Trimble Farm Works Information Management User Guide
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Version 2015 or later
Revision A
January 2015
User Guide
Farm Works™ Mapping Software
Contact and Legal Information
Contact Details
Farm Works Information Management
A division of Trimble
PO Box 250
Hamilton, IN 46742
USA
USA
Canada
+1 800-282-4103
Other countries +1 260-488-3492
Europe
Australia
New Zealand
+44 1786-465100
+61 (3) 8680-7222
Legal Notices
Copyright and Trademarks
© 2010–2015, Trimble Navigation Limited. All rights reserved. Trimble, Farm Works Software, AgGPS, EZ-Guide, EZ-Pilot, FmX,
GreenSeeker, Juno, Nomad, and Yuma are registered trademarks of Trimble Navigation Limited, registered in the United States and in other countries. CFX-750, Connected Farm, Farm Works, FM-750, FM-1000, TMX-2050, and XCN-2050 are trademarks of Trimble Navigation
Limited.
Microsoft, ActiveSync, Windows, Windows Vista, and Windows Mobile are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Microsoft
Corporation in the United States and/or other countries.
All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
Release Notice
This is the January 2015 release, version 2015 or later, Revision A of the Farm Works Mapping Software User Guide.
Product Limited Warranty Information
For applicable product Limited Warranty information, please refer to Legal Notices in the License Agreement for this product, or consult your local Farm Works authorized dealer.
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Contents
1 Getting Started . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Related information and technical support . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Windows Vista and Windows 7 operating system . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Registering the software . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Creating and opening a farm project . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Selecting a measurement system . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Changing user information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Changing the working date / system date . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Menus, submenus, and contextual menus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Toolbars . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
2 Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .24
Setup options . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Adding a new Supply . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
Adding a new Tank Mix . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
Editing a Commodity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
Managing Farms, Fields, and Inputs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
Viewing or modifying information. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
Deleting a farm, field, or input . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
Retiring a farm, field, or input . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
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3 Field Record Keeping . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .61
Using the View menu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
Completing planned jobs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
Recording tillage operations (manually) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
Recording planting operations (manually) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
Recording harvesting operations (manually). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73
Editing landlord/sharecrop information when completing a job . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78
Finding a job in the Farm tab. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79
Finding a job in the Jobs tab . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79
Finding a job in the Inputs tab . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81
Exporting CSV or XML files . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82
Importing FODM XML files . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83
Linking resources when synchronizing or importing jobs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
Adding weather information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87
Viewing and printing a weather report . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88
Assigning a County and State to each field . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94
Assigning RMA Identities to Commodities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95
Assigning a Practice and Type . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97
Submitting data to Great American Insurance Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99
Linking crops. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101
Changing Practices and Types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102
Filtering listed fields . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103
Submitted data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104
Printing Job reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109
Printing a Job Efficiency report . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111
Printing Field, Equipment, and Supply usage reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114
4 Mapping Software . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119
Downloading road and waterway data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122
Calibrating and geo-referencing images without GPS data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123
Registering GPS points . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123
Calibrating the image . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 124
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Loading the image . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 126
Drawing and importing boundaries. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127
Drawing field boundary maps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 127
Automatically drawing fields from yield maps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 132
Importing field boundaries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135
Field boundary display: View changes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 139
Working with Guidance Line Layers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154
Creating area features . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 158
Creating line features . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159
Creating point features . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 160
Multi Swath Lines management. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 161
Crop Row Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 161
Working with Multi Swath Lines as planting lines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 164
Editing row settings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 165
Creating planned Multi Swath Lines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 168
Copying planned Multi Swath Lines from other sources. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 170
Working with offsets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 174
Working with Swath IDs for Case and New Holland displays . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 175
Editing individual line Swath IDs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 177
Editing Swath IDs for multiple lines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 179
Creating clip lines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 180
Clipping lines to an area . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 182
Writing out planned and crop row lines for use with a display . . . . . . . . . . . . . 183
Working with yield and as-applied maps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 186
Importing Job data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 186
Importing CNH vault data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 190
Importing CNH large square baler data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 192
Analyzing yield and as-applied data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 195
Reprocessing Trimble yield data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 198
Merging jobs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 200
Splitting point data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 201
Creating reconciled yield maps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 203
Adding polygon variety maps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 205
Hand-drawing polygon variety maps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 207
Writing Variety maps to a supported device . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 212
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Using ranges created by the software . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 218
Creating your own ranges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 220
Changing the colors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 221
Creating a template . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 224
The Show Me feature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 226
Markers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 227
Working with grids and contour maps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 228
Adding grids or contours to a map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 228
Averaging polygons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 232
Downloading and importing soil type maps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 237
Creating a soil sample grid map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 239
Modifying soil sample grid maps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 243
Exporting soil sample grid maps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 244
Importing soil sample data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 245
Exporting VRA maps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 255
Exporting VRA map to a third-party controller or monitor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 257
5 Mapping Analysis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 266
6 Office Sync. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 278
Working with mobile devices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 280
Logging in to your Office Sync account . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 281
Office Sync tab . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 282
Uploading resources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 283
Sending a Work Order . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 286
Processing the Inbox . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 287
Previous files . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 291
Logging in to the VarioDoc account in the Farm Works Software solutions . . . . . . 292
Connected Farm tab . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 294
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Uploading resources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 295
Sending a Work Order . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 298
Processing the Inbox . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 299
7 Synchronizing Data with the Mobile Software . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 300
Marking planned jobs as work orders to the Mobile software . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 301
Synchronizing with the Mobile software . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 302
Synchronizing GreenSeeker® data from the Mobile software . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 304
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C H A P T E R
1
Getting Started
In this chapter:
Related information and technical support
Running the software for the first time
Changing the working date / system date
This section describes how to get up and running with the Farm Works™ Office software.
It also describes common software operations.
1
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1 – Getting Started
•
•
Related information and technical support
Farm Works provides a range of support options:
You can email the technical support group at [email protected]
with specific questions, or contact your local Farm Works office.
If you are subscribed to an Update Service Plan, you can contact the technical support group at one of the following numbers:
Canada
Other countries
Europe
Australia
New Zealand
+1 260-488-3492
+44 1786-465100
+61 (3) 8680-7222
The Update Service Plan gives you access to current updates to all of your software modules as well as unlimited telephone support.
•
•
For more information, go to http://www.farmworks.com/support/usp.php.
Online discussion groups where you can post questions, and view questions and answers from many users.
Go to http://www.farmworks.com/forum/ .
Frequently Asked Questions, which are updated regularly.
•
•
Go to http://www.farmworks.com/support/faqs/index.php
.
Tutorials that show you how to use the software. Go to http://www.farmworks.com/support/flash/index.php
.
Release Notes that describe new features of the product, information not included in the manuals, and any changes to the manuals. Go to http://www.farmworks.com/support/version_changes.php.
For more information, go to www.farmworks.com
.
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1 – Getting Started
Installing the software
To install the software:
1. Insert the installation disk into the CD/DVD drive of your desktop computer.
The installation starts automatically.
2. Select the software module(s) or manual that you want to install / download and then follow the on-screen instructions.
Some software modules require a software product code—these codes are located within your account on the Store or will be included with your software purchase.
Windows Vista and Windows 7 operating system
If you are running the software on a computer running the Windows Vista® or Windows® 7 operating system, and you receive an error message (for example,
DBI Create Table Error
) when you run the software, you may need to set the program shortcut to Run as an Administrator. For more information, see http://www.farmworks.com/files/faqs/General/Vista_and_7_Setup.pdf.
Registering the software
You must register your software to get full use of it. You can register the software automatically over the Internet by selecting the appropriate option when you run the software for the first time.
Alternatively, you can register your software by calling the number listed for support in the front of the manual or by contacting your Reseller. If you are calling to register, make sure that you are at your computer with the software installed and running.
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Running the software for the first time
1 – Getting Started
Creating and opening a farm project
Every time that you start the software, the Project Selection dialog appears.
In this dialog:
Click ...
To ...
A project name in the list Select a project.
New Project
Change Project Info
Create a new project. See
Change the project name and/or password.
Restore Project
Copy Project
Delete
Restore a backup of a project previously saved to another storage device.
Copy a project or part of a project.
Delete a project
C
CAUTION – It is strongly recommended that you back up your projects frequently to protect
vital project information in the event that a computer suffers hardware failure or become infected by a virus. The software saves the backup to your desktop computer's hard drive, but
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1 – Getting Started
Adding a new project
If this is the first time you use the software, no projects will be listed in the Project Selection dialog.
To create a new project:
1. In the Project Selection dialog, click
New Project
.
2. In the Add New Project dialog, enter a name for the new project in Project Name. You can also enter a password in Password—this is optional.
Passwords are case sensitive and may have up to eight letters and numbers, but no special characters, such as the at sign (@) or tilde (~). If no password is required, leave Password blank.
To remove the password at a later date: a. In the Project Selection dialog, select the project and then click
Change Project Info
.
b. Enter your password in the Project Password dialog and then click
OK
.
c. In the Project dialog, select the password, press
[Delete]
on the keyboard and then click
OK.
C
CAUTION – A password will protect your project, but if you forget it, you will not be able to
view your project. Make sure that your password is easy for you to remember, but not easy for others to guess. If you do forget your password, contact the technical support team.
3. Click
OK
to return to the Project Selection dialog.
4. The Project Selection dialog displays the name of your project. To open your project, make sure that you have highlighted the correct project name and then click
OK
.
The software creates a new blank project that you can start working in.
