Claas PDF manuals, parts and wiring diagrams

Claas Combine Manuals PDF Free Download

Download
Lexion_470-480
ba_lexion_470-480
ba_lexion_470-480.pdf
Adobe Acrobat Document 15.2 MB
Download
Lexion_510-560
Lexion_510-560
ba_lexion_510-560.pdf
Adobe Acrobat Document 21.7 MB

Download
Claas Dominator-58-48-38 Service Manual.
Claas Dominator-58-48-38 Service Manual.
Claas Dominator-58-48-38 Service Manual.
Adobe Acrobat Document 7.1 MB
Download
Claas Lexion 500 R Service Manual
Claas Lexion 500 R Service Manual
Claas Lexion 500 R Service Manual.pdf
Adobe Acrobat Document 1.2 MB

Download
Claas OPTIMISING OUTPUT FROM YOUR COMBINE
Claas OPTIMISING OUTPUT FROM YOUR COMBINE
Claas OPTIMISING OUTPUT FROM YOUR COMBIN
Adobe Acrobat Document 562.5 KB
Download
Claas Tucano 3 and 4 Series Service Manual
Claas Tucano 3 and 4 Series Service Manual
Claas Tucano 3 and 4 Series Service Manu
Adobe Acrobat Document 6.5 MB

The History of Claas Combine

Today's buyer has a very strong belief: everything that is developed and manufactured in Germany is invariably associated with high reliability and unsurpassed workmanship. This applies to daily necessities as well as high-tech products.

CLAAS logoTherefore, among the representatives of agriculture, all equipment manufactured by CLAAS enjoys well-deserved popularity and sympathy. Indeed, like many other now world-famous equipment, this brand of agricultural equipment began with one very small family business in the German town of Harsewinkel.

 

1887 is considered the year of foundation of this company, which was originally engaged in a completely different kind of production and specialized in the development and production of milk centrifuges. The company inherited its name and trademark from the founder, Franz Klaas Sr., whose son became at its helm in 1913 and later, joining forces with the rest of the brothers, set about promoting the idea of producing agricultural machinery for the needs of Germany. The brothers began to develop a prototype already in 1930.

However, the first serious success for their enterprise came only six years later, when their harvesting device attached to the leading tractor, and in fact it was the first combine harvester assembled on the territory of modern Europe, fell in love with German farmers. Therefore, a year later, this combine began to be mass-produced. The combine was a universal unit that combined a mower, a threshing machine, and a knitting machine, and could process thirty tons of wheat, unprecedented for those times, in one day.

And twenty years later, a fully self-propelled combine, equipped with its own propulsion unit, entered the fields, which actually became the standard for modern agricultural machinery. With the passage of time and the advent of new technologies, this combine has only been improved and refined for more efficient work in a wide variety of climates and work with different types of crops.