Farming worldwide is becoming more complex with increasing environmental demands plus the continued need to further cut production costs per ton. HOLT® and LEXION® combines are your ideal partners to face these challenges with the right technology to improve your bottom line.
LEXION’s products include rotary combines, straw walker combines, grain headers, flex headers, corn headers, chopping corn heads, VARIO headers, rice headers, and pick-up headers.
The LEXION combine range has established a unique reputation for setting performance standards and the new LEXION 500 range continues the trend in terms of cutting production costs. The line includes a full range of sizes: class 6, 7, 8, and the industry's only class 9.
With industry-leading fuel economy and legendary Cat® engines (up to 462 hp for the class 9 combine), you can’t go wrong with a LEXION, the most advanced in the industry.
LEXION Rotary Combines
Increased globalization and further liberalization of agricultural policy demand more cost-efficient production methods. In agricultural terms this means constantly keeping production costs per ton low. Our state-of-the-art harvesting technology enables you to work efficiently and reap significant cost benefits. All LEXION combines share the patented and powerful APS threshing system and the same twin rotor design for industry-leading centrifugal force and separation performance.
We set the standard in combine technology. By driving research and development and continuously setting milestones, a market leader has the capacity to astonish the competition. We offer the world’s only class 9 rotary combine, the LEXION 590R/595R, venturing into new realms of efficiency and productivity.
LEXION Straw Walker Combines
LEXION makes the world’s largest straw walker combine, the LEXION 570. All of our combines share the patented and powerful APS threshing system. Straw walker separation models use 6 straw walkers for separation, assisted by the LEXION’s multifinger separation system (MSS) to further agitate the material.
