The history of the emergence of the John Deere company. John Deere company

Jonh Deere, also known as Deere & Company, is a global leader in equipment for the agricultural, forestry and construction industries. The products of this brand are also successfully used when caring for lawns and parks, landscaping and irrigation systems is needed.

The company's founder was John Deere. It all started in 1837. His first invention then was a steel plow of a unique design. After 10 years, the successful entrepreneur was already producing 1000 of these copies per year.

Until 1946, the company was mainly engaged in agricultural products.

Beginning in 1852 and over the next 16 years, the company's name changed several times: John Deere, John Deere & Company, Deere & Company, and Moline Plow Manufactory. In 1868, Deere & Company was officially incorporated.

The history of John Deere included cooperation with the current world leader in the production of construction equipment - Caterpillar. In 1935, manufacturers joined forces to sell their products, especially in California. Strong at the beginning, the collaboration weakened over time, ending completely in the mid-1960s.

John Deere began business relations with Russia back in the Soviet era. In June 2010, it was exactly 100 years since the first delivery to Russia. True, these were mainly agricultural or logging machines. Construction equipment under the John Deere brand appeared in Russia only in 2009.

2010 was marked by the opening of a production center and distribution center for John Deere spare parts in Domodedovo. The assembly of agricultural, construction and logging equipment began at the new production site.

It is worth noting that John Deere pays great attention to training. Thus, a Training Center was opened in Domodedovo on the territory of the John Deere production complex and distribution center.

The company's main office is located in Moline, Illinois, USA. In Russia, John Deere has a plant for the production of sowing and tillage equipment in Orenburg, as well as a plant for the production of tractors, combine harvesters, construction and logging equipment in Domodedovo.

Construction equipment under the John Deere brand is mainly represented by bulldozers, loaders and backhoe loaders.

The company, which is today one of the most successful agricultural machinery companies in the world, traces its history back to 1837, when its founder, blacksmith and inventor John Deere, made his first plow from polished steel. This happened in the US Midwest, in Illinois.

John Deere strived to help farming with all his might and his main principles were honesty, quality, commitment and innovation.

Over the 178-year history of its existence, the company has experienced ups and downs more than once, but each time it has been understood again and again, overcoming crises, wars and numerous reorganizations. We will present only some of the most important facts from the history of the company.

IN 1839 10 plows were already manufactured in John Deere's workshop, 1841 year - 75, and in 1842 year - 100.

1843 - Deere and Leonard Andrews become "partners in the blacksmithing and trade in blacksmith's products, the manufacture of plows and all related products" ...

1848 - The growing plow business moves to Moline, Illinois, 75 miles southwest of Grand Detour. Molina has a hydroelectric power station and better transportation options. Deere finds a new partner, Robert N. Tate, who moves to Moline and erects rafters for their three-story blacksmith shop by July 28th.

1850 - The company is called Deere, Tate & Gould.

1852 - Deere buys out the shares of its partners. Over the next 16 years, the company changed its name several times: John Deere, John Deere & Company, Deere & Company and Moline Plow Manufactory.

1853 - Sixteen-year-old Charles, Deere's only son, begins working at the company as an accountant after graduating from the College of Commerce in Chicago.

1858 - Business declines during the national financial crisis. Attempts to avoid bankruptcy lead to a change of owner and reshuffles in the company's management apparatus. John Deere remains president, but the reins of power pass to 21-year-old Charles Deere. He would manage the company for the next 49 years.

1861 - The Civil War begins. Midwestern farmers and their suppliers prospered during the war as the need to supply the army and crop failures in Europe caused grain prices to rise. Large farms in the Midwest develop during the war years. Agricultural technology is being improved, which allows even small farms to expand.

1864 - John Deere receives the company's first valid patent for molds for casting steel plows. The next one will be received in a few months, and the third one next year.


1868 - Having existed for 31 years in the form of partnership and individual entrepreneurship, the concern was officially registered as a legal entity under the name Deere & Company. Initially there were four co-owners, by the end of the year there were six. Charles and John Deere controlled 65 percent of the shares.

1869 - Charles Dear and Alva Mansour established the company's first sales branch Deere Mansur & Co. in Kansas City. This semi-independent distributor of Deere products in a specific geographic region foreshadowed the company's current farm and industrial equipment sales subsidiaries and geographic divisions.

