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- How To Use A Food Plot Seeder
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- Which tillage tool might be right for you
- Why vertical tillage might be right for you
- How to adjust and operate the VT17 Series vertical tillage tools
- How to maintain a gravel drive using a box blade with hydraulic scarifiers
- How To Control Water Drainage In A Small Feed Lot
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- How to use a wood chipper.
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- How to use a land plane
- How to dethatch your lawn.
- How to use a box blade: The basics
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- How to use a tractor mount rotary tiller in your large vegetable garden
- How to make great garden soil.
- Frontier WR00 Series Carted Wheel Rakes
- Frontier WR31 Series High Capacity Carted Wheel Rakes.
- How to use a one-row cultivator.
- How to aerate, fertilize and over seed your lawn
- How to use a grooming mower
- How to use a one-bottom plow
- How to use a manure spreader
- How to adjust and use a rotary cutter
- How to Fill And Level A Low Spot With Gravel
- Frontier TD34 Series Hay Tedders
- How to use a subsoiler
- How to use a rotary tiller
- How to Maintain A Gravel Drive
- Frontier DM50 Series Disc Mower.
- How to use a middle buster
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Used Equipment
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Lawn
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Order Parts Online
-
Service
-
About
-
John Deere Tips Notebook
- The Top 10 implements you should acquire first
- How To Adjust & Operate The Frontier LS1145 Mounted Sprayer
- How To Control Weeds
- How To Build A Self-Filling Livestock Water Tank
- How To Adjust & Operate The Frontier LS11 Series Mounted Sprayers
- How To Use A Manure Fork
- How To Use A Food Plot Seeder
- How To Remove A Tree Stump
- Which tillage tool might be right for you
- Why vertical tillage might be right for you
- How to adjust and operate the VT17 Series vertical tillage tools
- How to maintain a gravel drive using a box blade with hydraulic scarifiers
- How To Control Water Drainage In A Small Feed Lot
- How to gravel a farm road using a drawn box scraper
- How To Use A Wood Chipper
- How To Clear Debris Using A Root Grapple
- How To Plant A Food Plot
- How To Handle Large Round Bales
- How To Renovate A Pasture
- How To Gravel A Country Lane
- How to get driveway gravel out of the grass.
- How to use a wood chipper.
- Why shorten a PTO shaft?
- How to choose the right hay tedder for you.
- How to plant a wildlife food plot.
- How to maintain a one- or two-bottom plow.
- How to aerate, fertilize and over seed your lawn.
- How to use a middle buster in your garden.
- How to store off-season equipment
- How to free a tractor stuck in the mud.
- How to create a large vegetable garden with a one-bottom plow
- Time for your tractor’s spring maintenance?
- How to build a rail fence
- How to restore a pasture
- The Top 10 implements you should acquire first.
- How to use a tractor mounted rotary cutter
- How to use a PTO-driven post hole digger
- How to maintain a gravel drive
- How to use a land plane
- How to dethatch your lawn.
- How to use a box blade: The basics
- How to eliminate standing water using a subsoiler.
- How to plant a wildflower meadow
- How to use a tractor mount rotary tiller in your large vegetable garden
- How to make great garden soil.
- Frontier WR00 Series Carted Wheel Rakes
- Frontier WR31 Series High Capacity Carted Wheel Rakes.
- How to use a one-row cultivator.
- How to aerate, fertilize and over seed your lawn
- How to use a grooming mower
- How to use a one-bottom plow
- How to use a manure spreader
- How to adjust and use a rotary cutter
- How to Fill And Level A Low Spot With Gravel
- Frontier TD34 Series Hay Tedders
- How to use a subsoiler
- How to use a rotary tiller
- How to Maintain A Gravel Drive
- Frontier DM50 Series Disc Mower.
- How to use a middle buster
Krone Swadro 1010

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Three-Rotor Rakes Swadro 1010
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Features
Heavy-duty and maintenance-free
- Maintenance-free rotors and rotor gearboxes
- Hard-wearing DuraMax cam tracks with a three-year warranty
- Rotors featuring the KRONE Jet Effect to avoid crop contamination on headlands
Permanently lubricated and maintenance-free. The enclosed bevel gearboxes and the tine arm rollers are permanently lubricated for optimum care and attention. So, operators need not bother to lube a single component on the rotor.
Steep cam tracks: As the rollers move in steep cam tracks they lift and lower the tine arms quickly and with greatest precision to the effect that the crop stays clean and the windrows are tidy and boxy. The 47 mm (2") diameter tine guiding rollers offer a generous contact area, are protected from ingress of dust and absolutely maintenance-free.
Hard-wearing KRONE DuraMax cam tracks: For greatest longevity, these cam tracks are made from high-tensile and Bainite-tempered cast SG iron which offers exceptional resistance to wear and tear and is absolutely maintenance-free. For this reason, KRONE is able to offer a three-year warranty on these DuraMax cam tracks.
The cardanic rotor suspension
Great flexibility and cleanest rakes
- Optimum contouring in any direction through pivoting rotors
- Cleanest forage from the KRONE Jet Effect during take-off and touch-down
- Central suspension for a uniform ground pressure across the full widths of the rotors
The cardanic rotor suspension: The rotors pivot in and across the direction of travel to give optimum adaptation to undulating ground. A cardanic joint on the arm with two elongated holes prevents the tines from being pressed into the ground or from being left suspended in the air, thereby avoiding crop contamination as well as throwing the grass about.
