Gleaner Manufacturing Company

The Gleaner Manufacturing Company is an American manufacturer of combine harvesters. Gleaner has been a popular brand of combine harvester particularly in the Midwestern United States for many decades, first as an independent firm, and later as a division of Allis-Chalmers. The Gleaner brand continues today under the ownership of AGCO.

History

Gleaner Combine, produced between 1922-1927. The tractor on which it is mounted is partially visible.
A 1965 Gleaner E displaying its ease of loading for over-the-road hauls.

Gleaner combines date from 1923, when the Baldwin brothers of Nickerson, Kansas, created a high-quality and reliable self-propelled combine harvester. They decided to use the "Gleaner" name for their radically redesigned grain harvesting machine based on inspiration from "The Gleaners", an 1857 painting by Jean-François Millet. Gleaning is the act of collecting leftover crops from farm fields after they have been commercially harvested, or on fields where it is not economically profitable to harvest. In the broadest sense, it is the act of frugally recovering resources from low-yield contexts. Thus, with the Gleaner name, the company evoked a positive connotation in potential customers' minds, of a brand of harvester that would leave none of the grain behind. A combine harvester combines the reaping (plus or minus binding), threshing, and winnowing functions into one machine, hence the "combine" part of its name. To that list, the Baldwin brothers' Gleaner added self-propulsion. Earlier combines, the so-called pull-type or tractor-drawn combines, were towed by tractors.

The original Gleaner design was mounted on a Fordson Model F. It had a retail price of USD $950 FOB at the factory in Nickerson. This design was manufactured between 1923 and 1928.

The Gleaner was one of the pioneers in self-propelled combines. They were often considered the "Cadillac" of the industry because of this feature and because of their solid engineering. Buescher (1991)[1] credited the design principally to one of the brothers, Curt Baldwin, and explained that it focused on the needs of custom cutters like the Baldwin brothers themselves: contractors who move north with the harvest season, providing harvesting services to farmers. It resulted in machines that were reliable and useful, which benefited not only custom cutters but anyone who bought a Gleaner. The short wheelbase and axle track allowed the combine to fit on a truck.[1] The grain header did not need to be detached for transit, because it fit over the cab of the truck.[1] Buescher said, "Since custom cutters didn't know where their next parts supply source would be, Baldwin designed his combine so that it wouldn't need parts."[1] (Buescher's tongue-in-cheek point is that the machines were designed and built well so that need for repairs would be minimal.) The frame was "like a bridge" in its strength.[1] The bearings were chosen with service in mind: large and good quality (to obviate failure) and of common sizes (so that the operator could carry a small stock of spares in his truck, and have the size needed when a replacement became necessary).[1] The Gleaner's exterior sheet metal was galvanized (zinc plated), providing superior weather resistance. As Buescher said, "Baldwin reasoned that most of his combines would sit outdoors. Texas and Oklahoma dust storms have a way of peeling paint off of machinery."[1] As a result of the silver color of the zinc plating, the Gleaner brand ended up having a distinctive color (just as Allis had Persian Orange, IH had red, and John Deere had green), despite the sheet metal not even having any paint.

During the Great Depression, owing mostly to the collapse of the farm economy and the Dust Bowl, the Baldwins' company entered bankruptcy in the 1930s as equipment sales plummeted. William James Brace acquired the company with his son-in-law, George Reuland. The pair, along with other investors, brought the company back to profitability and maintained ownership until 1955. During World War II, the factory converted its production to war materiel.

By the late 1940s and early 1950s, other farm equipment manufacturers were offering increased competition to Gleaner, having introduced their own versions of self-propelled combines.

In 1955, Allis-Chalmers acquired Gleaner. This represented commercial renewal for Gleaner with the production and marketing success of various new models and technologies. It also represented a great gain for Allis-Chalmers. Allis was the market leader in pull-type (tractor-drawn) combines, with its All-Crop Harvester line. Acquiring Gleaner meant that it would also be a leader in self-propelled machines, and it would own two of the leading brands in combines. The Gleaner line augmented (and later superseded) the All-Crop Harvester line, and for several years Gleaner's profits made up nearly all of Allis-Chalmers' profit.[2] Gleaners continued to be manufactured at the same factory, in Independence, Missouri, after the acquisition.

1965 Gleaner E harvester

In 1979, Gleaner released its first rotary combine, the N6. It was soon followed by the N5 and N7. The latter was the largest combine of its time, with grain headers as wide as 30 feet (9.1 m).

In 1985, Allis-Chalmers sold their farm machinery manufacturing business to Deutz AG and became known as Deutz-Allis, and in 1991 its North American operations became AGCO. Despite several ownership changes, the Gleaner brand never ceased to be produced or marketed. Between 1985 and 2000, Gleaner lost significant market share to other manufacturers with broader dealer bases and farm equipment product lines that had marketing and customer service advantages. Another problem for Gleaner was that some of their combines used the air-cooled Deutz engine, a departure from water-cooled engines predominantly found in most other industrial and agricultural applications.

In 2000, AGCO moved the Gleaner manufacturing operations from Independence, Missouri to its Hesston, Kansas facility, which featured modernized manufacturing equipment and techniques. It also centralized the engineering and production functions into one location. The Hesston facility is 35 miles east of Nickerson, Kansas, where the Baldwin brothers started the Gleaner company in 1923.

Firsts

Some of the firsts introduced by the Gleaner were: an auger that replaced canvas drapers, a rasp bar threshing cylinder instead of a spike-tooth arrangement, and a down-front cylinder that put threshing closer to the crop. In 1972 Gleaner was the first manufacturer to use electro-hydraulic controls, an innovation that other companies didn't offer until nearly two decades later. Gleaner was also the first in the industry to offer a 12 row corn head in 1979.

