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Farm Machinery
Precision Farming & GPS
Fendt Varioguide sensitivity
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<blockquote data-quote="Northern farmer" data-source="post: 7230251" data-attributes="member: 4568"><p>A bit difficult to interpret how aggressive it is, the task of the auto-steer is to get to the wayline "as soon as possible".</p><p></p><p>The part concerns me where you say it looks like driven by a drunken driver. Does the auto-steer actually oscillate when trying to reach the wayline? You should have another setting to control the overshoot which again reduces oscillation.</p><p></p><p>What kind of a sprayer (implement settings) do you have? Is it a trailed sprayer? I don't even know how to set up a trailed implement that steers itself like trailed sprayers usually do. Anyway, with trailed implements Fendt has a pretty unique behaviour. The tractor drives a path that makes the implement follow the wayline. This makes the tractor overshoot and oscillate at headlands and on contour waylines (overshoot only on the latter). The tractor path may look like driven by a drunken driver but the implement would follow the actual wayline much more accurately than most (any) other auto-steer system. On the later Fendt Varioguide screens you can select between two modes, making either the tractor or the implement follow the wayline.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Northern farmer, post: 7230251, member: 4568"] A bit difficult to interpret how aggressive it is, the task of the auto-steer is to get to the wayline "as soon as possible". The part concerns me where you say it looks like driven by a drunken driver. Does the auto-steer actually oscillate when trying to reach the wayline? You should have another setting to control the overshoot which again reduces oscillation. What kind of a sprayer (implement settings) do you have? Is it a trailed sprayer? I don't even know how to set up a trailed implement that steers itself like trailed sprayers usually do. Anyway, with trailed implements Fendt has a pretty unique behaviour. The tractor drives a path that makes the implement follow the wayline. This makes the tractor overshoot and oscillate at headlands and on contour waylines (overshoot only on the latter). The tractor path may look like driven by a drunken driver but the implement would follow the actual wayline much more accurately than most (any) other auto-steer system. On the later Fendt Varioguide screens you can select between two modes, making either the tractor or the implement follow the wayline. [/QUOTE]
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Farm Machinery
Precision Farming & GPS
Fendt Varioguide sensitivity
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