The central suspension: The rotors suspend centrally across the direction of travel which allows them to produce consistent and high-quality windrows. The special suspension ensures they always stay level as they lift and lower on the headland. In addition, the machine’s weight is distributed uniformly on all wheels of the running gear as it travels down the field.
The Jet Effect
The KRONE Jet Effect prevents the tines from damaging the sward on the headland and ensures the crop stays clean. As the bogies are lowered into work, the rear wheels touch down first before the leading wheels follow. Vice versa, as the rotors lift out it is the leading wheels that lift out first and the rear wheels that follow. This is identical with the take-off and touch-down phases observed with airplanes.
The trailing rotors: The rotors are trailed rather than being pushed in direction of travel. Therefore they enjoy greater flexibility in following ground contours and there is no risk of tines being pressed into the soil
The running gear
Great stability and excellent tracking
- Cleanest rakes as the bogie wheels run in vicinity of the tines
- Straightforward angle adjustment
- Castering wheels are standard at the front and an option at the rear to protect the sward
The KRONE Tridem running gear: All rotors run on a Tridem running gear from KRONE. Specified as standard, the running gear consists of an extra wide rear axle and a flexible front axle which form a triangle. Occupying all space under the rotor, the construction has the wheels stabilise the rotors exactly in those areas the tines work under load.
Wide track width and quiet running: It is the extra wide tracking width of the running gear that absorbs the forces that are generated by the rotors and keeps them level and stable in undulating terrain.
The Tandem running gear: A Tandem running gear is available for the rear axle where it enhances rotor control.
The tine arms
Stable running and tidy windrowing
- Large-diameter and thick-walled tine arms ensure absolutely dependable operation
- Easy and fast tine arm attachment and removal
- Sturdy foldback mechanism
Each tine arm is easily removed: Simply undo two bolts to remove the entire arm complete with bearing and roller.
Folding tine arms: Most Swadro models can be specified with foldable tine arms that reduce the machine's storage and transport height clearly below 4 m (13'2").
KRONE Lift tines
Better and faster – courtesy of KRONE Lift Tines
All rakes in this brochure are specified with the new Lift Tines. The specialty about these is the fact that they are angled in two different positions. This optimized design brings special advantages which have been explored in field trials by KRONE and verified by a DLG test.
KRONE rakes with Lift Tines
- They rake up more material per hectare at typical work rates and with tines in typical settings and cut common loss rates by 50%
- They deliver 2 km/h (1.24 mph) higher work rates without compromising on the quality of work
- They give more effective rakes and protect the sward at an up to 1 cm (3'3") higher ground clearance
- They lead to better quality forage, as their Lift effect and higher ground clearance minimize contamination
Setting the tines to an optimum position: The special Lift tines perform better, because their ends maintain a steep angle even in heavy crop and lift it more easily, which leads to more uniform windrows. As a result, the machine can work at a faster pace and still deliver consistently well shaped windrows.
No crop contamination: Thanks to their excellent performance, the Lift tines can work at a greater ground clearance than traditional tines. And thus reduce the risk of crop contamination as well as tine wear.
KRONE Lift tines
Better and faster – courtesy of KRONE Lift Tines
All rakes in this brochure are specified with the new Lift Tines. The specialty about these is the fact that they are angled in two different positions. This optimized design brings special advantages which have been explored in field trials by KRONE and verified by a DLG test.
KRONE rakes with Lift Tines
- They rake up more material per hectare at typical work rates and with tines in typical settings and cut common loss rates by 50%
- They deliver 2 km/h (1.24 mph) higher work rates without compromising on the quality of work
- They give more effective rakes and protect the sward at an up to 1 cm (3'3") higher ground clearance
- They lead to better quality forage, as their Lift effect and higher ground clearance minimize contamination
Specs
Model | Swadro 1010 |
Work width single raking mm (inch) double raking |
9,700 (31'10") |
No. of rotors | 3 |
Area output Approx. ha/h | 9-10 (22-24.7) |
Transport width mm (inch) | 2,995 (9'10") |
No. of tine arms | 36 |
No. of double tines | 157 |
Rotor diameter mm (inch) | 1 x 2,960 (1 x 9'9") 2 x 3,600 (2 x 11'10") |
Work depth control mechanical electric |
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Tire size on bogies | 16x6.50-8 |
Tire size on running gear | 15/55-17/10 PR |
Power requirement Approx. kW/hp | 59/80 |
Weight Approx. kg (lbs) | 2,920 (6,437) |
Two-point hitch | Standard |
Drawbar | - |
Storage length mm (inch) | 9,800 (32'2") |
Rigid tine arms Folding tine arms |
- Standard |
Storage height machine with rigid tine arms mm (inch) machine with folding tine arms mm (inch) |
4,300 (14'1") 3,800 (12'6") |
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Bay City
1402 FM 3156
Bay City, TX 77414
979-245-2711
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Beaumont
9135 College St.
Beaumont, TX 77707
409-842-1128
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East Bernard
625 N SH 60 Hwy
East Bernard, TX 77435
979-335-4887
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El Campo
25830 US 59 Rd.
El Campo, TX 77437
979-543-8363
Map & Hours -
Liberty
2210 Hwy 90 East
Liberty, TX 77575
936-336-7226
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Victoria
9806 US Hwy 59
Victoria, TX 77905
361-578-7072
Map & Hours -
Shiner
1012 Hwy 95 North
Shiner, TX 77984
361-594-3312
Map & Hours -
Giddings
1309 E. Austin St.
Giddings, TX 78942
979-542-2259
Map & Hours
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