1875 - Gilpin Moore creates plow with wheels and seat. This invention eliminated the need to walk behind the plow, putting all farmers in chairs, and became one of the company's most successful products in the 19th century.





1876 - A noticeable deterioration in development prospects and a rapid increase in debt. The company is introducing a ten percent wage reduction. The short strike ends and the workers return to work on the company's terms. Trademark registered "running deer"

1877 - A company was founded in Molina for the production of grain seeders Deere & Mansur Company. This separate organization, named after the Kansas City branch, will be part of Deere & Company in 1909.

1878 - A plow with wheels and a Gilpin seat beats 50 other competing plows in a field competition at the World's Fair in Paris and wins first place. Retail sales rise to 5,198 units the following year and reach the 7,824 unit mark in 1883.

1880 - Carts entered the product line at the beginning of the decade, followed by trolleys. By the end of the century, the company's product catalog offered Old Hickory, New Moline, and Mitchell buggies, as well as Derby, Red Star, White Elephant, Victoria, Goldsmith, and Sterling buggies.

1882 - Deere & Mansur Company corn planters with innovative rotary planting mechanism generate $48,000 in profit.

1883 - Best selling products in 1879 - 1883 became traditional plows, Gilpin plows, cultivators, subsoilers and harrows. Traditional plows accounted for a larger share of retail sales (224,062) than the other four products combined.

1888 - Steam-powered tractors appear on American farms in the 1880s. Deere makes sectional plows that are pulled by tractors, but not the tractors themselves. The "steam age" lasted about 30 years until the "snorting and sniffling giant" was replaced by the internal combustion engine tractor.

1894 - Bicycle mania is sweeping the country. Appear in catalogs Deere Leader, Deere Roadster And Moline Special. The hobby goes away after a few years. (The company would briefly return to bicycle production in the 1970s.)

1912 - A prototype of modern Deere & Company. The company now has 11 manufacturing facilities in the United States and one plant in Canada, as well as 25 sales organizations - 20 in the United States, including the export department, and 5 in Canada. The company also operates a sawmill and owns 41,731 acres of timber in Arkansas and Louisiana. Harvester Works is being built in East Moline.

1918 - Deere buys tractor manufacturer Waterloo Boy. Tractors are becoming the main type of products. Although 5,634 Waterloo Boys were sold that year, Ford Motor Company sold 34,167 Fordson tractors.


1923 - Deere launches Model "D". An early success, built in Waterloo, the first two-cylinder tractor under the John Deere name would remain in the line for 30 years.

1925 - Development of the "GP" universal tractor begins, Deere's answer to IH-Farmall.

1927 - The company produces a combine harvester John Deere No. 2. A year later appears in catalogs John Deere No. 1, a more compact and more popular car. Since 1929 No. 1 and No. 2 are being replaced by new lightweight versions.

1929 - "GP" Wide-Tread, a row crop tractor, enters the market. This is the first Deere tractor with three wheels on the front axle to go between two furrows and a wide track on the rear wheels to go around two furrows.


1935 leader in the wheeled tractor segment, and Caterpillar, a premier manufacturer of tracked tractors, are joining forces to sell their products, especially in California. Strong in the beginning, the cooperation weakened over time, ending completely in the mid-1960s.

1938 - Industrial designer Henry Dreyfuss works with Deere engineers to redesign the A and B models. Henceforth, attention to attractive design is combined with traditional utilitarian values, becoming a special attribute of John Deere products.

1939 - The Second World War begins. A sharp increase in sales of the L series tractor model, assembled at the Wagon Works in Moline from 1936 to 1946. after restyling by Henry Dreyfus.

1943 - During the war years, Deere produced tractors for the needs of the army, ammunition, aircraft parts, cargo and laundry mobile modules.

1947 - The M model tractor was built at the new John Deere plant in Dubuque. Two years later, equipped with a tracked chassis, the "M" became available in a tracked version called the "MC". Construction Equipment Division International has been notified. After adding a front knife to the design, the tractor becomes a bulldozer.

1948 - At the Deere plant in Des Moines, “swords” are forged into openers. A former ammunition factory purchased from the government begins producing cotton pickers and cultivators. And finally, he also begins to produce plows.

1949 - Deere's first diesel product, the Model "R" tractor, goes into production.

1953 - Model 70 launched as the largest row crop tractor to date. Initially produced with engines running on gasoline, liquefied gas or two types of fuel, this model will be the first diesel row crop tractor.

