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Published byBarnaby McLaughlin Modified over 9 years ago
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Key Questions About Farm Machinery --Chapter 22 1. What are the alternatives for acquiring machinery 2. What are the advantages of new versus used? 3. What factors influence the best size of machinery?
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Machinery Costs per Acre High 1/3 Mid 1/3 Low 1/3 zTotal cost / acre$89 $100 $106 zInvestment /acre$289 $294 $346
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Acquiring Farm Machinery zOwnership zRental (short-term) zLeasing zRollover zCustom Hire zJoint Ownership zTrade Labor
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Advantages of Owning zMore control over use zMore convenient zLess expensive for high use or long life machines zTax benefits from depreciation and interest zBuild up equity value
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Short-Term Rental z Pay only for time machine is actually used z Pay by the hour or day z No investment z Cheaper for low use or specialized machines
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Long Term Leasing zMake annual lease payments (20-25% of new price) zFirst payment when lease begins zLeases usually run 3-5 years zOption to purchase at end of lease zOperator pays for repairs, insurance, etc. zExample on page 433
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Leasing Machinery Disadvantages z More expensive if you plan to own it z Do not build equity z Locked into lease period z No tax depreciation deduction Advantages zLower initial investment zCan trade frequently zPayments usually lower than loan payments zKnow machine before purchasing zPayments tax deductible
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Advantages of Custom Hire zNo long term investment zNo repairs or maintenance zCheaper for low use items zGet operator labor zPay only for acres actually farmed
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Own vs. Custom Hire $ per acre
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Rollover Purchase z New machine is purchased, usually by company credit plan z Used one season, then traded for a new model z Difference paid depends on hours of use on old unit
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Joint Machinery Ownership zSpread ownership costs over more acres zIncrease labor supply zOwner/operators can specialize zLess investment for each owner zMust be able to schedule use zMust adjust costs if use is not proportional to ownership zSome farmers form machinery co-ops.
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Trade Labor for Machinery z No investment or debt z No cash costs z Use excess labor z Takes about 5-8 acres of labor to equal the value of one acre of machinery use
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Used Machinery z Lower investment and ownership costs z Higher repair costs z Lower reliability z Must trade more often z Requires more mechanical skills
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Machinery Costs Decrease
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Machinery Capacity zSmall machinery causes timeliness losses zLarge machinery has excess ownership costs zBottleneck is suitable field days zLeast-cost machinery set can complete: ytillage and planting in 20-25 days yharvesting in 25-30 days
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Least-cost Machinery Set
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Some days you just can’t farm!
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Machinery Capacity (Acres covered per hour) Acres per hour = width (ft.) x speed x field efficiency % 8.25 Field efficiency allows for time to turn around, make adjustments, and overlap. 30-ft. field cultivator x 5 mph x 85% = 15 a/hr 8.25
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Matching Tractor and Implement zHorsepower needed depends on: yWidth of implement yDraft requirement—pounds of force) yType of soil (firm or tilled) ySpeed zHP = width x speed x draft x soil factor 375
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Example: Chisel Plow Width: 20 feet Draft: 500 lb/foot Soil factor (corn stalks): 1.5 Speed: 5 mph HP = 20 ft. X 500 lb/ft x 5 mph x 1.5 / 375 = 200 hp
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When to Trade Machinery zRepair costs are high zMachine is unreliable zMachine is obsolete zNeed more capacity zCash flow is favorable zNeed tax deductions
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