Combines For Sale in Canada

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    About Combines

    Self-propelled combine harvesters perform a “combination” of all the necessary tasks to bring in a crop: reaping (cutting), threshing, and winnowing (cleaning). Combines use a variety of interchangeable headers designed for harvesting specific crop types.

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    1 - 28 of 11,213 Listings

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    Hours3,910
    Separator Hours2,592
    Drive4WD
    Location: Westbourne, Manitoba, Canada
    Seller: Grunthal Auction Service
    Online Auction
    2014 JOHN DEERE S680 Used Combines upcoming auctions2014 JOHN DEERE S680 Used Combines upcoming auctions
     
     
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    Auction Date:2026-07-13 9:00:00 AM (CDT)
    ConditionUsed
    Stock Number4300
    Location: Adrian, Minnesota, USA
    Seller: Kerr Auction
    Hours3,447
    Separator Hours2,680
    Drive4WD
    Location: Sainte-Brigide-D'iberville, Quebec, Canada
    Seller: Phaneuf – Agricultural Equipment
    Hours1,274
    Separator Hours927
    Drive4WD
    Location: Sainte-Brigide-D'iberville, Quebec, Canada
    Seller: Phaneuf – Agricultural Equipment
    Drive4WD
    Crop TypeCorn/Beans
    ConditionUsed
    Location: Upton, Quebec, Canada
    Seller: Phaneuf – Agricultural Equipment
    Hours740
    Separator Hours477
    Crop TypeCorn/Beans
    Location: Sainte-Brigide-D'iberville, Quebec, Canada
    Seller: Phaneuf – Agricultural Equipment
    Hours5,957
    Separator Hours4,604
    Drive4WD
    Location: Foxwarren, Manitoba, Canada
    Seller: Ernest Hofer
    Hours3,533.2
    Separator Hours2,627.9
    Crop TypeGrain
    Location: Morris, Manitoba, Canada
    Seller: Ronald Dreger
    Hours474
    Separator Hours363
    ConditionUsed
    Location: Keg River, Alberta, Canada
    Seller: Doug Jaeger
    Hours585
    Separator Hours1,485
    Serial NumberYJG235840
    Location: Macgregor, Manitoba, Canada
    Seller: Travis Snaith
    Hours802
    Separator Hours499.8
    Drive2WD
    Location: Kinistino, Saskatchewan, Canada
    Seller: Ian Thorson
    Hours4,432.2
    Separator Hours3,312.7
    Crop TypeGrain
    Location: Morris, Manitoba, Canada
    Seller: Ronald Dreger
    Hours5,019
    Separator Hours5,019
    Drive2WD
    Location: Kinkora, Prince Edward Island, Canada
    Seller: Jason Webster
    Hours4,244
    Separator Hours2,389
    Drive2WD
    Location: Kinkora, Prince Edward Island, Canada
    Seller: Jason Webster
    Hours2,946
    Separator Hours2,200
    ConditionUsed
    Location: Teeswater, Ontario, Canada
    Seller: Will Vloet
    Hours1,490
    Separator Hours1,135
    ConditionUsed
    Location: Ripley, Ontario, Canada
    Seller: Brucelea Poultry Farm
    Hours4,213
    Separator Hours2,850
    Crop TypeGrain
    Location: Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada
    Seller: Brandt Tractor Ltd - Ag (Saskatoon)
    Hours1,571
    Separator Hours1,065
    Drive2WD
    Location: Bassano, Alberta, Canada
    Seller: Brandt Tractor Ltd. - Ag (Bassano)
    Hours3,516
    Separator Hours2,581
    Drive2WD
    Location: Trochu, Alberta, Canada
    Seller: Brandt Tractor Ltd. - Ag (Trochu)
    Hours2,194
    Separator Hours1,532
    Serial Number1H0S790SJJ0800260
    Location: Rosthern, Saskatchewan, Canada
    Seller: Brandt Tractor Ltd. - Ag (Rosthern)
    Hours583
    Separator Hours348
    Drive2WD
    Location: Rocky View, Alberta, Canada
    Seller: Brandt Tractor Ltd. - Ag (Rocky View)
    Hours852
    Separator Hours624
    Drive2WD
    Location: Watrous, Saskatchewan, Canada
    Seller: Brandt Tractor Ltd. - Ag (Watrous)
    Hours816
    Separator Hours508
    Drive2WD
    Location: Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada
    Seller: Brandt Tractor Ltd - Ag (Saskatoon)
    Hours891
    Separator Hours710
    Drive2WD
    Location: Drumheller, Alberta, Canada
    Seller: Brandt Tractor Ltd. - Ag (Drumheller)
    Hours2,352
    Serial NumberYHG233557
    ConditionUsed
    Location: North Battleford, Saskatchewan, Canada
    Seller: Redhead Equipment
    Hours1,104
    Serial NumberHAJF8N4KPMG244377
    ConditionUsed
    Location: Lloydminster, Saskatchewan, Canada
    Seller: Redhead Equipment
    Hours1,052
    Serial NumberHAJF9N4LKNG248941
    ConditionUsed
    Location: Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, Canada
    Seller: Redhead Equipment
    Hours1,413
    Serial NumberHAJF9N4KVLG243294
    ConditionUsed
    Location: Swift Current, Saskatchewan, Canada
    Seller: Redhead Equipment