1959 - The company produces model 8010 - a 10-ton Goliath diesel tractor with a power of 215 hp. - the largest tractor ever built by the company. Only a few were sold. Soviet General Secretary Nikita Khrushchev visits the Des Moines plant.
1961 - Construction of a new plant for the production of tractors and attachments in Rosario, Argentina is being completed. Construction begins on a new engine plant in Saran, near Orleans, France. Construction begins on the Deere & Company administrative center in Moline.

1962 - John Deere celebrates its 125th anniversary. Construction begins on a technology center in Dubuque, Iowa. The company is buying a majority stake in South African Cultivators, a manufacturer of implements near Johannesburg.

1963 - John Deere surpasses IH to become the world's largest manufacturer and supplier of agricultural and industrial tractors and equipment. The company decides to enter the consumer market with lawn and garden tractors, as well as additional equipment such as lawn mowers and snow blowers.

1964 - Deere & Company Administration Center opens. Designed by Ero Saarinen, it has received numerous architectural awards. The company's objectives and the principles underlying its basic policies and organization are published in Green Bulletins.

1966 - A record year. Total sales exceeded $1 billion for the first time. Profit reaches $78.7 million. Farm equipment sales have broken records for four years in a row. Sales of industrial equipment are recording their highest annual growth in their history. Sales of lawn and garden care equipment rise 76 percent. A record influx of new employees around the world.

1971 - In an advertisement for snowmobiles, a new product from the John Deere Horicon Works plant, the slogan “Nothing Runs Like a Deere” appears. The slogan proves to be more enduring than the line of snowmobiles sold in 1984.

1972 - Four new "Generation II" tractor models with soundproofed cabs entered the market. Farm equipment sales top $1 billion.

1974 - Unprecedented demand for John Deere products, especially farm equipment, continues, but production capacity shortages and other shortfalls are emerging. Inflation causes prices to rise. The company begins its largest expansion program. More than $1 billion will be spent on new plants by 1979.

1975 - The John Deere plant in Davenport, Iowa, begins production of industrial equipment components.

1977 - An agreement with the Japanese manufacturer Yanmar allows the sale of small tractors under the John Deere brand. A revamped Technology Center has been established in Waterloo.

1979 - Headcount reaches an all-time high of 65,392. Sales reach $5 billion and revenues reach $310 million, both record highs.

1980 - The industry's first 4-row cotton picker is produced. Field tests have shown that it increased operator productivity by 85 to 95 percent.

1981 - The John Deere tractor plant in Waterloo began operating at full capacity. The plant won an award for its excellent use of computers in US manufacturing.

1993 - Thanks to the release of new tractors of the 5000, 6000, 7000 series, the company’s market share in North America and Europe has significantly increased. Among 20 competitors in Germany, Deere rose from third to first place in terms of tractor sales. Sales of lawn mowers and garden equipment topped the $1 billion mark for the first time.

1997 - Overseas sales top $3 billion, more than the company's total sales through the mid-1970s. The company acquires half of a Chinese combine harvester company. A John Deere exhibit hall featuring equipment samples and interactive displays opens in downtown Moline.

1998 - Despite the weakening in the farming sector, sales of agricultural equipment reach record levels at the end of the year. The company's net profit reaches $1 billion for the first time. Cameco Industries, a manufacturer of sugar cane harvesting equipment, is acquired. A new tractor manufacturing plant begins operations in Pune, India.

2003 - Under an agreement with The Home Depot chain, for the first time in the company’s history, sales of self-propelled mowers begin through a mass retail network. John Deere's small/diversity supplier programs received a "Very Successful" rating from the U.S. Department of Defense for the first time. Combined with revenue from Deere's commercial and consumer equipment divisions and its construction and forestry divisions, total company revenue doubled in 2003; equipment sales rose 14 percent.

2004 - Record annual revenue of $1.406 billion more than doubled 2003 levels. Deere & Company announces plans to build a new tractor plant in Montenegro, Rio Grande Do Sul, Brazil. The plant is scheduled to reach full production capacity in the second half of 2006.

2005 - Deere & Company opens an assembly shop for the production of seeding equipment in Orenburg, Russia, and organizes a dealer network. The company also announces plans to build a new engineering and data support center near the John Deere tractor joint venture in Pune, India. John Deere is investing in wind energy projects in rural areas of the United States and establishing a new wind energy division managed by John Deere Credit.