Note – A project represents all of the maps, records, and accounting information for a farming operation. If the Farm Works Accounting software has been installed, each project will have a separate set of books and should represent a separate taxable entity. Most users require only a single project. The data in each project is kept separate from all other projects and there is no way to combine or merge the data from multiple projects.
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1 – Getting Started
Selecting a measurement system
The first time that you open the software, you are prompted to select a measurement system.
Select the required option and then click
OK
. The options are:
•
•
•
US-English
Metric
Show All Units. This shows US and Metric units—the software uses the first selection (US-English or Metrics) for area and distance measurements, but gives both US-English and Metrics for any volume measurements.
The Show All Units option is suitable for users in Canada who want US distance and area measurements and metric volume and quantity measurements.
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1 – Getting Started
Changing user information
The contact information that is printed on many reports is sourced from the user information entered in the software. To change this:
1. Select File / Preferences / User Info.
2. In the User Information dialog, select the tabs in turn to enter the details that you want to appear on printed reports and then click
OK
.
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1 – Getting Started
Changing the working date / system date
If you want to enter data or print reports for a particular date, you can change the working date.
1. Click the date in the top right-hand corner of the screen.
2. Enter or select the Working Date that you want to use for data entry or for generating a report and then click
OK
.
3. Once you finish entering data/printing reports, repeat Step 1 through Step 2 to change the
Working Date back to the System Date.
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1 – Getting Started
Changing languages
The language feature allows you to change the language that you selected during the original installation, without requiring you to reinstall the software.
1. Select File / Preferences / Language.
2. Select the required language from the drop-down list and then click
OK
.
3. The software prompts you to restart the software. Once you have done this, the language change appears.
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1 – Getting Started
Interface overview
This section describes the elements of the software.
•
Menus, submenus, and contextual menus
You can select items from a menu. Where these items show an arrow next to them, there is a submenu. In the manual, this is described as “Select File / Preferences / User Info”.
• Hover over an item and then click the right mouse button to show a contextual menu. In the manual, this is described as “right-click <User Info> and then select New Client”.
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1 – Getting Started
Note – Most, but not all, of the items contained in the menus and submenus have corresponding toolbar icons (buttons). If you cannot find an icon to perform the command you want, look for the command on the appropriate menu.
Toolbars
You can select a toolbar from the drop-down list. This list shows all toolbars that are available for the current software.
To view icon information, hover the mouse pointer over the icon.
Click any icon on the toolbar to open the dialog—in this example, click the Structure icon to open the Structure Properties dialog where you can create a new structure.
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1 – Getting Started
Dialogs
Dialogs appear when you need to perform an action. Dialogs contain elements you may use to add, edit, delete, view, and print information—for example, buttons, options, check boxes, lists, and fields.
•
Drop-down lists: You can select an item from drop-down lists. To show the available items in a list, click the arrow. Click an item to select it.
If the list allows you to select more than one item, press
[Ctrl]
on the keyboard to select additional items.
<Add/Edit>: If this appears in a list, you can select it to add a new item to the list, or change the name of an item that appears in the list.
•
<New>: If this appears in a list, you can select it and then enter a new item in an adjacent box.
<All>: If this appears in a list, it selects all items in an adjacent list.
Dialog fields: You can enter information directly into a dialog field by clicking in the field. This includes Notes or Description fields, where you can enter a description or reminder.
Note – If a field appears greyed-out, it is not available. This means that you cannot enter or modify information in these shaded boxes.
•
•
Some fields allow you to enter information directly, or pick it from a list or calendar.
Radio buttons and check boxes: You can click to select only one option from a list of radio buttons. However, you can select more than one check box. Check boxes are generally used to enable one or more options. If you select a radio button, it is marked with a black dot; if you select a check box, a check mark appears in the box. To clear a radio button or check box, click it again.
Buttons: When you click a button (either a toolbar icon or a command button) this performs an immediate action, such as enabling an option or opening a dialog. For example, if you click
OK
, it usually closes the dialog.
Common buttons are used as follows:
Button
OK
Cancel
Record
Done
Action
Save information and close a dialog.
Close a dialog without saving the information.
Save information and clear the dialog so that you can enter new data.
• If you did not enter information, the dialog closes.
• If you did enter information, you are prompted to save it before the dialog closes.
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1 – Getting Started
Backing up projects
To safeguard your data, it is recommended that you make regular and frequent backups of your project to a medium other than your hard drive (USB, CD, hard disk, and so on) in case of failure, loss, or damage. This enables you to restore the backup of your project and recover lost data. Without a project backup, there is no way to recover the records and maps for your farm.
1. Select File / Backup Project.
2. Enter a name for the backup in the Backup To field, or replace an earlier backup by selecting it from the drop-down list.
By default, the software saves project backups in the backup folder on the computer hard drive
(c:\farmproj\backup). To save the backup to a different folder or to a removable drive:
–
– a. In the Backup Project dialog, click
Browse
. b. In the Save As dialog, do one of the following:
Select the required folder or removable drive from the Save In list.
Select an icon in the left column of the dialog and then browse to the folder or drive where you want to save the backup (for example, to save the backup to a USB drive, select the My
Computer icon , select the letter for the removable drive to enter it in the Save In field).
c. Enter a name for the backup file in the File Name field, or replace an earlier backup by selecting it from the drop-down list.
3. Do one of the following:
–
–
Click
Save
to return to the Backup Project dialog.
Click
Cancel
to close the dialog without saving the backup.
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1 – Getting Started
4. In the Options section of the Backup Project dialog, select a value from the Compression dropdown list to change the size of the backup file and the amount of time it will take to create the backup. The options are Maximum (slowest), Normal (default), Fast, Super Fast, or None:
–
–
If you select Maximum, the software takes longer to create the backup but the file will be smaller.
If you select None, the software will takes a shorter time to create the backup, but the file will be much larger.
5. If you are saving the backup to a USB drive or a disk, you can select Wipe Disk from the Disk Prep drop-down list to erase all files on the USB drive or floppy disk before making the backup.
C
CAUTION – Before you select Wipe Disk, verify there are no files you want to keep.
6. You can also select the checkboxes to include backdrops and /or Mobile archived data.
Note – Backdrops include aerial images and digital photos. Mobile data is a copy of the original data from the Mobile software.
7. Click
OK
. A progress screen appears.
Click
Cancel
to close the dialog box without making a backup.
8. Repeat
to save another backup to a different folder, removable drive, or floppy disk.
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1 – Getting Started
Restoring project backups
If your data is corrupted or if you lose your data through a hardware failure, you can attempt to recover it by restoring a backup you created earlier with the backup option (as described above).
Note – The software will not restore backups made with other software, such as the Windows XP backup utility.
Restoring a project backup replaces the information in the current project with the information that you had at the time you made the backup. For example, if you created a backup on Monday, and then needed to restore it on Friday of the same week, you will lose any information entered Tuesday through Thursday of that week.
1. Do one of the following:
–
–
Select File / Restore Backup.
In the Project Selection tab, click
Restore Project
.
2. From the Backup Project drop-down list, select the backup file you created previously. If the backup does not appear on the list, browse to locate it: a. Click the
Browse
button to open a second Restore Backup dialog.
b. Do one of the following:
–
–
Browse to the folder or drive where you previously saved the backup.
Select an icon in the left column and then browse to the folder or removable drive where you previously saved the backup (for example, if you saved the backup to your My Documents folder, select the My Documents icon to transfer it to the Look In field).
3. Select the backup file—it moves to the File Name field—and then click
Open
.
4. In the Restore Backup dialog, the backup file now appears in the Restore From field.
5. From the drop-down list, select the Project Name that you want to restore the backup to.
Note – If you selected Restore Backup from the File menu, you cannot restore to the project that you were previously in. To restore to this project, exit the software, restart it and then click
Restore Project
in the Project Selection tab.
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6. Do one of the following:
–
–
Click
OK
to restore the file.
Click
Cancel
to close the dialog box without restoring the backup.
7. If you click
OK
, you are prompted to confirm the restore operation.
1 – Getting Started
8. Click
OK
. A progress screen appears—you can click
Cancel
to close the dialog box without restoring a backup.
During the restoration of the backup, the software replaces the current data in your project with the data in the backup file. When the restoration is complete, you can begin working with the restored data.
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C H A P T E R
2
Setting Up Farms, Fields, and
Inputs
2
In this chapter:
Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
Client / Farm / Field or Inputs tabs
Managing Farms, Fields, and Inputs
This section describes how to set up the elements that are used within record keeping, mapping, accounting, and water management.
For a description on how to manually enter field record jobs / tasks, see
If the Farm Works Accounting software has been installed, you also need to set up a number of financial elements. These are described in the Farm Works Accounting
Software User Guide.
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2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
•
•
•
Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
Before recording farming operations, you must set up the following:
–
–
On the Farm tab :
.
Farms. See
.
–
– Structures. See
On the Inputs tab :
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Machines. See
Supplies. See
–
Animals. See
Other:
.
Job types. See
Chapter 3, Field Record Keeping .
–
Markers. See Markers, page 227 .
Attribute types. See
Setting up and selecting layer attributes, page 151 .
Setup options
•
•
•
To add farms, fields, and inputs to the software, use any of the following:
Toolbar icons. For example, click the New Animal icon . See
.
Menu. For example, select Resources / New Client. See
.
Context-specific menus. For example, right-click a Client name and then select New Farm. See
.
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2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
Job/Resource Tools
The icons that appear on the Job/Resource toolbar enable you to do the following:
Icon
New Client
Function
Add a new Client.
New Farm Add a new Farm.
New Field Add a new Field.
New
Structure
Add a new Structure, such as bins, to your farm.
