Various machines meter out seeds for sowing in rows. The ones that handle larger seeds tend to be called planters, whereas the ones that handle smaller seeds tend to be called
seed drills, grain drills, and seeders (including precision seeders). They all share a set of similar
concepts in the ways that they work, but there is established
usage in which the machines for sowing some
crops including
maize (corn),
beans, and
peas are mostly called planters, whereas those that sow
cereals are drills. On smaller and older planters, a marker extends out to the side half the width of the planter and creates a line in the field where the tractor should be centered for the next pass. The marker is usually a single
disc harrow disc on a rod on each side of the planter. On larger and more modern planters, GPS navigation and auto-steer systems for the tractor are often used, eliminating the need for the marker. Some precision farming equipment such as Case IH AFS uses GPS/RKS and computer-controlled planter to sow seeds to precise position accurate within 2 cm. In an irregularly shaped field, the precision farming equipment will automatically hold the seed release over area already sewn when the tractor has to run overlapping pattern to avoid obstacles such as trees. Older planters commonly have a seed bin for each row and a fertilizer bin for two or more rows. In each seed bin plates are installed with a certain number of teeth and tooth spacing according to the type of seed to be sown and the rate at which the seeds are to be sown. The tooth size (actually the size of the space between the teeth) is just big enough to allow one seed in at a time but not big enough for two. Modern planters often have a large bin for seeds that are distributed to each row known as central commodity systems. A class of planters that dig down farther than others are called listers. They are not used much any more, as their use belonged to a set of high-
till methods that low-till and
no-till methods have largely replaced. Corn listers were common on the
Great Plains in the 1920s through 1950s. == Drive systems ==