2006 - The network of representative offices on the global market is expanding, which has increased revenues to a record level of $1.69 billion; Chairman and CEO Robert W. Lane has been named Industry Week's CEO of the Year. John Deere Landscapes becomes the number one wholesale distributor of irrigation, hatchery, lighting and landscaping equipment in the United States. John Deere Tianjin Works transmission plant opens in Tianjin, China.

2009 - Samuel R. Allen has been named John Deere's ninth chief executive officer. The new global model brings together the technology, knowledge, experience, relationships and investments of the Worldwide Agricultural Equipment Division and the Commercial and Consumer Equipment Division into a single organization called the Agricultural and Peat Division. A joint venture with Ashok Leyland Limited has been established in India to produce excavators and all-wheel drive loaders.

2010 - The opening of new plants allows John Deere to expand its influence in the markets of Europe and the CIS countries. The European Center for Technology Innovation opens in Kaiserslautern (Germany), which becomes the epicenter for the development of intelligent solutions and advanced engineering projects. In Domodedovo, south of Moscow, John Deere is holding the grand opening of a new plant for the production of high-power tractors, combine harvesters and road-building and forestry equipment. The new manufacturing center also includes the John Deere Eurasian Parts Distribution Center.

2011 - The opening of a new spare parts distribution center in Bruxall has allowed John Deere to increase the efficiency and quality of its spare parts supply services. The creation of this center is intended to improve service and ensure fast delivery of orders to dealers, which is especially important with a rapidly expanding line of equipment.


2012 - John Deere celebrates its 175th anniversary. Many John Deere plants host open houses and family days to celebrate the company's long and successful history. Sales by the end of the year were US$36.2 billion and profits were US$3.1 billion.

2013 - John Deere Region 2 (Europe, CIS, North Africa, Middle East) celebrates the launch of a new line of agricultural and gardening equipment in Berlin and Brandenburg (Germany). At the end of the year, Deere & Company's sales reach a record high of $37.8 billion and net income of $3.5 billion.

The story of a blacksmith named John Deere and the company of the same name he created in the 19th century is closely intertwined with the colonization and development of the Midwest, an area that promised great opportunities and great prospects for settlers.

John Deere was born February 7, 1804, in Vermont, where he spent his childhood and adolescence, finishing school and completing a four-year course in blacksmithing. In 1825, John Deere began his career as an apprentice and quickly gained respect and a good reputation for his skillful work and craftsmanship. The pitchforks and shovels he made were especially in demand in western Vermont.

The economic crisis has greatly impacted the business environment in Vermont. The future looked rather bleak for the ambitious young man. Most Vermont natives emigrated to the Western States. Stories about great opportunities and prospects in other states captured John Deere so much that he decided to leave his own business and join the settlers, taking with him only tools and some cash. After long weeks of travel, he settled in a small town in Illinois, founded by immigrants from Vermont. The demand for blacksmithing was so great that just two days after arriving in Illinois, John Deere founded his own blacksmith shop.

He then had a lot of work to do - making horseshoes for horses and cattle, repairing plows and other agricultural equipment for farmers. It was from farmers that John learned that they were having difficulty cultivating the sticky prairie soils. The steel plows they brought with them from the Eastern States were designed for light, sandy soils. Plowing became a slow and labor-intensive operation, causing many to become disheartened and contemplate moving to other states. John Deere carefully studied the problem and came to the conclusion that the correct shape and moldboard of the plow should lead to its self-cleaning of sticky soil. So in 1837, a steel plow of a unique design was created, which successfully passed field tests. This plow was one of the first examples of agricultural machinery being manufactured specifically to order from customers.

10 years after the creation of the legendary plow in 1848, John Deere was already producing more than 1,000 of these products per year. The business principles that guided him are still relevant today: “I will never put my name on a product that does not contain the best that is in me.” One of the founder's partners once expressed his dissatisfaction with the constant changes in product designs, citing the fact that farmers would be forced to buy the plows that the company would produce. In response, John Deere noted that “farmers are not obliged to buy the plows that we make. Someone else will do it for us, and we will lose business.” Since then, Deere & Company has continuously continued to improve its products. In 1868, the company was registered as a corporation; in 1869, the founder's son, Charles Deere, was appointed vice president and subsequently president of the company.