New Person Add a new Person
New Machine Add a new Machine
New Supply Add a new Supply
New Animal Add a new Animal
Read Job Data If you are using the Farm Works Mapping software, this option is used to read data from a range of precision agricultural displays, including the Trimble FmX® integrated display, the Trimble CFX-750™ display, and the CNH Pro 700 display.
Write Job
Data
If you are using the Farm Works Mapping software, this option is used to write setup data, including Clients / Farms / Fields and Inputs to a range of precision agricultural displays, including the FmX integrated display, the CFX-750 display, and the CNH Pro
700 display.
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2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
Menu
Use the menu options instead of or as well as the toolbar icons.
The menus offer selections that are not available through the toolbar icons. For example, the
Resources menu has the same options as the toolbar, as well as Enterprises, Commodities, Job Types,
Markers, Attributes, and Landlords. If the Farm Works Mapping software is installed, the Resources menu will also include Formulas.
Shortcut menus
Right-click to open additional shortcut menus (also referred to as “contextual menus”. This method is used when setting up Clients, Farms, Fields, Crop Enterprises, and Inputs.
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2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
•
•
•
Client / Farm / Field or Inputs tabs
To work with the elements on the Client / Farm / Field or Inputs tab in tree view:
Click
+
beside the appropriate icon to expand the tree.
Click
-
to collapse the tree.
To view and/or edit assigned properties: a. Right-click the element (Client, Farm, Person, Machine, Supply, and so on).
b. Select Properties.
c. View, add, or change the element properties as required.
d. Click
OK
.
Client/Farm/Field tab Inputs tab
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2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
Setting up a Client
Clients appear on the Client/Farm/Field tab with Farms, Fields, Crop enterprises, and possibly Jobs listed under each. Selecting a client name on the Farm tab enables you to view the Farms and Fields associated with that Client.
Clients are useful for custom applicators, fertilizer resellers, consultants and others who want to keep maps and records for Clients/customers.
If you are a grower, you can set up a single Client for yourself.
You cannot change or delete Unassigned Client, Unassigned Farm, Unassigned Field, or Unassigned
Crop. These are a safety net to hold imported data that the software is unable to otherwise assign to a Client, Farm, and/or Field.
To add a Client:
1. Click the New Client icon .
2. Enter the required information in the General, Address, Contact, and Category tabs and then click
OK
.
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The new Client appears on the Farm tab.
2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
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2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
Setting up a Farm
Farms can be used to group Fields.
Multiple Farms are generally used with different Landlords, as you can organize Fields by Farm name.
You must add Farms to the Farm tab before you can add Fields.
You can also move fields that were previously added in the software to a new Farm. See
1. Click the New Farm icon .
2. Enter a name for the farm in the Description field.
3. The Client field is populated automatically with the client name if you right-click the Client Name in the Barn tab and then select New Farm. You can select a different client from the drop-down list, or select Add from the list to create a new client, see
Setting up a Client, page 29 .
The Area fields are not available, as the Fields assigned to the Farm will populate the acreage areas.
4. In the Notes field, enter any miscellaneous information for the farm (up to 255 characters).
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2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
Setting up a Field
Once you set up a Farm, you can quickly set up Fields so that you can begin recording farming operations:
1. Click the New Field icon .
2. Enter the following into the tabs:
Tab
General
Group
Description
Description
Enter a name for the Field. This is required.
Area • Mapped acres are calculated automatically from mapped boundaries.
• Enter the number of Legal acres.
• Enter the number of Tillable acres. This is required information, which is used in field records and reports.
Owner / Landlord • Select the Client and Farm that the Field belongs to. If you do not know, select <Unassigned Farm>, or select <Add> to add a farm that is not in the list.
• Select whether the Field is owned, cash rented, or share cropped.
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Tab
Info
Group Description
2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
Landlords
(If Share cropping)
State
County
FSA
Legal
Description
Select the State where the field is located.
Select the County where the field is located.
Enter the correct information in the FSA Farm #, Field #, Tract #, and Land
Class fields.
Enter the correct information in the Section #, Township #, and Range # fields.
Enter a brief description of the field; up to 255 characters, including spaces and punctuation marks.
If you are located outside the United States of America, you can enter any other required information for the field.
Select the field next to Landlords and then select Add/Edit. See
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2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
Tab
Photo
(Optional)
Group
Note – The image file can be in bitmap (.bmp), Joint Photographic Experts Group (.jpg), Tagged
Image File Format (.tif), or PC Paintbrush (.pcx) format.
Photos added in this area are used only for reference purposes. They do not appear on maps or other areas.
Change Photo
Description
1. Click
Change Photo
.
2. Select the folder where you previously saved a digital photograph of the field, such as My Pictures.
3. Select the required file and then click
Open
. The photograph appears in the Field Properties dialog.
4. To choose a different photograph, click
Change Photo
again
Print Photo
Remove Photo
Print the selected photograph.
Remove the selected photograph from the Field Properties dialog: This does not delete the file from the computer hard drive or removable drive.
5. Once you finish entering Field information, click
OK
. The Field name appears under the selected
Farm.
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2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
Setting up a Landlord
This procedure is done as part of
Setting up a Field, page 32 if you select the Sharecrop option in the
General tab. You can also access the Landlord option by selecting Resources / Landlords.
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In the Landlords dialog.
2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
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1. Click
Add
. The Contact Properties dialog appears.
2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
2. Select the General tab and then enter the Landlord’s name or business name, job title, and Tax ID
(business or social security number).
3. Select the Address tab to enter the Landlord’s address information.
4. Select the Contact tab to enter the Landlord’s telephone numbers, paper number, email address, and web address.
5. Select the Categories tab to select as many of the following as apply:
Sell To
Buy From/Pay To
1099 Required
Landlord (automatically selected)
Other (for labels, general contact)
6. Click
OK
twice to return to the Landlord tab in the Fields Properties dialog.
If there are multiple landlords for the same field, click
Add L.L.
and then repeat these steps as many time as required.
To remove a Landlord from the Field, select the name and then click
Remove L.L.
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2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
7. Enter the percentage of the crop that each Landlord receives, select which Inputs the Landlord gets billed for and what percentage they pay. If all items are billed at the same percentage, click
Fill Coll
.
8. If the Landlord gets billed for any equipment usage, click
Add Equip
, select the equipment that they get charged for and then enter the Charge/Unit in dollars (not percentage as with the other inputs).
To remove equipment, click
Remove Equip
.
9. If the billed items and the percentages are the same as another previously entered field, click
Copy Landlord Info
to avoid entering all of the information again. Select the Field from which to copy the Landlord information.
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2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
Setting up a Structure
If you are using the Farm Works Accounting software, you can use structures for storage locations for harvested crops.
1. Click the New Structure icon .
2. Enter a Description.
3. Do one of the following:
– If you selected the correct Client and Farm, those fields are automatically populated. No action is required.
– If you did not select the correct Client and Farm, select them now from the drop-down lists.
4. Click
OK
.
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2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
Setting up a Person
Use the software to track operations that a Person (employee or other worker) performs.
Before you assign your workers to a job, you must add them to the Inputs tab:
1. Click the New Person icon .
2. Enter information into the tabs. You must enter the person’s first or last name on the General tab; the rest of the information is optional.
Tab
General
Address
Contact
Group/Field
Name
Address
Phone
Internet
Action
1. Select the Business check box to add a name of a business as a contact.
2. Select a title, enter their first, middle, and last name and then select the appropriate suffix.
Note – The Full Name and Sorted Name fields are automatically populated:
You can change these as preferred. The sorted name is how the name appears in all of the lists within the software.
3. Enter the name of the business for which the person works and their appropriate job title.
1. Enter a PO box, rural route, or street address in the Street 1 and Street 2 fields.
2. Enter a city/town, state/province, zip/postal code, and country as appropriate
Enter home, business, mobile number as appropriate.
Enter email and/or URL details.
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2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
Tab
Category
Employee
Photo
Invoice
Group/Field
Categories
Employee
Costing
Action
Enter information as appropriate.
If the employee has a pesticide applicator’s license, enter the license number here. This number appears on the Job Report.
Enter the charge rate in dollars per hour that the employee gets paid. This information is used for costing purposes on the Job Report.
Change, remove, rotate, or print digital images. For more information, see
Note – The Invoice tab is active if the Farm Works Accounting software is not installed.
Include on
Invoice
Select this check box to add information to the invoice.
If you select Include on Invoice, enter information here to be included.
Description on
Invoice
Invoice Rate Enter the required rate. See the note under this field.
3. Once you finish entering the information, click
OK
. The worker now appears in the Inputs tab under the People icon.
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Setting up a Machine
To set up a new machine:
1. Click the New Machine icon .
2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
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2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
2. Enter information into the tabs.
Tab
General
Group/Field
Machine
Service
Options
Model
Console
Operation
Service
Service Notes
Options
Fuel
Action
• Enter the Machine name.
• From the Category drop-down list, select the type of machine.
Enter the make, model, year, and serial number.
Enter the Console ID# (AGCO GTA users only).
• From the Costing Unit drop-down list, select how the machine is to be charged: this will typically be acre/hectare or hour.
• Under Charge Rate, enter the rate per acre/hectare or hour.
The charge rate will be used on the Enterprise statements, applied directly to the acres or hours the machine farmed, and applied on planned operation reports.
If the Farm Works Accounting software is installed and you selected Profit
Enterprise for the equipment, the charge rate goes directly to the Fields covered by the equipment. If you selected Passive Enterprise, the charge rate is used only for planning reports. For more information, refer to the
Farm Works Accounting Software User Guide.
• If you are using the Mobile module, enter the Machine width.
• From the Service Interval Unit drop-down list, select the required value.
