Three opener types available from Bourgault

Brand offers drills with side-band and mid-row fertilizer banding technology

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: September 25, 2024

Three opener types available from Bourgault

Bourgault displayed a variety of openers at the July Ag in Motion farm show near Langham, Sask. It’s best known for the original opener design it marketed several years ago; a single knife for seed placement paired with a mid-row bander for fertilizer.

The company now gives buyers a broader choice of options when configuring a new drill.

“If you can’t find the (opener) that fits your operation, you haven’t looked hard enough at our company, especially since the last four seasons,” says Bourgault sales territory manager Curtis Hinrichsen.

Read Also

Barry Senft is stepping down as CEO of Seeds Canada after four years.. Photo: John Greig

Senft to step down as CEO of Seeds Canada

Barry Senft, the founding CEO of the five-year-old Seeds Canada organization is stepping down as of January 2026.

“You should be able to find an opener that fits your operation, because we have a broad selection. There’s a reason for that. Every farm wants to put their fertilizer down in a different manner. And we offer all the different types.

“The product we come from in our history is a single knife opener, narrow tipped with a mid-row bander for fertilizer. That’s what everyone seems to know Bourgault for. That one we refer to as a PLS.”

Now, the brand has two other opener designs so farmers can tailor a new drill to better match soil types and farming practices.

“The second type of opener we came up with in 2012 is the PLX. Its heritage comes from the XTC, which was an extreme terrain contouring opener, a para-link extreme,” said Hinrichsen.

”That one is meant more for ground that contours a lot, hilly, washouts, ditches, that kind of thing. It’s a one-to-one opener with very good depth control. It’s typically used with a narrow opener.”

A few years ago, Bourgault began offering the dual-knife PLDS model, which is capable of side-banding fertilizer.

“A lot of the industry uses that style of opener,” Hinrichsen says, “and we know it has some benefits. But like a single knife, it has some drawbacks too. That’s why we let the customer decide which one fits their operation, depending what they want to do fertility wise and with their farming practices.

“Each of these openers lends itself to different farming operations. That’s why we feel there’s a need for all these different styles of openers.”

The dual knife design places fertilizer closer to the seed row than a mid-row application. It offers quick emergence but doesn’t perform as well in fields with heavy trash when compared to a single knife opener.

“Trash clearance with a single knife and banders is significantly better than a dual knife for residue clearance. But if you manage your residue properly, you’re fine with a dual knife, even on a 10-inch spacing.”

To add more options for fertilizer placement, Bourgault has introduced its TriMax opener arrangement, which is dual knife openers paired with mid-row banders. That offers growers a lot of choice for placing fertilizer separately or in combination and works well in one-pass seeding operations, even with heavy rates of fertilizer.

“Some soil types can’t handle as high a rate as close to the seed as others. Maybe a dual knife in a heavy clay soil that’s predominantly wet can get away with a little higher rate of fertilizer than one that’s a little drier and loamier,” Hinrichsen says.

“In my mind (the Trimax) is the pinnacle for agronomic reasons. You can put your seed and fertility wherever you want.”

About the author

Scott Garvey

Scott Garvey

Senior Machinery Editor

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

explore

Stories from our other publications