SKU: 91366204589
john deere 7000 planter seed spacing

john deere 7000 planter seed spacing John Deere 7000 Folding 12-Row Wide, 16,18-Row Planters Manual

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Description

john deere 7000 planter seed spacing John Deere 7000 Folding 12-Row Wide, 16,18-Row Planters ManualJohn Deere 7000 Folding 12 Row Wide; 16 and 18 Row Planters Operator's Manual This is the Operator's Manual for the John Deere 7000 folding planter in 12 row wide, 16 row, and 18 row configurations, covering the control console, folding and transport procedures, planting rates, service, and the complete attachment lineup across 250 pages. This is the factory document John Deere issued to 7000 folding planter owners and is available as an instant

John Deere 7000 Folding 12-Row Wide; 16- and 18-Row Planters Operator's Manual

This is the Operator's Manual for the John Deere 7000 folding planter in 12-row wide, 16-row, and 18-row configurations, covering the control console, folding and transport procedures, planting rates, service, and the complete attachment lineup across 250 pages. This is the factory document John Deere issued to 7000 folding planter owners and is available as an instant digital download.

About the John Deere 7000 Planter

The John Deere 7000 was one of the most significant row crop planters of the late 20th century, introduced in 1971 and produced in various configurations through the 1980s. It was the planter that brought John Deere's finger-pickup seed metering technology to wide-scale adoption — a departure from the cell-type seed disc systems used on earlier planters. The finger pickup mechanism used rubber fingers that picked up individual seeds regardless of shape or size variation, eliminating the need to precisely match seed plates to seed lots and dramatically reducing skips and doubles compared to cell-type systems. The 7000 was also among the first planters to be widely offered in large folding configurations — the 12-row wide, 16-row, and 18-row fold-up frames covered in this manual — which allowed operators to plant wider swaths per pass while still meeting highway transport width restrictions. The folding frame, hydraulic markers, and control console made the 7000 a genuinely high-productivity machine for its era. The 7000 supported an extensive attachment lineup including liquid and dry fertilizer, insecticide, herbicide, and row-cleaner systems. Many 7000s remain in active service on smaller operations today, and the 250-page depth of this manual reflects the genuine complexity of setting up and maintaining a large folding planter correctly.

What This Manual Covers

This 250-page manual covers all three folding configurations across every operational and service aspect of the 7000 planter, with separate documentation where procedures differ by row count or frame type. Key sections include:

  • Safety — John Deere's original safety requirements for large folding planter operation, transport, and field use
  • Preparing for Use — pre-season setup, inspection, and preparation procedures
  • Attaching to Tractor — hitch setup, hydraulic connections, and PTO/marker line connections
  • Control Console — full documentation of the 7000's control console operation, monitor functions, and settings
  • Folding & Unfolding the Planter — step-by-step hydraulic folding and unfolding procedures for safe operation
  • Transporting — transport configuration, road safety, and width compliance procedures
  • Operating the Planter — field operation, row unit setup, depth adjustment, downforce settings, and marker operation
  • Planting Rates — seed population charts and rate adjustment procedures for corn and other row crops
  • Troubleshooting — systematic diagnosis of planting problems, monitor errors, and hydraulic issues
  • Detaching from Tractor — correct disconnection and parking procedures
  • Lubrication — lubrication points and service intervals for a large multi-section folding frame
  • Service — row unit service, finger pickup mechanism service, drive chain and sprocket maintenance
  • Attachments & Attachment Assembly — full documentation of fertilizer, insecticide, herbicide, and other attachment systems
  • Specifications — factory-specification settings, capacities, and dimensions
  • Index — full manual index for rapid field reference

Why This Manual Matters

  • Folding frame operation and safety: Correctly folding and unfolding a 12-row or wider planter requires following the factory sequence precisely — skipping steps or operating the hydraulics in the wrong order can damage the fold joints or create a transport width violation; the step-by-step procedures here are the authoritative reference
  • Finger pickup mechanism service: The 7000's finger pickup metering system requires periodic rubber finger inspection and replacement — the service section documents wear indicators, replacement procedure, and the timing relationship between pickup fingers and seed tube positioning that determines spacing accuracy
  • Control console documentation: The 7000's monitor and control console had more functions than most operators used to from older planters, and the full console documentation is necessary for understanding alarms, population monitoring, and hydraulic marker controls
  • Drive chain and sprocket setup: Population rate changes on the 7000 require drive sprocket changes and chain re-routing — the manual documents the sprocket combinations needed for each target population, which is the information operators lose first when a planter changes hands
  • 250 pages of coverage for a complex machine: A folding 16- or 18-row planter is genuinely complex equipment, and the 250-page depth of this manual reflects that — covering the full machine rather than summarizing it
  • Original factory content: This is the manual John Deere issued to 7000 folding planter owners, carrying manual code OM-A41143