• In Current Meter, enter the current acres or hours on the machine.
• In Last Serviced, enter the acres or hours at the time of the last service.
• In Last Service Date, enter the date of the last service, or select the calendar icon and choose the date in the calendar.
• In Service Interval, enter the number of acres or hours to elapse between each service. This automatically calculates and shows in
Next Service the number of hours or acres until the next service is due.
Enter any notes; up to 255 characters.
• Select the Fuelable check box if you want to track fuel usage.
• Select the Harvester check box if you will use the machine to perform harvesting operations, for example, combines or balers.
• Select the Metered check box if you are using the Mobile software and want to keep track of the hours and acres used for the service options.
• If the machine uses fuel, select the correct fuel type from the Supply
Fuel list. If required, select <Add> to add a new fuel supply.
• Enter the Default Burn Rate, and select Gal/Acre or Gal/Hr.
• If the Farm Works Accounting software is installed, select Passive or
Profit Enterprise under Enterprise Type. Refer to the Farm Works
Accounting Software User Guide. This options is only active when the
Farm Works Accounting software is installed. A section called
Enterprise Type appears directly below the Fuel section.
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2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
Tab
Photo
(Optional)
Group/Field
Note – The image file can be in bitmap (.bmp), Joint Photographic Experts Group (.jpg), Tagged
Image File Format (.tif), or PC Paintbrush (.pcx) format.
Photos added in this area are used only for reference purposes. They do not appear on maps or other areas.
Change Photo
Action
1. Click
Change Photo
.
2. Select the folder where you previously saved a digital photograph of the field, such as My Pictures.
3. Select the required file and then click Open. The photograph appears in the Field Properties dialog.
Invoice
Print Photo
Remove Photo
4. To choose a different photograph, click
Change Photo
again.
Print the selected photograph.
Remove the selected photograph from the Field Properties dialog: This does not delete the file from the computer hard drive or removable drive.
• Select Include on Invoice.
• In Invoice Rate enter an amount if different from the Costing Rate entered on the General Tab.
Note – The Invoice option is only available if the Farm Works Accounting software is not installed.
5. Once you finish entering information for the Machine, click
OK
. The machine appears in the appropriate machine category of the Inputs tab under the Machines icon.
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2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
Setting up a Supply
You can keep comprehensive information for all of the supplies you apply to your fields, such as seed, fertilizers, insecticides, and other chemicals.
Adding a new Supply
1. Click the New Supply icon .
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2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
2. Enter information into the tabs:
Tab
General
Chemical
Group/Field
Description
Type
Units
Action
• Enter a name for the supply.
• If relevant, enter the Part # number.
• If the Farm Works Accounting software is installed, you must select the applicable account from the Account drop-down list.
• Select the Add to Markers check box, if applicable.
Select the type of supply.
Enter the Purchased Units, Unit Cost, Distributed Unit, and the Default
Application Rate.
Note – Unit cost is similar to the charge rate for a Machine and a Person. It is used on Enterprise statements if the Farm Works Accounting software is
not installed, and on planned operation reports. If the Farm Works
Accounting software is installed, you must still enter this value, as it is used on all planned operation reports.
Carrier
• Select the Keep Detailed Chemical Records check box.
• Enter the following information: Take it from the product label:
Chemical Name
–
–
–
–
–
–
EPA #
Manufacturer
Formulation
Mode of operation
Default carrier
1. Click
Add/Edit.
2. Enter the Carrier name.
3. Select a Unit value from the list and then click OK.
Default Carrier Rate Enter a value.
Target Problems
(max. 5)
1. Click
2. Click
Add/Edit Problem List
Add/Edit.
.
3. Click
Add
and then enter the pest name. Repeat this to add more pests.
B
Tip – To include more pests in the selection of five names, use a wider term such as Broadleaves or Grasses.
4. When finished, click OK.
5. From the Pests list, select up to five pests to move to the Selected Pests list. To select multiple items, press and hold [Ctrl] as you click the names.
6. To add the names, click >>--->.
7. To remove a pest from the Selected Pests list, select the name and then click <---<<. To remove all pests, click <<---<<.
8. To add a new pest, repeat from Step 2
.
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2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
Tab
Fertilizer
Group/Field Action
Fertilizer Nutrients 1. Click the blank field in the Nutrient column.
2. From the drop-down list, select the first nutrient, and the percentage of the analysis that nutrient makes up in the Percent % column.
Product Weight
3. To add more nutrients, click
Add Nutrient
, select the name from the list and then enter the percentage. Repeat this step as required.
4. If the nutrient you want is not in the list, select Add/Edit from the list and then click
Add
in the dialog that appears. Enter a nutrient name and abbreviation and then click
OK
.
5. To remove a nutrient from the list, click - next to its name.
This conversion factor is automatically entered.
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Tab Group/Field
Restrictions Re-entry restrictions
2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
Action
Enter restrictions as they appear on the product label.
1. Select the Re-entry Restrictions check box and then enter the required number of hours in Restricted-Entry Interval (REI).
2. In PPE Required for Handlers and Early Entry PPE Required for Workers, enter the required protective equipment for those handling the supply.
3. In Other Label Requirements, enter the other requirements for those handling the supply.
4. If applicable, select Treat Area Posting and Oral Notification Required.
For example.
PHI
Invoice
Pre-Harvest Interval If this applies to the chemical:
1. From the Crop drop-down list, select the crop name or select
<Add/Edit> to add the crop.
2. Enter a value in the Pre-Harvest Interval (Days) column.
3. If there are restrictions for more than one crop, click
Add Crop
and then repeat steps 1 and 2.
1. Select Include on Invoice.
2. Enter a description.
3. Enter the Invoice Rate only if it differs from the Unit Cost you entered on the General tab.
Note – The invoice option is available only if the Farm Works Accounting software is not installed.
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2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
Adding a new Tank Mix
1. On the Inputs tab, right-click Supplies Category and then select New Tank Mix.
2. In the Tank Mix Properties dialog, enter in a Description for the tank mix.
3. Select the correct Carrier from the drop-down list or select Add/Edit to create a new carrier.
To add a Carrier: a. In the Carriers dialog click
Add.
b. In the Carrier Properties dialog, enter the Carrier name, select a Unit value from the list and then click
OK
.
c. In the Carriers dialog, click
OK
.
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2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
4. In the Tank Mix Properties dialog, in the Format section, select Quantity or Rate and then enter the Total Quantity.
5. In the Ingredients section, click the plus sign next to the correct supply category, and then select the supply.
6. Click
Add
to add the supply to the Tank Mix. Add other supplies as required to complete the tank mix.
7. Enter a Quantity for each supply and then click
OK
.
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2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
8. The Inputs tab now shows a Tank Mix Category. To use the Tank Mix in a job add it to the Working
Group and Apply to fields.
Note – When you enter a Farming Job, you will enter the rate or total amount of the tank mix used.
However, all your field records will show the individual ingredients used.
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2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
Setting up an Animal Group
1. On the Inputs tab, click
+
to expand the tree view, right-click the animal’s icon and then select
New Animal.
2. In the Animal tab of the Animal Properties dialog enter a Description.
3. In the Photo tab, insert a photo, if required.
4. Click
OK
.
The animal appears on the Inputs tab under the Animal icon.
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2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
Setting up a Crop Enterprise
You can set up multiple Crop Enterprises under one Field. For example, if you have a 100 acre field and you plan to plant corn on 75 acres and soybeans on 25 acres, you can add 2 Crop Enterprises to the Field and assign the correct acreage for each crop. If you subsequently plant 100 acres in corn and then 50 acres each of corn and soybeans, the software accommodates each scenario and maintains Field histories.
You can use Crop Enterprises to analyze a certain crop in a given year or over several years: There is a new Enterprise for each year within a given crop. To compare records and profitability of one crop to another, and one year to another, they must have separate Enterprises. For example, if you grow several types of one crop (soybeans and low linolenic soybeans), and you want to compare the two, they must all have separate Enterprises.
1. On the Farm tab, click
+
beside the appropriate Client or Farm to expand the tree view, right-click the Field to which the enterprise is to be added and then select New Crop Enterprise.
2. From the Crop drop-down list of the Enterprise Properties dialog, select <Add>.
The Year defaults to the current year. You can select a different year from the drop-down list.
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2 – Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
If the Farm Works Accounting software is installed, you must also select an account. The account is used to keep track of costs associated with the crop, harvest, and other costs.
3. From the Commodity drop-down list of the Crop Properties dialog, select <Add/Edit>.
4. Click
Add
and then select a Commodity from the list or select <New> to add your own.
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5. Click
OK
.
In the Commodity Properties dialog, some items selected from the list automatically populate the fields, with the exception of the color. If the Farm Works Mapping software is installed, select a color to appear on the Enterprise map view.
–
–
RMA identity is used to collect crop insurance information if you are located in the United
States of America.
Units are the harvested units of the commodity.
–
–
Density and Moisture are used to calculate dry quantities when harvesting. Moisture should be the moisture that dry weight is calculated from: Obtain this information from your local elevator or wherever you deliver your grain.
The units, density, and moisture information is used for yield mapping and detailed harvest records (including scale tickets).
The value of the commodity is used on reports.
–
– The color appears on the map where that commodity is being grown.
6. Click
OK
to save the entry and exit the Commodity Properties dialog.
7. Click
OK
to save and exit the Commodities dialog.
8. In the Area field of the Enterprise Properties dialog, enter the number of acres to be planted with the selected commodity. Area defaults to the total Field acreage so you do not need to change the area if the entire field is to be planted with one crop.
