Machinery Planting John Deere Furrow Vision gives direct view of seed while planting The upgrade puts a camera on the planter row unit, looking directly down into the furrow as farmers are planting. By Alex Gray Alex Gray Alex joined the Successful Farming team in December 2021 as the New Products Editor. Alex has been with Dotdash Meredith since 2021, starting in the imaging department and working on magazines across the company's entire portfolio before moving to Successful Farming. Successful Farming's Editorial Guidelines Published on March 9, 2023 Close Photo: John Deere John Deere has announced Furrow Vision, a performance upgrade for John Deere planters that gives farmers a direct view of the seed as it's dropped in furrows. The upgrade puts a camera on the planter row unit, looking directly down into the furrow as farmers are planting, providing real-time visuals on the farmer's in-cab display. The system combines the camera view, and information from lasers measuring seed depth, to produce digestible data on the display. "Most customers have to get out, dig, check in-field to understand what's going on in the furrow," says Kevin Juhl, product line marketing manager for John Deere. "What this does is it checks every seed and in row, to tell you what's going on." READ MORE: John Deere unveils ExactShot, fully electric excavator at CES 2023 The system places a camera across each section of the planter, one on the left, right, and center wing, regardless of size — a 12-, 16-, or 24-row planter will have three total cameras. As farmers are moving through the field, they will be able to pause the video and rewind where needed to evaluate seed-to-soil contact while planting. Availability Furrow Vision will be first available as a performance upgrade to existing planters, with specific model-compatibility and system requirements still in development. The system has been in testing for a few years, and John Deere will announce availability as soon as they are confident in the system and supply availability, according to Juhl. For more information, visit JohnDeere.com. Was this page helpful? Thanks for your feedback! Tell us why! Other Submit