Troubleshooting, Planting rate problems, Suggested furrow check – Great Plains YP925TD Operator Manual User Manual
Page 70: Troubleshooting planting rate problems

401-755M
02/23/2011
66
YP625TD and YP925TD
Great Plains Manufacturing, Inc.
Troubleshooting
Planting Rate Problems
When starting up with a new planter, a new crop or a
new population it is important to physically double check
what the monitor is reporting in the cab by digging seeds.
This is to verify that you are set up correctly to plant the
desired population. Do not rely solely on the population
reported by the seed monitor.
Also during start up it is common to encounter alarms
and readouts on the seed monitor that don’t seem to
make sense. It is critical to troubleshoot these alarms not
only to make sure the planter drive is set properly to hit
the target population, but also to fix incorrect entries in
the monitor setup to eliminate nuisance alarms.
Before entering the troubleshooting charts to remedy a
monitor or population problem, it is helpful to use the
following flowchart to get a handle on what may be
wrong. The basis for finding what is wrong comes from
knowing exactly what the planter is actually doing in the
soil. Always dig or observe seed on the ground when
checking populations.
1.
Is the spacing on the
ground correct?
No:
Check the ground drive transmission and range sprocket selections, or
the population settings on a hydraulic drive unit. See also “Population
Too Low” or “Population Too High” in the troubleshooting charts.
Yes:
Go to step 2.
2.
Is the population reported
by the optional seed
monitor
1
⁄
2
or
1
⁄
3
the actual
or is the reported
population too high by a
factor of 2 or 3?
No:
Go to step 3.
Yes:
An incorrect twin- or triple-row spacing value entered in the seed
monitor can cause this.
Example:
18 rows at 110 cm using an incorrect “Row Spacing” of 110 cm (18x110
is an incorrect 1980 cm effective swath),
instead of:
18 Rows at a swath of 660 cm (or swath-averaged 36.7 cm effective row
spacing).
Correct the row spacing error on the seed monitor console.
The system can also be off by a large factor if incorrect range sprockets
are installed. Check seed rate charts against range and transmission
sprockets on the planter.
3.
Is the population reported
by the optional seed
monitor close to the target
population?
No:
Check seed rate charts against transmission sprockets selected. See
“Population Too Low” or “Population Too High” in the troubleshooting
charts.
Yes:
If slightly under, see “Population Too Low” if slightly over, see
“Population Too High”.
Suggested Furrow Check:
Plant a short distance and dig seeds, or run with the
closing wheels wired up to leave an open seed trench.
Based on seeds found, determine an average distance
between seeds. Compare the distance between seeds
to the seed spacing listed in the charts for your
population. This is listed as “inches per seed”.