Charles Deere was an outstanding businessman who founded the company's branches and a network of independent retail equipment dealers. By 1907, the corporation was already producing a whole range of steel plows, cultivators, seeders, etc. During the tenure of the company's third president, Deere & Company included six independent manufacturers of agricultural equipment, which allowed the corporation to produce a full line of agricultural equipment. In 1918, the company purchased a tractor manufacturing plant in Waterloo, Iowa.

In 1928, John Deere's grandson, Charles Deere Wyman, took over the management of the company. While modern agriculture was booming, Charles's focus on engineering and technological excellence led to great success and significant growth for the enterprise. Despite the Great Depression of the 1930s, the company reached $100 million in gross sales for the first time in history in 1937. During World War II, Deere & Company management continued to improve its products, which allowed it to take a strong position in the post-war market. Shortly before the death of Charles Dear Wyman, the company became one of the hundred largest manufacturers in the American market.

Under the leadership of William Hewitt, who headed the company from 1955 to 1982, the company experienced a period of rapid growth. Manufacturing and marketing operations have been established globally in various countries. The company has become a leading manufacturer of agricultural equipment, the largest manufacturer of construction, forestry, and park and lawn care equipment in the world.

Robert Hanson, Mr. Hewitt's successor, worked for the company during a period of rather difficult economic conditions and intense competition. Under his influence, the corporation acquired a dynamic, flexible structure and reached a new level of sales, setting record figures in the last three years of the decade.

Hans Becherer was elected chairman of the board of directors in 1990. He continued to develop international operations. Six times during Mr. Becherer's career, the company's profits reached record levels. In August 2000 he retired. At this time, Robert W. Lane, who has extensive experience in the John Deere organization, including management of the company’s agricultural division and its credit organization, became the head of the company.

History in numbers:

1837
John Deere invents the first cost-effective self-cleaning steel plow.

1848
John Deere moves the company's headquarters from Grand Detour to Moline, Illinois.

1868
A concern was created bearing the name “Deere and Campaigns”.

1918
The acquisition of the Waterloo Gasoline Engine Company (owned by Waterloo Boy Tractors) marks the beginning of John Deere's tractor manufacturing activities.

1956
By purchasing Heinrich Lanz AG in Germany and a partnership in Mexico, John Deere is laying the first stone on the path to becoming an international corporation.

1958
John Deere Credit Company begins its activities to finance the acquisition of John Deere equipment domestically.

1963
John Deere is expanding its range of products by adding lawn care and land cultivation machines to its range.

1966
Sales of John Deere products exceeded $1 billion for the first time.

1973
Farms are thriving, and the demand for agricultural machinery is growing. Total sales of John Deere products reach $2 billion for the first time.

1979
The number of people employed in the company reaches a record for all this time - 65,392. Sales reach 5 billion, revenues amount to $310 million - both amounts are record amounts.

1998
The company's net income reaches $1 billion.

2000
Robert W. Lane becomes the head of the company. John Deere acquires Timberjack, the world's leading manufacturer of forestry equipment.

Founded in 1837, John Deere is one of the world's leading companies producing agricultural and construction equipment. The founder of the brand was a simple American, John Deere, who received his first patent for the invention of a steel plow of an unusual curved design (before him, these plows were made smooth and made of cast iron, which did not cope well with plowing the lands of Illinois).

Photo of the steel plow invented by John Deere

In the first 10 years, Deere produced and sold about 1,000 of these plows, and since 1857, his company has grown and produced almost 10,000 similar products.

The John Deere company has a long and eventful history and today its product range includes dozens of lines of equipment such as combines, seeders, snowblowers, sprayers, cotton harvesters, construction excavators and various forestry equipment.

But besides the obvious achievements in creating perfect machines, there are some interesting facts that you probably don't know about John Deere.

  • Its founder had only a school education. Coming from a poor rural family of a tailor, he initially entered the University of Magdeburg, but after studying there for several months, he realized that he was unable to support himself and dropped out. Already at the age of 17, he began working as a blacksmith's apprentice and only through perseverance and determination was he able to achieve such heights that one could only dream of.
  • John Deere created his first diesel engine in 1949. This 2-cylinder, 6.8-liter engine for the Model R tractor produced only 51 horsepower, but at that time it was the most powerful engine in the world.

Drawing of one of the first diesel engines produced by John Deere

To date, John Deere has produced more than 7 million engines under its brand.