Gleaner also explored use of turbocharged diesel engines before the competition. Records from October 1962 list the 262-cubic-inch turbo-diesel engine as being available for the model "C".

Another Gleaner innovation was a "rock door" to protect the machine from damage due to stones that it might pick up while harvesting. If a Gleaner combine ingests a rock, the rock door simply pops open and drops the stone on the ground, preventing damage to the cylinder and concave bars, unlike other machines with a "rock trap" that the operator must periodically clean out or dump.

A current Gleaner and world first is that they created the first Class VIII transverse rotor combine. This happened when AGCO introduced the new Gleaner S88 series combine in 2014.

Today

Gleaners are still in production under AGCO. The Gleaner brand is marketed in North America, South America, and Australia.[3]

The two models that have been currently available, and in production since 2011, are the S67 and S77, which are Class VI and VII combines, respectively. Three newer models have come out this year (2016) and are now available and in full production, which are the S96, S97, and S98, which are Class VI, VII, and VIII combines, respectively. These combines still utilize the transverse rotor which was originally introduced in 1979.[4]

Models

Here is a list of Gleaner Combines models built from 1970 to present.

ModelYears MadeGrain Tank SizeClassEngineHorsepower
Gleaner K1969-197666 bushels2General Motors gas Engine78 hp
Gleaner F1968-1976120 bushels3GM gas or AC Diesel Engine93/84 hp
Gleaner G1968-1972100 bushelsN/AAC gas or AC Diesel Engine105/109 hp
Gleaner L1972-1976120 bushels5GM Gas or AC Diesel Engine120/109 hp
Gleaner M1973-1976150 bushels4GM gas or AC Diesel Engine120/109 hp
Gleaner K21977-198168/96 bushels2GM gas or AC Diesel Engine85/72 hp
Gleaner F21977-1982120 bushels3GM gas or AC Diesel Engine112/95 hp
Gleaner M21977-1982165/180 bushels4Allis Chalmers Engine130 hp
Gleaner L21977-1982185/200 bushels5Allis Chalmers Engine158 hp
Gleaner N51978-1985200 bushels5Allis Chalmers Engine190 hp
Gleaner N61978-1985245 bushels6Allis-Chalmers Engine240 hp
Gleaner N71978-1985310 bushels7Allis-Chalmers Engine270 hp
Gleaner F31983-1986120 bushels3Allis-Chalmers Engine95 hp
Gleaner M31983-1986180 bushels4Allis-Chalmers Engine145 hp
Gleaner L31983-1986200 bushels5Allis-Chalmers Engine158 hp
Gleaner R51986230 bushels5Allis-Chalmers Engine180 hp
Gleaner R61986270 bushels6Allis-Chalmers Engine220 hp
Gleaner R71986300 bushels7Allis-Chalmers Engine270 hp
Gleaner R401986-1992230 bushels4Deutz Engine155 hp
Gleaner R501986-1992230 bushels5Deutz Engine190 hp
Gleaner R601986-1992270 bushels6Deutz Engine228 hp
Gleaner R701986-1992300 bushels7Deutz Engine270 hp
Gleaner L41990-1991200 bushels5Cummins Engine175 hp
Gleaner R421992-1996170 bushels4Deutz Engine185 hp
Gleaner R521992-1996225 bushels5Deutz Engine230 hp
Gleaner R621992-1996300 bushels6Deutz Engine260 hp
Gleaner R721992-1996300 bushels7Deutz Engine300 hp
Gleaner R42 Updated1996-2002170 bushels4Cummins Engine175 hp
Gleaner R52 Updated1996-2002225 bushels5Cummins Engine220 hp
Gleaner R62 Updated1996-2002300 bushels6Cummins Engine260 hp
Gleaner C621996-2002300 bushels6Cummins Engine260 hp
Gleaner R72 Updated1996-2002330 bushels7Cummins Engine330 hp
Gleaner R552003-2006250 bushels5Cummins Engine230 hp
Gleaner R652003-2008300 bushels6Cummins Engine300 hp
Gleaner R752003-2008330 bushels7Cummins Engine350 hp
Gleaner R662008-2011300 bushels6AGCO Engine300 hp
Gleaner R762008-2011330 bushels7AGCO Engine350 hp
Gleaner A652007-2008300 bushels6Cummins Engine300 hp
Gleaner A752007-2008300 bushels7Cummins Engine350 hp
Gleaner A852007-2008350 bushels8CAT Engine429 hp
Gleaner A662008-2010300 bushels6AGCO Engine300 hp
Gleaner A762008-2010300 bushels7AGCO Engine350 hp
Gleaner A862008-2010350 bushels8CAT Engine425 hp
Gleaner S672010–2012390 bushels6AGCO Engine314 hp
Gleaner S772010–2012390 bushels7AGCO Engine370 hp
Gleaner S682013–2015390 bushels6AGCO Engine322 hp
Gleaner S782013–2015390 bushels7AGCO Engine375 hp
Gleaner S882013–2015390 bushels8AGCO Engine430 hp
Gleaner S962016–present390 bushels6AGCO Engine322 hp
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  1. Buescher 1991, pp. 282–283.
  2. Buescher 1991, p. 270.
  3. "Gleaner Combines". AGCO Corporation. Retrieved 26 October 2012.
  4. "Gleaner Super Series Specifications" (PDF). AGCO Corporation. Retrieved 26 October 2012.

Bibliography

  • Buescher, Walter M. (1991), Plow Peddler, Macomb, Illinois, USA: Glenbridge Publishing, ISBN 978-0-944435-18-2. A memoir by a man who worked for Allis-Chalmers company for over 30 years as a sales representative and sales manager.
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