    About Combines

    Combines represent a type of primarily self-propelled harvester that “combines” all the necessary tasks: reaping or cutting, threshing, and winnowing or cleaning. In other words, it separates the edible, nutritious part of the plant from the stalk, chaff, or straw. The crop is either stored for periodic offloading or continuously conveyed via auger into a grain cart driving next to the combine. The chaff is typically dumped or spread out from the rear of the machine.


    Case IH Axial-Flow 9250 Combine

    Combines are typically diesel-powered and can use a variety of front-mounted heads, or headers, depending on the grain or cereal crop being harvested. For example, row crop headers are designed for inline crops such as corn, while platform or draper heads are optimised for harvesting wheat. Farmers also use combines with headers suitable for oats, barley, soybeans, rice, sorghum, flax, canola, and other crops.

    History

    The first combine harvesters appeared in the 1800s, drastically improving the amount of work each farmer could do and reducing the number of workers necessary to bring in a harvest. An American named Hiram Moore developed a livestock-pulled combine harvester in 1835, borrowing ideas from a reaper machine invented by Scotland’s Reverend Patrick Bell several years earlier.

    The first self-propelled harvester came about in 1911 thanks to the Holt Manufacturing Company, which would later become famous for its Caterpillar machinery. Case, John Deere, and International Harvester worked on pull-type combines in the following years. Other self-propelled models appeared from Gleaner in 1923, an Argentinian inventor named Alfredo Rotania in 1929, and notably from Australian Thomas Carroll in 1937 and 1940 (models No. 20 and 21) while working for Massey-Harris.

    Important combine improvements include the use of tracks for better flotation across fields and stability on slopes, sidehill leveling capabilities (Raymond Hanson, 1946), unloading augers for emptying the grain into a wagon or truck (Lyle Yost, 1947), continuously variable transmissions to separate forward speed from threshing speed (1950s), self-cleaning rotary screens (mid-1960s), hydrostatic drive systems (1960s), grain loss monitoring (late 1960s), rotary combines (Sperry-New Holland, 1975) and axial-flow models (International Harvester, 1977) with more effective crop separation, and automatic header height and level control (1990s).

    Modern Technology

    More recently, manufacturers have developed technologies that let combines automatically compensate for crop conditions, reduce grain loss, and even guide themselves and a grain cart using GPS data and advanced sensors. Telematics systems allow combines to report data to the farm’s home office, agronomists, and technical support personnel, while remote monitoring allows a farm manager to view the data on the combine’s in-cab screen.

    Find The Right Combine Harvester

    Popular manufacturers of new and combines for sale on MarketBook include Case IH, CLAAS, Gleaner, John Deere, Massey Ferguson, New Holland, and others. Some of the most plentiful models on the site are the John Deere S680 and S670, Case IH 8240 and 8230, the CLAAS LEXION series, and New Holland’s various CR9000 series models.