  • John Deere once said that the most important thing in his products is their quality, for which he will fight until the end of his days. “I will never put my name on a product that doesn’t contain the best of me,” he said.
  • The first trademark, which depicted a deer jumping over a log, was registered by John Deere in 1876. At that time, his company was already well known in Illinois, producing 60,000 plows a year, but ordinary farmers continued to call them “Moline plows.” That is why John Deere decided to register his brand in order to assign his own name to the product. The deer that appears on the sign is a symbolic animal for John Deere. In English, deer is written as deer, that is, it is consonant with the surname of John Deere, which is why the creator of the brand chose its image for his trademark. It is also funny that the stamp was originally mistakenly depicted as a deer that lives exclusively in Africa.

Only starting in 1912, the “correct” white-tailed deer, whose habitat is North America, will appear on the sign.

  • In 1958, John Deere handed over the management of the company to his 21-year-old son, Charles Deere, who began working in his father’s company as an assistant accountant at the age of 16. Charles led the firm for 49 years and was a highly successful leader, growing the firm's revenues.
  • After retiring, John Deere was active in public life. Being a man who earned the respect of the community, he was elected mayor of the small town of Moline (Illinois), where he lived at that time.

    The beginning of this activity was marked by the failure of Dir. Having tried to introduce licenses for the production of a local drink - liqueur, it began to lose popularity. However, it was quickly restored by installing street lighting in the city, laying water supply, sewerage and stone roads. The benefit of his popularity was the organization in the city of a beautiful city park with fountains and lanterns. But he soon fell ill with dysentery, refused the post of mayor and died in May 1886.

  • Today, the John Deere brand has become an international brand. The first plant for the production of agricultural machinery was opened in 1912, now, 103 years later, 104 similar plants have been built. Unfortunately, the company is now run by people who are not related to the family of the original creator, John Deere.

Without high-quality agricultural equipment, it is impossible to obtain a large harvest. Huge losses and damage to the crop often occur when equipment breaks down in the midst of sowing or harvesting. Valuable time is wasted on repairs. Agricultural special equipment manufactured by John Deere Corporation is protected from this.

Release of the first special equipment

Back in 1837, in the American state of Illinois, a simple blacksmith John Deere improved the plow, making it from well-polished steel. This was the beginning of the family company John Deere. The enterprise expanded; after 5 years, 100 plows were produced, which were in constant demand.

John Deere has always kept pace with technological progress, constantly expanding the range of agricultural equipment produced. John Deere's motto is: Integrity, Quality, Commitment and Innovation.

Currently, the main regions to which products are sold are the USA, Canada, Brazil, India, China and Russia. According to company forecasts, up to 75% of major food crops will grow in these countries. And John Deere can provide all the necessary agricultural equipment for their cultivation.

The company has representative offices in more than 30 countries, and customers in 130 countries. Production facilities are close to consumers and scattered around the world. In Russia these are Orenburg and Domodedovo.

Agricultural machinery - John Deere 592 baler

What is the advantage of John Deere equipment?

The quality of John Deere equipment is at the highest level, so the corporation has never had a shortage of clients. They buy its products for the following reasons:

  • Only modern technologies and materials are used for production;
  • all equipment has a manufacturer's warranty;
  • value for money – optimal;
  • special equipment is reliable and has a long service life;
  • You can lease the necessary equipment.

John Deere is very picky about selecting dealers. These must be people who share its basic principles.

John Deere Product Range

It is able to satisfy the most demanding buyer who requires equipment for any branch of agriculture. The tractor is the farmer's main workhorse. It performs many work operations if you change attachments. John Deere has tractors for any agricultural work: from wheeled (6 M series with 110 horsepower) to the powerful 9 RX (with four tracks and a 570 horsepower engine).

Advantages of tractors:

  • optimal ratio of engine power and efficiency;
  • ease of operation thanks to a hydraulic system equipped with pressure control;
  • maximum comfort when working: the cabin has a heater and air conditioning.


John Deere tractors offer a wide range of attachments, with which you can carry out all operations for sowing and caring for agricultural crops:

  • Various sowing equipment, including row crop seeders(with durable frames and a device for seed dosing and precision sowing).
  • Everything for cleaning: grain headers of several series, corn headers with a device for crushing the stalk.



Manufacturers also have equipment for preparing feed, including forage harvesters with a chopping system, and self-propelled mowers designed for mowing any crops and herbs.