Manual Code: OM-A41143

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Amazon Customer
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 5
A difficult book that must be read
This is a Pulitzer Prize winning novel by William Styron (the author of Sophie’s Choice). It is based on a slave revolt in Virginia in 1831, lead by Nate Turner. Turner’s capture and confession is the basis of this book. The novel is told in a 1st person narrative and is largely the work of Styron’s imagination. While it is brilliantly written Styron does include graphic scenes of highly erotic obsessions with various white women and one of the most vivid homosexual encounters in modern literature. Probably because of these scenes Styron was savaged by many of the leading black artists of the day but the book has endured the criticism and is, in many ways, an American Classic. Slavery is an indelible stain on the fabric of American culture. It will never be washed away. Turner is an aesthetic, a religious fanatic, a brilliant, tormented misanthropic, homicidal nihilist. His band of followers slaughters 52 men, women, and children. In retribution the white slaughter 200 blacks. Turner is captured, interrogated, and executed. Instead of inspiring a region wide uprising, he is brought down by his fellow blacks fighting alongside the plantation owners. It is a difficult book to read but it is a book that really should be read.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 18, 2013
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Bill Allen
Alexandria, US
★★★★★ 5
“The Confessions of Nat Turner” William Styron, 1966 Compelling ...
“The Confessions of Nat Turner” William Styron, 1966 Compelling is the word that comes to mind. This is a work of fiction based upon the actual event of Turners 1831 bloody insurrection. It is my option that a reasonably accurate portrayal of slave life and slave/slave owner relationships is presented. I will say that for my own part that, most of the time I was rooting for Nat. I don’t know that I have a clear understanding of Nat’s hatred except in the obvious; except for his education, why was his hatred so deep as to cause him to this violence? (In an afterword, Styron states that he believes Nat was insane but that in his novel he did not want an insane Nat) A thought that I had as I read the accounting was what if Turner had directed his energies toward educating other slaves? (Of course this would have been illegal but Nat’ owmer educated him.) A compelling read and I’m giving it 5 full stars.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 3, 2015
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Lavender
New York, US
★★★★★ 5
Extraordinary Chronicle of an Avenging Warrior
I purchased this book, although I had read this several years ago. My interest to revisit the novel was aroused when I read The Good Lord Bird and viewed the series. There are strong parallels in the struggles and the motivations explored in these works. Styron is a talented writer who makes this history come alive and gather relevance. The brutal consequences of an impossible circumstance lives on through this century as the legacy of slavery is explored in splendid literary works such as this powerful novel. I highly recommend it.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 7, 2021
K
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Kenny of LA
Whiting, US
★★★★★ 4
Make Sure You Read the Vintage Edition with the Afterword
I initially purchased this book to read for two reasons: First, it was written by William Styron, who wrote the great "Sophie's Choice;" and second, it won a Pulitzer Prize. It was only after I was into the book that I learned that this vintage sixties' book was the subject of a major controversy over the depiction of the title character, Nat Turner. I learned that Styron openly acknowledged fictionalizing large portions of Turner's life, including his motivations for leading the slave revolt. I also learned that Styron's largely fictionalized portrait of Turner outraged many black leaders of the time. Rather than painting Turner (entirely) as a hero, called to action by the injustices of slavery, Styron created a darker picture of a man fixated on religion, a vision of himself as a prophet, and frustrated by lust and desire (particularly, for a young, blond haired white girl). As I read the book, I search my own feelings, and felt that if I were black, I would certainly have objected similarly. We all need our heroes, who become much larger as symbols than they could ever be as people. For the sake of those that come after, such icons are perhaps entitled to be treated with a greater level of sensitivity and care--even at the cost of literary restraint. It is here that the story gets fascinating. After I finished the novel, I read Styron's Afterword. Styron was truly stung by the criticism and in the Afterword, provided an elegant and persuasive defense of his writings. While I will not say that Styron entirely changed my position, he definitely made me see the other side of the argument. The dialogue between Styron and his critics not only allows the reader to consider one of the great social and political issues of our time, but permits the reader a unique insight into the thinking of a great writer--and suffices, in and of itself, as a reason for reading this novel. MAKE SURE YOUR VERSION OF THE NOVEL HAS THIS AFTERWORD. Putting the issue aside as to the real "Nat Turner," the novel itself is beautifully written. The characters are fully developed and believable. The description of the system of slavery and the relationship between whites and blacks feel very real, and very accurate. Styron shows us good and bad of each race, and how all of them are bound by the system of slavery and their actions directly the product of it.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 26, 2008
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Cstro
Cuba, US
★★★★★ 5
I loved this book.
I read this book for my book club and I thought it was beautifully written. It has stayed with me for weeks now. I love when a book does that. I'm glad I wasn't swayed by controversy. I had no problem with the fact that the author was white and using a black voice(maybe because I'm white - but I do like when an author gets the voice right and I thought Styron did that). I didn't understand the charges of racism after reading the book. Sometimes I wonder if, what some people find uncomfortable, they label as racist or sexist or whatever. Anyway, I would encourage everyone to read this book because it gave me a fresh awareness of a huge part of U.S. history, it reminded me that there are always gray areas to consider and it was a great novel. You might think so too.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 8, 2007

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