Case IH introduces AF11 combine

Company enters the dual-rotor club and Class 10-Plus segment with a platform that has 775 peak horsepower

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Published: February 23, 2024

Case IH is introducing the AF11 twin-rotor with Class 10-plus threshing capacity

Glacier FarmMedia – On the heels of the introduction of the CR11 combine from New Holland at the Agritechnica machinery show in Germany in November, sister brand Case IH has introduced its version of that Class 10-Plus combine, the AF11.

This red giant with a 567-bushel grain hopper made its first public appearance at the National Farm Machinery Show in Louisville, Kentucky, last month.

“(It’s) our entry into that Class 10-Plus segment,” said Leo Bose, harvesting segment leader at Case IH. “Producers are looking not only for capacity but technology and run time. The AF11 delivers on those three pillars.”

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The AF11 is Case IH’s first dual rotor combine, an engineering concept that New Holland has been embracing for almost 50 years.

Related: Check out the Case IH AF11 Combine Specs

Bose said the combine is a clean-sheet design compared to current models, meaning it has been re-engineered to improve productivity and efficiency.

“The rotors are physically longer and they’re dual,” said Bose.

It also has a wider feeder house for gathering all crop material to keep the rotors fed.

“The AF11 has been redesigned from the ground up with a longer wheelbase,” Bose said.

“We know headers are getting wider, so we can go up to 50 feet at this time, and we can carry up to 15,000 pounds (6,800 kilograms) on the feeder house for that header.

“We widened out the feeder. We use a synchronized feed system. It allows us to do two things. It provides rock protection, but it also synchronizes the speed of the crop mat coming into the rotor. As I speed up or slow down the rotor, that feed system is going to speed up or slow down. We can adjust the feeder house chain speed to really push the capacity of the machine.”

The AF11 uses a newly designed cleaning system to improve grain quality entering the hopper and reduce the amount of grain loss out the back.

“It’s a whole new cleaning system,” Bose said. “It allows us to start with a cross flow plus cleaning fan. We’ve increased the fan diameter, which allows us to create more air volume. We can run that fan at a slower speed as well. That allows us to save on horsepower.

“It was totally reimagined. It allows us to take a four-sieve approach. We call it an active and dynamic cleaning system. It allows us to take the (crop) mat and even it out. On level ground or on 13 per cent slope, we can now have more efficiency in the cleaning system.

“We can sense the air pressure left and right in the cleaning system. We know if the system is loading one side or the other, and we do that through automation. The cleaning system can move that crop to get a nice even level.”

At six bushels per second, the unloading auger can empty the hopper in just over a minute and a half. At the back, the new spreader system is designed for a consistent, even spread pattern across the full header width.

“We’re seeing residue spread that can go past the width of the header,” said Bose.

“We have what we call radar spread automation. Now we can adjust automatically, without operator input, to make sure we have that consistent, uniform spread.”

The combine uses the same 16-litre diesel engine that powers the new Steiger 715, which can deliver 775 peak horsepower. It will be available in wheeled or tracked versions.

According to the brand’s announcement, the AF11 is “the first in the AF Series and will offer a number of top-of-the-line technology-focused features, including Case IH’s combine automation solution, Harvest Command.”

The “first in the AF Series” reference seems to suggest more twin-rotor machines will be wearing Case IH branding in the future.

AF11s will see limited production for the 2024 season until the brand is able to expand to full production in 2025.

About the author

Scott Garvey

Scott Garvey

Senior Machinery Editor

Scott Garvey is senior editor for machinery and equipment at Glacier FarmMedia.

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