9. You can enter a Plant Date, but this is optional. If you do not enter a plant date, the date is entered automatically when a planting farming operation is recorded.
10. If required, enter a Crop Insurance Unit and Yield Number.
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11. Select a Process and Type from the drop-down list. You can use this information to collect crop insurance information if you are located in the United States of America.
12. Click
OK
.
13. For all other Commodities to be planted in the field for the crop year, repeat
Editing a Commodity
Commodities that are used in the software have properties tied to them that can be edited. You can choose from a list of pre-entered commodities. Commodities must be added to appear in lists as active. To edit commodity properties:
1. Select Resources / Commodities. Commodities currently being used appear in the Commodities dialog.
2. To add a commodity, click
Add
and then select the new commodity from the list or select <New> to add your own.
3. To delete a Commodity, select it and then click
Delete
.
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4. To edit commodities information, select the commodity and then click
Properties
.
5. Enter or change information as required:
–
–
Units are the harvested units of the commodity.
Density and moisture are used to calculate dry quantities when harvesting. Moisture should be the moisture that dry weight is calculated from: Obtain this information from your local elevator or wherever you deliver your grain.
–
–
–
The units, density, and moisture information is used for yield mapping and detailed harvest records (including scale tickets).
The value of the commodity is used on reports.
The color appears on the map where that commodity is being grown.
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Managing Farms, Fields, and Inputs
Note – You cannot delete a Client, Farm, Field, Person, Equipment, Animal, or Supply if it has been used in a Farming operation or if it was purchased using the Farm Works Accounting software.
This section describes how to view or modify information about an element (Client, Farm, Machine, and so on), and how to delete or retire a farm, field, or input. Select the appropriate tab (Farm or
Inputs) for the element that you want to manage.
Viewing or modifying information
1. In the Farm or Inputs tab, right-click the element name and then select Properties.
2. In the dialog that appears, view the information or make the necessary changes and then click
OK
.
Deleting a farm, field, or input
You can delete a farm, field, or input if you no longer need it, provided that it has not been used in a farming operation or accounting transaction.
1. In the Farm or Inputs tab, right-click the element name and then select Delete.
2. Click
OK
to confirm deleting the element and all associated records.
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•
•
Notes:
•
If an Input was used in a job, you cannot delete it but you can retire the Input.
If you delete an operation that Input was used in, or change it so that the Input is not included, you can then delete the Input.
If you delete a Client, all the Farms, Fields, and any records and maps under each field will be
deleted.
Retiring a farm, field, or input
If you cannot delete a farm, field, or input, you can retire it:
1. In the Farm or Inputs tab, right-click the farm, field, or input name and then select Retire.
The retired farm, field, or input name remains in the system. The software adds an asterisk after the name and keeps the history for future reference.
2. To show a retired farm, field, or input in the Farm or Inputs tab, select View from the main menu and then select Show Retired Land Areas or Show Retired Inputs.
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To hide a retired element, select View from the main menu and then click Show Retired Land
Areas or Show Retired Inputs to remove the tick mark.
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Field Record Keeping
C H A P T E R
3
3
In this chapter:
Creating a planned job
Recording tillage operations (manually)
Recording planting operations (manually)
Recording harvesting operations (manually)
Editing landlord/sharecrop information when completing a job
Submitting crop insurance data
This section describes how to work with farming operations (“jobs”) and create invoices based on completed farming operations.
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Jobs tab
The Jobs tab shows all planned and completed jobs.
To widen or narrow a column, move your cursor over the space between the column headers until the cursor changes to one with two arrows . Hold the left mouse button down as you drag your mouse to the left or right to adjust the column width.
At the bottom of the screen there are a number of buttons:
Click ..
Clear Filter
Edit Filter
Merge
Complete
Export
Delete
Properties
To ...
Clear any filter settings that were applied in the Farm, Input, or Jobs tab.
Select filter settings for the Jobs tab. See page 79
.
Merge two or more selected jobs that are for the same field, enterprise, and job type.
Print reports for a selected job. See Reports, page 109 .
Complete a selected planned job. See Completing planned jobs, page 68
.
Export an .xml file of a job.
Delete a selected job.
View or edit job details for a selected job.
Using the View menu
In the View menu, you can set viewing preferences for the Farm and Inputs tabs—you can show or hide Farm tab items such as retired land areas, planned and completed jobs, or inputs such as machines, people, or supplies. If the Farm Works Mapping software is installed, you can use the View menu to show or hide background images, such as aerial photos to display with maps of your fields.
Check marks beside items in the View menu indicate which items are shown.
The options are:
Select ...
Show Retired Land
Areas
To ...
Show retired farms and fields in the Farm tab—they are identified with an asterisk
(*).
To unretire a farm or field, right-click it and then select Un-Retire.
To hide the retired land areas, clear the check mark.
Show Retired Inputs Show retired inputs in the Inputs tab—they are identified with an asterisk (*).
To unretire an input and bring it back into use, right-click it and then select Un-Retire.
To hide the retired inputs, clear the check mark.
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Select ...
Show Jobs in Land
Areas
Show Background in
Land Areas
To ...
Show planned and completed jobs in the Farm tab. The jobs appear under the applicable Farm, Field, and Crop Enterprise icons.
To hide the jobs in the Farm tab, clear the check mark.
Display background image icons on the Farm tab if the Farm Works Mapping software is installed. A background image icon is added to the Farm tab for each background image that has been imported into the software.
To display the image, double-click the image name or icon. For more information,
see Chapter 4, Mapping Software .
To hide the image icons and aerial photograph names, clear the check mark.
Creating a planned job
To create planned jobs, add all the inputs (machinery, people, and supplies) you expect to use to the
Working area.
Note – When planning a job not all of the inputs may be known. In this case, apply only the inputs
that are known; you can add others when the job is complete. See Editing jobs, page 81
.
To record a planned job:
1. In the Inputs tab expand the tree view.
2. Double-click each input (machines, people, supplies) that will be used for the job to move it to the Working area. Alternatively select an input and then click the Add icon .
To remove an input from the Working area, double-click it, or select it and then click the Remove icon .
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To remove all inputs from the Working area, click the Remove All icon .
3 – Field Record Keeping
3. After you have all of the inputs you expect to use during the operation in the Working Group area, click
Apply to Fields
.
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4. Click
+
to expand the tree, click the box beside the field(s) for which you are planning the job and then click
Record Planned Jobs
.
The Farming dialog shows the general information for the planned job (note the orange color), followed by the information for each input (in the order People, Machines, Supplies). You may need to scroll up and down to see all of the items listed for the operation. If more than one Field is selected, the dialog shows a separate column for each field and a Total column. You may enter total values—these are moved across each Field according to the proportion of the area farmed in each field.
You may also select the fields that the operation will be performed on in the Map tab. To select multiple fields, hold down the
[Shift]
key while selecting them. Then right-click and select
Apply
Working Group to Planned.
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5. Enter the information for the planned job—to make a change to any Field, select it and overtype or select a different option from the drop-down list that appears, or click
Delete
to remove any element: a. The Field name and job type are listed in Job Name. b. To change the planned crop enterprise, select a different commodity and year in Crop
Enterprise list. Select <Add> to add a new crop enterprise if required.
6. Crop Enterprise is blank if you have not previously selected a crop enterprise for the field—you can select or add a crop from the drop-down list.
Note – It is recommended that you select a crop enterprise even if you are unsure of the crop; this can be edited at any time. If the Crop Enterprise changes throughout the year (for example, you planted beans where you planned on planting corn) you can edit this under each individual job.
7. The Job Type is automatically populated according to the type of machine(s) used in the farming operation, for example if you select a machine from the Planting/Seeding folder, Planting /
Seeding is listed as the Job Type. You can select or add a different Job Type from the drop-down list. Because job types are often used to search operations that take place throughout the year and can be queried for reports and editing, it is important to select the correct job.
8. Enter/change the Area Farmed if required.
During a planned operation, Area Farmed is usually not changed from the tillable acres as actual applied acres will not be known until the job is complete. They may be changed if a partial operation is planned. Area Farmed carries to the charge units and applied area of the inputs below.
9. The Dates default to the date the planned job was created. If required, you can clear the fields, enter the Start and Stop Date (actual or estimated; they can be edited later) in m/d/yyyy format, or click the Calendar icon .
10. Enter the information required for each of the inputs. The Job Hours based on these entries and the Charge Units (Hours) are both calculated automatically. If time is not known, estimate or leave these items blank.
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11. You can add or delete inputs if required:
– To add an Input: a. From the Add menu, select Input.
b. Click the
+
beside the appropriate item to expand the tree, click the check box to select the input you want and then click
OK
.
c. In the Farming dialog, enter the required information associated with the added input:
If a Person is added, the Costing Rate defaults from the rate entered in the Person Properties dialog; the Quantity (hours) defaults from Job Hours. You may change these values as required.
If a Machine is added, the Costing Rate and the Quantity (acres) default from the Machine
Properties dialog. If the machine uses fuel, the estimated Fuel Used and Fuel Cost also appear.
You can change these values as required. d. To remove any input, click
Delete
next to it.
12. If you use the Farm Works Mapping software, and a listed supply is going to be applied using
Variable Rate Application, select the check box. This allows you to create a variable rate
prescription map for the supply. See Chapter 4, Mapping Software
in the Farm Works Mapping
Software User Guide. Select the machine that will be applying the supply and, if needed, edit the
Applied Area, Planned Rate, and Cost. The Planned Rate and Costing Rate were entered when the supply was set up. Quantity Used is calculated from the Applied Area and Planned Rate. Changing the Quantity Used also changes the Planned Rate and vice versa.
