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| Your profile pic shows you live around Salem, OR. Very pretty area, I attended an event at the university in Corvallis in my college days.
Your Latitude is almost 45 degrees, exactly half way from the equator to the north pole. So your overlap would be much faster than a research farm in Hawaii at 20 degrees N. I live near 40 degrees N, and at one mile, the rows are off by about 15 inches when compared to Trimble or AgL. If you farm directly on the equator, a Deere system would be almost identical to anything else.
So that to say, it is highly dependent on where you live on how quickly you will start to see overlap. But, unless you have farms that are about a half mile or more long, you will not notice it.
Someone on AgTalk had a calculator that would say what the drift on a row pass was over distance. Not sure who it was, or even if they're still active around here. | |
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