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UK Farmer Cuts Costs with Precision Spreading: Kverneland Exacta TL GEOSPREAD iDC Spreader

Kverneland Exacta TL GEOSPREAD iDC with Intelligent Disc Control (iDC), helped UK farmer, Henry, cut costs, boost efficiency, and achieve precise spreading.

Farmer Henry Peasgood standing in front of a tractor with a Kverneland Exacta-TL GEOSPREAD iDC disc spreader, designed for precision fertilizer application in modern farming, attached to the back of it.

“We had been using a four-bag capacity, 17-year old spreader on 24m tramlines, so there was an opportunity for us to improve accuracy and efficiency, and try to save money,” explains Henry Peasgood of Peasgood & Sons, Langtoft, Lincolnshire. “Adopting variable rate brought in SFI payments that have more than covered the cost of our new Kverneland spreader. It’s been a no-brainer.”

From an investment viewpoint, Henry says the funding that was available outweighed the cost of buying the range-topping spreader, which he and his Dad Robert couldn’t ignore.

Henry Peasgood loading fertiliser into the Kverneland Exacta TL GEOSPREAD iDC.

“SFI is paying out £15,000/year over three years for variable rate applications, while SOYL’s sampling costs us £3,000/year, so we’re getting a net gain of £12,000/year for investing in Kverneland’s spreader technology,” he says. “We couldn’t afford not to buy the spreader and it will be easily paid for in under three years.”

With the exception of a small area of land rented out to a local potato grower, the Peasgoods farm around 2,000 acres of combinable crops spread over a six-mile radius of its Langtoft base. Cropping includes winter and spring barley, winter wheat, beans and sugar beet.

Field sizes vary from two to 110 acres, and tramlines are now at 30m spacings. Equipped with three hopper extensions, the new spreader can carry up to 3.6 tonnes – the equivalent of six bags.

“The extra hopper capacity means fewer trips to the fields and we’re spreading 25% wider too, and one of the key innovations on this model is the lack of PTO shaft,” he says. “It’s a huge safety improvement, but it’s also delivering a big fuel saving for us too.”

Used on either the farm’s Fendt 724 or 728 tractors, Mr Peasgood says the hydraulic disc drive means the engine is running at a leisurely 1,300rpm.

“Where fuel consumption with a PTO shaft was from 18-20 litres/hour, it’s now down to around 8-12 litres/hour,” he says. “I’m also spreading at around 18km/hr.”

Supplied by Chandlers Farm Equipment for the 2025 season, the Kverneland Exacta TL GEOSPREAD iDC disc spreader also features MULTIRATE in addition to auto start/stop and section control. ISOBUS connectivity means the spreader pops up on the tractor’s in-cab Vario terminal, avoiding the need to buy a terminal for the Kverneland spreader.

The tractor terminal displaying Kverneland Exacta TL GEOSPREAD iDC's interface through the ISOBUS connection.

“The Kverneland Exacta TL GEOSPREAD iDC is a very easy spreader to use, and everything you need to know is right in front of you, on the display,” he says. “It is plug and play. The only drawback is our older 724 tractor's terminal hasn’t the computing power to run the sophisticated MULTIRATE system, but the Gen 7 728 tractor can.”

MULTIRATE has the ability to take a full width variable rate map and split the application rate across eight sections over the full spreading width, boosting application accuracy even further.

“With MULTIRATE and variable rate maps, we’re now getting far more accurate fertiliser placement rather than just varying the rate at 30m,” he says. “And RTK means we really are making the most of 1cm accuracy, and I use full auto-steering on permanent tramlines too.”

Initially sceptical of the Kverneland spreader’s ability to deliver pin-point accuracy, Mr Peasgood over-ordered fertiliser for the farm.

“We’ve always bought two tonnes more than we should ever really need,” says Henry. “Nobody wants to be short, so having a bit extra was always safer than running out and in previous years’ we’ve always used it. But the accuracy of the new Kverneland spreader is mind-blowing.”

Fendt tractor spreading fertilizer with Kverneland Exacta TL GEOSPREAD in a crop field
Peasgood & Sons showing their new Kverneland Exacta TL GEOSPREAD iDC in action.

He says the application rate is always within 10kg of the target rate, meaning the accuracy of the Kverneland Exacta TL GEOSPREAD iDC is spot on!

“I just didn’t expect the spreader to be this good,” he says. “So I’ve two tonnes extra sat in the shed, and that’s £1500 more than I needed to spend. Fortunately, it’ll be offset against next year’s fertiliser requirements.”

This experience has changed the way the Peasgood family looks at spreading. What began as scepticism has turned into clear, measurable gains.

In summary, the Kverneland Exacta TL GEOSPREAD iDC has provided Henry and Peasgood & Sons with the benefits of:

  • Pin-point accurate spreading: Application always within 10 kg of the target rate
  • Less fertiliser costs: Two tonnes of fertiliser left over — about £1,500 saved
  • Less fuel costs: Went from 18-20 l/hour, down to only 8-12 l/hour
  • Now able to plan needed fertiliser amount: No longer needs to over-order fertiliser “just in case"
  • Ease of use: Clear on-screen display, simple plug-and-play setup
  • Smarter spreading maps: Variable rate maps used across the whole working width, not just in sections
  • RTK integration: 1 cm accuracy with full auto-steering on permanent tramlines

Read more about the Kverneland Exacta TL GEOSPREAD iDC:

Tractor using a red Kverneland Exacta TL GEOSPREAD iDC fertilizer spreader in a green crop field