13. If applicable, select a Chemical Carrier and enter a Carrier Rate for each chemical (restricted-used supplies).
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14. If a supply is an insecticide, herbicide, or other pest-control chemical, you can click
Pests
Controlled
and then select the pests (up to five) controlled by that chemical.
15. Click
OK
. The planned job appears in orange colored text in the Job tab. If you selected more than one Field, the software adds a separate job for each Field to the Jobs tab.
Completing planned jobs
When a job is actually carried out, you can complete the planned job in the software and update the details to match what was done.
To complete a planned job:
1. In the Jobs tab, find the job you want to mark as complete. You can scroll to the job, or sort or filter the jobs. See
Note – Jobs that are complete appear in black and show a Completed icon ; Jobs in the planning stage appear in orange and show a Planned icon .
2. Right-click the job and then select Complete.
3. In the Farming dialog (which now appears in grey), make any required changes, for example, enter any information that was not known when the job was planned and correct any information that may have changed and then click
OK
.
The job is marked as complete, the text color changes to black and the Completed icon appears.
•
•
Once you mark a job as complete, you cannot change it back to a planned job. However, you can:
Change the completed job as required. See Editing jobs, page 81
.
Delete a completed job and reenter it as a planned job. See Creating a planned job, page 63
.
Recording tillage operations (manually)
Rather than recording planned farming operations and then marking them as complete, you can also manually record completed farming operations.
To record a tillage operation:
1. In the Inputs tab: a. Add Machines to the Working Group: Click
+
beside Machines to expand the group and then double-click the machine(s) you want to use in the tillage operation to add them to the
Working Group. b. Add People to the Working Group: Click
+
beside People to expand the group and then double-click person(s) you want to use in the tillage operation to add them to the Working
Group.
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2. Once you add all the required machines and people to the Working Group, click
Apply to Fields
.
3. Click
+
to expand the tree, click the box beside the field(s) for which you are planning the job and then click
Record Completed Jobs.
To remove a field from the tillage operation, clear the check box.
If a wrong Field is selected, click it and then select a different Field from the Fields dialog.
4. Crop Enterprise is blank if you have not previously selected a crop enterprise for the field—you can select or add a crop from the drop-down list.
Note – It is recommended that you select a crop enterprise even if you are unsure of the crop; this can be edited at any time. If the Crop Enterprise changes throughout the year (for example, you planted beans where you planned on planting corn) you can edit this under each individual job.
5. The Job Type is automatically populated according to the type of machine(s) used in the farming operation, for example if you select a machine from the Land Preparation folder, Land
Preparation is listed as the Job Type. You can select or add a different Job Type from the dropdown list. Because job types are often used to search operations that take place throughout the year and can be queried for reports and editing, it is important to select the correct job.
6. Area Farmed defaults to the tillable acres of the selected field—if a partial operation was completed previously, it defaults to the remaining tillable acres.
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Area Farmed carries to the charge units and applied area of the inputs below.
3 – Field Record Keeping
The completed operation is added to the Jobs tab in black text and shows the Completed icon for every field where the operation was performed.
If you do not plan to set up more jobs using current inputs, click the Remove All icon to remove the items from the Working Group.
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Recording planting operations (manually)
To manually enter a planting job:
1. In the Inputs tab: a. Add Machines to the Working Group: Click
+
beside Machines to expand the group, and then double-click the machine(s) you want to use in the planting operation to add them to the
Working Group. b. Add People to the Working Group: Click
+
beside People to expand the group, and then double-click the person(s) you want to use in the planting operation to add them to the
Working Group. c. Add Supplies to the Working Group: Click
+
beside Supplies to expand the group, and then double-click the supply(ies) you want to use in the planting operation to add them to the
Working Group.
2. Once all the required machines and people are added to the Working Group, click
Apply to Fields
.
3. Click
+
to expand the tree, click the box beside the field(s) for which you are planning the job and then click
Record Completed Jobs
.
To remove a field from the planting operation, clear the check box.
If a wrong Field is selected, click it and then select a different field from the Fields dialog.
4. Crop Enterprise is blank if you have not previously selected a crop enterprise for the field—you can select or add a crop from the drop-down list.
Note – It is recommended that you select a crop enterprise even if you are unsure of the crop; this can be edited at any time. If the Crop Enterprise changes throughout the year (for example, you planted beans where you planned on planting corn) you can edit this under each individual job.
5. The Job Type is automatically populated according to the type of machine(s) used in the farming operation, for example if you select a machine from the Planting/Seeding folder, Planting /
Seeding is listed as the Job Type. You can select or add a different Job Type from the drop-down list. Because job types are often used to search operations that take place throughout the year and can be queried for reports and editing, it is important to select the correct job.
6. Area Farmed defaults to the tillable acres of the selected field—if a partial operation was completed previously, it defaults to the remaining tillable acres.
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Area Farmed carries to the charge units and applied area of the inputs below.
3 – Field Record Keeping
The completed operation is added to the Jobs tab in black text and shows the Completed icon for every field where the operation was performed.
If you do not plan to set up more jobs using current inputs, click the Remove All icon to remove the items from the Working Group.
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Recording harvesting operations (manually)
To enter a harvest job:
1. In the Inputs tab: a. Add Machines to the Working Group: Click
+
beside Machines to expand the group, and then double-click the machine(s) you want to use in the harvesting operation to add them to the
Working Group.
Note – At least one of the machines must be set up as a “Harvester”. Do this in the Options tab of the
Machine Properties dialog.
b. Add People to the Working Group: Click
+
beside People to expand the group, and then double-click the person(s) you want to use in the harvesting operation to add them to the
Working Group.
To remove an item from the Working Group, click the Remove icon . To remove all items, click the Remove All icon .
2. Once all the required machines and people are added to the Working Group, click
Apply to Fields
.
3. Click the plus sign to expand the tree, click the box beside the field(s) for which you are planning the job and then click
Record Completed Jobs
.
To remove a field from the planting operation, clear the check box.
If a wrong Field is selected, click it and then select a different Field from the Fields dialog.
4. Crop Enterprise is blank if you have not previously selected a crop enterprise for the field—you can select or add a crop from the drop-down list.
Note – It is recommended that you select a crop enterprise even if you are unsure of the crop; this can be edited at any time. If the Crop Enterprise changes throughout the year (for example, you planted beans where you planned on planting corn) you can edit this under each individual job.
5. The Job Type is automatically populated according to the type of machine(s) used in the farming operation, for example if you select a machine from the Harvesting folder, Harvesting is listed as the Job Type. You can select or add a different Job Type from the drop-down list. Because job types are often used to search operations that take place throughout the year and can be queried for reports and editing, it is important to select the correct job.
6. Enter/change the Console ID if required.
7. Area Farmed defaults to the tillable acres of the selected field—if a partial operation was completed previously, it defaults to the remaining tillable acres.
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Area Farmed carries to the charge units and applied area of the inputs below.
3 – Field Record Keeping
8. In addition to these steps, do the following: a. In the Harvest Information area, enter the Yield/Ac or Qty. Harvested. The correct amount for the other is calculated based on the Area Farmed. b. Enter the Unit Price. If the Value was entered when the commodity was setup, the program will default the unit price to that value. The price entered here is used on the Field Enterprise
Statements and typically is the price the crop could be sold for if sold at harvest.
c. If scale tickets are available, click
Scale Tickets
and then enter the required information. See
Entering Scale Tickets, page 75 .
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3 – Field Record Keeping d. If the Farm Works Accounting software is installed, click
Harvest Destination
. For more information on harvested crop inventories, refer to the Farm Works Accounting Software
User Guide. When the harvest is recorded, it is in effect sold from the field enterprise to the marketing enterprise. Adjustments made to the commodity by over-selling or adjusting is only recorded as a gain or loss on the marketing enterprise. If the harvested amount is incorrect, you must adjust the harvest job.
The completed operation is added to the Jobs tab in black text and shows the Completed icon for every field where the operation was performed.
If you do not plan to set up more jobs using current inputs, click the Remove All icon to remove the items from the Working Group.
Entering Scale Tickets
When entering a harvest operation, you can also enter scale tickets. This can be an easy way to calculate yield, and allows you to keep these records and print scale ticket reports. Scale ticket information is transferred to Qty. Harvested and Yield/ac in the Farming dialog.
Scale tickets may not be available at the time of harvest—you can enter an estimate when you set up the job and enter accurate information when it is available. This overrides any previously entered values.
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1. In the Farming dialog, click
Scale Tickets
in the Harvest Information area.
3 – Field Record Keeping
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2. Select the Commodity or select <Add/Edit> to add a new commodity if this is not listed. If the field has a commodity assigned to it, the program will default that commodity in the Commodity field of the scale tickets.
3. Enter the Dry Moisture, Lbs/bushel, and Shrink values. When you enter the ticket information, these numbers are used to calculate the Qty. (Dry).
Dry Moisture and Lbs/Bushel will default based on the information set up in the Commodity
Properties.
4. In the table, enter the Load ID (ticket number), Gross Wt., Tare Wt., % Moisture, and % FM from the scale ticket.
5. To add additional columns that you can use to keep track of information, such as Test Weights,
Protein, and other values: a. Select File / Edit User Defined Items.
b. Select the User Value or User Text check box and then enter a name for the column in the field below the check box. You can up to four numeric and one text item.
c. Click
OK
. The Scale Ticket dialog now has new columns where you can enter additional information for each load / scale ticket.
6. To add rows, click
New Load
.
7. Once all the ticket information is entered, click
Calculate All
. This calculates the remaining fields and the Total row.
Note – To print an abbreviated scale ticket report, select File / Print. If you want to print a complete report, select Reports / All Reports, click Field and then select Scale Ticket Report.
