Farmers gain relief as EPA eliminates DEF sensor rules, cutting costs and reducing equipment failures during critical ...
“Hey Pete, if you were having an auction, what time of year would you choose?” My answer to that question has been the same for the past 20 years: early November through December. The Machinery Pete ...
I’ve been compiling auction price data since November 1989 and writing my Machinery Pete column since 1992. Yet in all that time, there’s a timely topic I have yet to cover: how the equipment ...
Many farm operators provide some type of custom work or use of farm machinery to other farmers during the growing season, and payment is usually made following the completion of the harvest season.
The slump in new farm machinery sales accelerated in 2025 as growers continued to endure economic pressure and high production expenses, experts say. In 2025, unit sales decreased about 22% for new ...
By Ed White REGINA, Saskatchewan, April 3 (Reuters) - Farm machinery salespeople are wrapping up a dismal season of farm ...
Across the United States and the High Plains, the amount of farm equipment (balers, combines, cotton pickers and strippers and forage harvesters) on farms is shrinking. Since the 1997 Census of ...
Key opportunities in agriculture equipment include electrification, autonomy, data-driven services, and modularity, amidst shifting tech and trade dynamics. Focus on sustainable, adaptable solutions.
Hundreds of thousands of people are expected to visit Louisville for the 2026 National Farm Machinery Show. The four-day event at the Kentucky Exposition Center begins Wednesday, Feb. 11 through ...
BISMARCK, N.D. -- Many states have passed specific laws for farmers who purchase machinery and later find that the machinery does not conform to the express warranties offered by the manufacturer. In ...
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (LEX 18) — The National Farm Machinery Show is underway at the Louisville Expo Center. From a simple electricity demonstration in Lexington in 1963, it's become the world's largest ...
People are venturing out into a mostly normal world again as the COVID-19 pandemic eases. But the reverberations of the shutdown are still showing up—and in some relatively unexpected places. Just as ...