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 03 jun 2006 16u30 

Farmers still wary of GPS investment


Farmers have always been willing to adopt new technology, but they have also been quick to ask "Is it worth it?" This has been especially true with GPS tools on farm equipment. While yield monitors and lightbars have been quickly adopted, auto steering and field mapping have been slower in their adoption. As a general rule, farmers should not expect their site-specific tools to remain viable any longer than their home computers, according to Jess Lowenberg-DeBoer, a Purdue University agricultural economist and director of Purdue's Site-Specific Management Center.

"For the kinds of electronic technology that we see being used for site-specific management, we usually think of about a three-year lifespan," he said. "This comes from the computer world. A three-year-old computer is almost worthless, so you have to figure out how you can make that computer pay off in those three years. If you can make it pay in three years, then it's probably a good investment. If you use it longer than that or you can sell it for something at the end of that three years, that's a bonus."

Site-specific technology does not come cheap. Lightbars, which help guide equipment in straight rows without skip or overlap, usually run from $2,000 to $4,000. Yield monitor units which track bushels per acre during harvest, range from $6,000 to $10,000. A GPS auto guidance system, a kind of autopilot for tractors, can cost as much as $60,000.

"The faster the payoff, the better off you are purchasing this technology," Lowenberg-DeBoer said. "That is one of the reasons that GPS lightbars sold quite well when they were first introduced. The cost was relatively low and many farmers did a little calculating and decided that they could pay that off in a year.

"In 1999, about 5 percent of agricultural custom operators with ground-based equipment used lightbars. In the Midwest this year, about 75 percent will use them. This is an enormously rapid adoption, and one of the key reasons was the very quick payoff."

Other issues farmers should keep in mind when considering site-specific purchases include:
* Problems the equipment solves -- Auto guidance, for example, is popular with older farmers with physical limitations, Lowenberg-DeBoer said. The technology has allowed producers to extend their farming careers when they might have been forced to retire.
* Compatibility between equipment and farm machinery -- "Compatibility is better than it was," Lowenberg-DeBoer said. "When this equipment first came out on the market, every company wanted to have their proprietary advantage and guard their clients. Many companies have now moved to an open architecture-type arrangement, where it is much easier to share or mix and match equipment and software. But we're not at total compatibility yet. There are some companies that still like to keep their proprietary software and hardware, and they can get away with it, in part, because of brand loyalty."
* Tech support -- Original equipment manufacturers are often less qualified or able to provide service on factory-installed, site-specific equipment than after-market companies who sell the products. "Farm equipment manufacturers are mainly in the business of selling iron, not electronics, whereas many of the precision agriculture after-market companies are in the business of selling electronics," Lowenberg-DeBoer said.

Farmers also are advised to keep up with the latest changes in site-specific technology through their own research and information obtained from trusted sources.

(Source: brownfieldnetwork.com)



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