8. Click
OK
. The Total Qty. (Dry) is entered into the Qty. Harvested field in the Farming dialog.
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Editing landlord/sharecrop information when completing a job
Enter Sharecrop Information in the Farming dialog. This allows you to modify any charges, receipts, and inputs for a landlord while performing a farming operation:
1. In the Farming dialog, click
Landlords
in the Sharecrop Information area.
2. The Landlords tab of the Field Properties dialog appears. From here, you can add/modify any information for Harvest/Input charges and percentages as well as equipment charges, if applicable.
3. You can also add and remove landlords from the sharecrop information on the Field.
For more information on landlord properties, see
.
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Finding an existing job
You can find planned and completed farming operations (jobs) in the Farm, Jobs, or Input tab.
Finding a job in the Farm tab
1. Select View / Show Jobs in Land Areas.
2. Click
+
to open the Farm tree where you recorded the job.
3. To find a specific job recorded for this particular field and enterprise, highlight the correct crop enterprise and then select the Filter Jobs by Selection check box. Only the jobs recorded for this field and enterprise appear in the Jobs tab.
To remove the filter, clear the Filter Jobs by Selection check box or click
Clear Filter
in the Jobs tab.
Finding a job in the Jobs tab
The Jobs tab shows all the planned jobs (orange text, Planned icon ) and completed jobs (black text, Completed icon ) you entered, synchronized, or imported into the software.
In the Jobs tab, scroll to the job or use the sorting and filtering options:
•
Click the column header (for example, Client or Date). Click the header again to reverse the sort order.
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•
Apply a filter to find a job: a. Click
Edit Filter.
3 – Field Record Keeping b. Enter Filter criteria—click the appropriate check box (for example, Commodity) and then select the required item from the drop-down list (for example, Corn) and then click
OK.
You can enter more than one filter at the same time to limit the search. For example, you can also select Status and then select Planned, or use a specific date range.
Only jobs that meet the criteria appear in the Jobs tab.
To remove criteria from the job filter, clear the check boxes.
c. Click
OK
.
To show all jobs again, click
Clear Filter
in the Jobs tab.
Note – If you apply a filter and no jobs appear in the Jobs tab, click
Clear Filter
to view all jobs.
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Finding a job in the Inputs tab
This allows you to find a job based on a Machine, Person, or Supply:
1. In the Inputs tab, click
+
to open the category for the input used in a job.
3 – Field Record Keeping
2. To find a specific job, highlight the input item and then select the Filter Jobs by Input check box.
All jobs that use this input appear in the Jobs tab.
To remove the filter, clear the Filter Jobs by Inputs check box or click
Clear Filter
in the Jobs tab.
Editing jobs
You can edit both planned and completed jobs.
1. Find the job you want to edit, see
Finding an existing job, page 79
, right-click it and then select
Properties.
2. Make the required changes to the Farming dialog—you can change or modify any field. See
Creating a planned job, page 63
.
3. You can also:
–
–
Add an input; select Add/ Input. See page 67 .
Delete an input. See
4. Click
OK
to record the changes made to the job.
Removing/deleting jobs
C
CAUTION – Once a job is deleted, records are permanently removed.
You can delete planned or completed farming operations at any time. If you delete a job, it permanently removes the job and replaces any inventories (only if the Farm Works Accounting software is installed), and subtracts any charge units when inputs were used.
1. Find the job you want to delete. See Finding an existing job, page 79 .
2. Verify that this is the correct job—right-click it and then select Properties. To return to the Jobs tab, click
Cancel
.
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3. If you are satisfied that this is the job you want to delete, select it in the Jobs tab and then click
Delete
.
To delete several jobs at once that are not grouped together, hold down the
[Ctrl]
key as you select each operation in the Jobs tab and then click
Delete
.
To delete several jobs at once that are grouped, hold down the
[Shift]
key, select the first job in the group and then select the last job in the group and then click
Delete
.
Exporting jobs
Once jobs are created, you can export both planned and completed jobs for different uses outside of the office or on another device. This may be called exporting or writing data. Jobs can be exported in several formats, including CSV and FODM (.xml) files, and for use with the Mobile software.
Exporting a job does not remove it or change it in the Jobs list. You can use the job data in another field recording or in Farm Works Mapping software.
Exporting CSV or XML files
You can export only one CSV file at a time, but you can export multiple jobs in a single XML file.
1. In the Jobs tab, scroll to the job or use the sorting and filtering options to find the job(s). See
Finding a job in the Jobs tab, page 79
.
2. Right-click the required job and then select Export, or click
Export
.
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3. Select a location in the Save in field, enter a name for the job in File Name and then select an option from the Save as type list. The options are Comma Separated Values File (*.csv) or FODM
XML File (*.xml).
4. Click
Save
.
The exported job is saved to the chosen location. Use Explorer to locate the file to copy it to a removable drive, attach it to an email, or import it back into the software.
Importing FODM XML files
You can import FODM (*.xml) files that were created by another user of the software or by other software. FODM files include field record data as well as any associated map data. The imported job is added to the Jobs tab where you can view, edit, print, or export it.
Importing jobs is not the same as synchronizing. Refer to the Farm Works Mapping Software User
Guide for more information.
1. Select File / Read Job Data or click the Read Job Data icon .
2. Click
Browse
to select the File Location.
3. Click
OK
; the XML file appears in the Job tab. The Linker dialog appears—click
+
next to Generic
Import and then select FODM XML (*.xml).
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4. Click
OK
.
The imported job is added to the Jobs tab.
Linking resources when synchronizing or importing jobs
When importing jobs from a file or from the Mobile software, there may be resources and job entry items that were not previously entered into the office software. These can be created elsewhere and then set up when importing. When a resource is entered in the field, a different name may be used than that used in the office.
The Linker dialog appears when you import jobs to create new resources and allows you to "link" new and current items. Once items are linked, the software assumes that the two different items are actually one. There are two resource lists: Operation and Desktop. If there are items in the Operation list, you must either create or link them using the desktop software.
1. Select an item in Operation Resources and then do one of the following:
– Click
Create
with the item highlighted on the operations resource side. This opens the
Commodity Properties dialog so that you can set up the particular item.
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–
If it is a new item, click
OK
and then enter the required information into the
Commodity
Properties dialog.
Note – You will not be prompted to enter this information until you have completed all the Link screens.
– If the item is the same as an item already listed in Desktop Resources, select both items and then click
Link
.
If you are confident that the item was set up earlier, but it does not appear in Desktop
Resources, it may be a retired item. Select the Show Retired check box.
2. Once all items are linked or created, click
OK
.
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Merging crop enterprises
1. Select Resources / Enterprises.
3 – Field Record Keeping
2. Select the two enterprises that you want to merge and then click
Merge
.
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Weather tab
The Weather tab allows you to enter weather observations and apply them to one or more fields.
The information can be edited, applied to additional fields, removed from fields, or deleted.
Adding weather information
1. In the Weather tab, click
Add
.
2. In the Weather dialog: a. In the Fields area, select the Farm / Fields to which the weather information will be applied. b. In the Weather information area, enter the Date, High Temperature, Low Temperature,
Precipitation, and Humidity.
c. Click
OK
.
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The weather information appears in the Weather tab.
3 – Field Record Keeping
•
•
You can now do any of the following:
• To edit weather information, select the item and then click
Edit
. To clear Clients/Farms/Fields, clear the check box. Once you have made the required changes, click
OK
.
To delete weather information, select the item and then click
Delete
.
To add additional weather information, click
Add
.
Viewing and printing a weather report
1. Do one of the following:
–
–
Select Reports / All Reports.
Click the report icon .
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2. Click
+
beside the Field category or click
Expand All
.
3 – Field Record Keeping
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3. Select Weather Report and then click
OK
.
3 – Field Record Keeping
4. Select each item that you want to include in the report or click
Select All
to select all items.
5. Enter a Date Range and then click
Preview
.
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The Print Preview shows the first page of the report. To view other pages, click the Next Page
[>] or Previous Page
[<] icon.
Creating invoices
If you are using the Farm Works Accounting software, you can create invoices for use in billing custom-hire work, supply and crop sales, and Landlord percentages.
1. For more information on printing invoices from the Farm Works Accounting software, refer to the
Farm Works Accounting Software User Guide. Make sure that the equipment, people, and supplies to be used in invoicing are set up correctly.
2. In the Inputs tab expand the tree for the required category, right-click the item you want to include on the invoice and then select Properties.
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3. In the Properties dialog, select the Invoice tab and then select the Include on Invoice check box.
Change the Description on Invoice (if required) and then enter a dollar amount in Invoice Rate.
4. Click
OK
.
5. Complete
through
Step 4 for all equipment, supplies, and people that you want to invoice.
6. In the Jobs tab, scroll to the job or use the sorting and filtering options to find the required job, see
Finding a job in the Jobs tab, page 79 .
7. Select the required job(s) to highlight them, right-click any selected job and then select Create
Invoice.
8. If a Landlord was set up for this field, you are prompted to select the inputs that must be billed.
Select from Farm Inputs Only, Landlord Inputs Only, or Farm and Landlord Inputs and then click
OK
.
9. Select the Client / Landlord to be billed and then complete the other fields. Any items that you
through Step 4 appear on screen.
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To add additional items, click
+
, select Add Input and then enter the required inputs; to delete an item, click
-
next to the item you want to delete.
10. If required, select the Comment or Footer check box and enter a message or footer to appear on the invoice.
11. Click
OK
.
Invoices appear in the Invoice tab.
12. To print an invoice, right-click the invoice and then select Print. From the print preview screen you can print or export the invoice.
