row Spacing30 in
    Location: Hayes Center, Nebraska
    Number of Rows8
    Row Spacing30 in
    Location: Paris, Texas
    Seller: DM Auctions

    About Headers

    A combine harvester is only as good as the header you have attached to it. Fortunately, there’s a wide selection of mounted and trailed headers available, whether you’re harvesting corn, peas, soybeans, sunflowers, cereals, grains, or other crop types. Covering anywhere from a couple to 18 rows or more at widths exceeding 50 feet (15.24 meters) depending on the model, headers are constructed from high-quality steel and other durable materials and rely on folding, hinged, and rigid frames able to withstand demanding field conditions. While many/most headers are designed to work with specific crops, some also offer all-crop harvesting flexibility. Leading manufacturers such as Case IH, John Deere, and New Holland are constantly working to enhance their headers’ feeder chains, knife systems, belts, augers, sickle bars, and other components in order to help obtain higher efficiency and reduce crop loss.


    CLAAS ORBIS Corn Header

    Header Categories

    Headers generally fall into one of three categories: row crop, platform, and forage. The forage category further breaks down into row crop, rotary, and windrow subcategories. Platform headers use some form of a cutter bar, rotating wheel, and auger or fabric- or rubber-constructed draper that collectively cut, gather, and feed the crop into the combine where it’s cleaned and separated.

    Rigid platform models have long been in use, but you’ll also find flex platform headers available that provide enhanced flotation and ground-following abilities on uneven terrain. Case IH’s TerraFlex headers, for example, have a flexible cutter bar that moves 3 inches (7.62 centimeters) up and 3 inches down and an airbag suspension system to support this ability. Row crop headers, meanwhile, use snouts or spikes situated between the rows to position the stalks for cutting. Forage headers are ideal for small grains, grass seeds, cereals, and other crops, and include pickup and windrow variants that gather and pick up forage that’s already been cut.

    A Variety Of Features

    There’s a long list of features that you’ll find on modern headers, including everything from folding frames that facilitate easy transport to headers with hydraulically controlled and automatic self-adjusting deck plates. John Deere headers come with a variety of useful innovations such as a time-saving reel resume and reverse feature that lets operators save separate reel positions for typical conditions and for crops that are down, tangled, short, or leaning. Newer Deere headers also feature a header control unit that enables communication with the combine, yield-mapping accuracy, diagnostics, and more. Case IH headers, meanwhile, also support in-cab header adjustments, as well as chopping and non-chopping configurations to match the grower’s residue-management system. MacDon C Series corn headers use carbide knives and four serrated edges integrated into snapping rolls that it claims cut decomposition times in half compared to competing headers.

    Find The Header For You

    TractorHouse.com offers for-sale listings for thousands of new and used headers built by popular manufacturers including Case IH, CLAAS, Gleaner, John Deere, MacDon, New Holland, and others.