You can also:
• Mark an invoice as paid: Right-click the invoice and then select Paid. A cross appears in the Paid column.
•
•
If required, you can reverse this: Right-click the invoice and then select Unpaid. A cross disappears from the Paid column.
Change the invoice: Right-click the invoice, select Properties and then make the required changes.
Delete an invoice: Right-click the invoice and then select Delete.
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Submitting crop insurance data
Users of Farm Works Software® solutions can now submit their crop insurance records electronically to the Great American Insurance Group. This is done from the Farm Works Mapping software, by directly transferring planting and harvest data.
•
•
•
Before you can do this, you must assign the following in the software:
A County and State to each field, see below
RMA identities to commodities
A Type and Practice
Assigning a County and State to each field
To successfully use the Great American Insurance Submission option, assign a County and State to each field:
1. On the Farm tab, click + beside the appropriate Client or Farm to expand the tree view, right-click the required field and then select Properties:
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2. In the Field Properties screen:
3 – Field Record Keeping a. On the General tab, enter the Tillable acres. This data item will be exported to the XML
Export option only—it is not submitted to Great American Insurance.
b. Select the Info tab and then select the State and County where the field is located.
Note – If the State and County are already displayed, you must still click OK to record the information.
c. Click
OK
to save changes.
Repeat this procedure for each field.
Assigning RMA Identities to Commodities
1. Select Resources / Commodities. The Commodities dialog shows all commodities currently used.
2. Select the commodity to which you want to assign an RMA identity and then click Properties.
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3. In the Commodity Properties screen, select the correct RMA Identity from the drop-down list (if this has not yet been done).
4. Click
OK
.
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Assigning a Practice and Type
You can assign the Practice and Type to fields when you submit the data or to the enterprise before data submission.
To assign a Practice and Type to the enterprise:
1. In the Farm tab, right-click the Crop Enterprise to edit and then select Properties.
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2. In the Enterprise Properties screen, select a Practice and Type from the drop-down lists.
The Practice and Type lists are limited to the appropriate choices for the field, based on the State and County selected in the Field Properties screen. If the correct Practice and Type are not listed, select the Show All Types and Practices checkbox to show all items for selection.
3. Click
OK
.
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Submitting data to Great American Insurance Group
1. Select File / Submit Insurance Data.
2. In the Crop Insurance screen, select Great American from the drop-down list, enter the correct
Harvest Year and then click
Next
.
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3. Enter the User ID and Password provided to you by Great American Insurance. If you do not have a User ID and/or Password, click the https://www.greatag.com
link to create an account.
4. Click
Next
.
5. Once the
Ready to submit data
message appears, click
Finish
.
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Linking crops
If you have crops within the software that do not have the same name as is used in the Crop
Insurance, you are prompted to link the crop listed in the software to the description in the Crop
Insurance Resources list. To do this, select the crop in the Desktop Resources list, select the matching crop in the Crop Insurance Resources list, click Link and then click
OK
.
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Changing Practices and Types
The Crop Insurance Policies screen lists all the fields within the selected harvest year that have a county and state assigned to the field, a crop commodity with an RMA identity, and a crop enterprise with a Practice and Type assigned.
You can assign or change Practices and Types on individual fields.
If you want to assign the Practice and Type to all of the fields with a selected Commodity, State, or
County:
1. Select Fill / Fill All Values.
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2. In the Crop Insurance screen, select the Show All Types and Practices checkbox to show all types and practices, not just the ones associated with the state and county.
3. Select the required Practice and Type from the drop-down lists and then click
OK
.
Filtering listed fields
1. Use the All Operations, All Commodities, or All Counties drop-down lists to filter the listed fields.
The fields that are marked with a check sign contain the information that will be submitted to
Great American Insurance.
2. Click
OK
to complete the submission process.
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Submitted data
Once the Submit Insurance Data process is completed, Great American Insurance will have the following information for each selected field:
Field Required? Description
Crop Year Yes Enterprise year for the particular crop assigned to the field.
State Yes
County Yes
State set up in the Field
Properties screen.
County set up in the Field
Properties screen.
Field
Name
Acres
Yes
No
Farm
Name
Yes
Field name for each field.
Acres entered into the
Tillable Acres field in the
Field Properties screen.
This data item will be exported to the XML
Export option only-it is not submitted to Great
American Insurance.
The name of the farm each field is assigned to.
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Field
RMA
Practice
Required? Description
Yes Practice for this enterprise selected in the Enterprise Properties screen.
RMA Type Yes Type for this enterprise selected in the Enterprise
Properties screen.
3 – Field Record Keeping
FSA Farm No
FSA Field No
FSA Tract No
Legal
Section
Legal
Township
No
Legal
Range
No
No
FSA Farm Number entered in the Field
Properties screen.
FSA Field Number entered in the Field
Properties screen.
FSA Tract Number entered in the Field
Properties screen.
Legal Section Number entered in the Field
Properties screen.
Legal Township Number entered in the Field
Properties screen.
Legal Range Number entered in the Field
Properties screen.
Great American Insurance will receive the enterprise boundary for the crop. To verify the enterprise
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boundary, right-click the Enterprise and then select Edit Boundaries.
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Field
Planting Date
(Start Date)
Planting
Acres (Area
Farmed)
Required? Description
Yes Date crop was planted.
This date comes from any Planting or
Seeding farming operations entered into the program for the particular field and enterprise.
Note – If there is more than one Plant Date each plant date and the planted acres are included.
Yes The acres actually planted. This information comes from any Planting or
Seeding farming operations entered into the program for the particular field and enterprise.
Note – Verify that the
Planting Acres or Area
Farmed on the planting operation are correct before submitting the data to
Great American
Insurance. Make changes as necessary as these are the acres
Great American
Insurance looks for.
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Field
Harvest Date
(Start Date)
Harvest Acres
(Area
Farmed)
Required? Description
No This date comes from any Harvest farming operations entered into the program for the particular field and enterprise.
Note – If there is more than one Harvest
Date, each harvest date and the planted acres are included.
No Acres Harvested. This information comes from the Harvest farming operations entered into the program for this field and enterprise.
Note – Verify that the
Planting Acres or Area
Farmed on the planting operation are correct before submitting the data to
Great American
Insurance. Make changes as necessary as these are the acres
Great American
Insurance looks for
Quantity
(Total
Quantity)
Harvest Share
(Landlord
Quantity)
No
No
Total of harvest for this field. This information comes from the Harvest farming operations entered into the program for the particular field and enterprise.
The amount of harvest share if there is a landlord share for this field. The share amount is set up in the
Landlord tab of the
Field Properties screen.
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Reports
You can print reports for all of your machinery, field enterprises, and supply usage, including:
•
•
•
•
Equipment reports: Enterprise Statement, Fleet Management, Notation Report, Usage Reports
(Averages, Job Details, and Totals)
Field Reports: Field Equipment Usage, Field Enterprise Statement, Planning Summary by Crop, and Planning Summary Total
Fertilizer and Supply Usage Reports
Personnel Reports
Reports can be printed from the Reports dialog or from the Jobs tab and can be saved as Word documents, Excel spreadsheets, or PDF documents.
Printing Job reports
•
•
These reports are for planned and completed jobs:
The job report for a planned job is a work order to give to employees assigned to a job.
The job report for a completed job is a summary of the details of the farming operation that has been completed.
To print report(s):
1. In the Jobs tab, scroll to the job or use the sorting and filtering options to find the required job.
See Finding a job in the Jobs tab, page 79 .
2. Right-click the job and then select Print.
The preview report that appears lists all job elements.
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3. From the report preview, you can:
– Click the Print Setup icon to set the printer properties.
3 – Field Record Keeping
– Click the Print icon to print the report. In the Print dialog, you can select the pages and number of copies.
– Click the Export icon to export the report and save a copy.
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a. In the Export dialog, select the Format and Destination and then click
OK.
3 – Field Record Keeping b. In the Export Options dialog, select the page range that you want to export, or click
OK
to export the whole report.
c. In the Choose Export File dialog, select the folder or removable drive where you want to save the report, enter a name for the file in File name and then click
Save
.
The report is exported to the specified location where it can be printed, copied, or emailed.
Printing a Job Efficiency report
You can print reports for all of your machinery, field enterprises, and supply usage.
1. Do one of the following:
–
–
–
Select Reports / All Reports.
Click the report icon .
In the Farm or Inputs tab, right-click an item and then select Reports.
2. Click
+
beside the Equipment category.
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3. Select Job Efficiency and then click
OK
.
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4. Select the required report and then click
OK
.
3 – Field Record Keeping a. Select each item that you want to include in the report. or click
Select All
to select all items.
b. Enter a Date Range.
c. Click
Preview
.
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The print preview window shows the first page of the report. To view other pages, click the
Next Page icon
>
or Previous Page icon
<
.
Printing Field, Equipment, and Supply usage reports
You can print reports for all of your machinery, field enterprises, and supply usage
1. Do one of the following:
–
–
Select Reports / All Reports.
Click the report icon .
–
In the Farm or Inputs tab, right-click an item and then select Reports.
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2. Select the report you want to print. To do this, click
+
beside each category or click
Expand All
.
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3. Select the required report and then click
OK
.
3 – Field Record Keeping a. Select each item that you want to include in the report. or click
Select All
to select all items.
b. Enter a Date Range.
c. Click
Preview
.
The print preview window shows the first page of the report. To view other pages, click the
Next Page icon
>
or Previous Page icon
<
.
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4. From the report preview, you can:
– Click the Print setup icon to set the printer properties.
3 – Field Record Keeping
– Click the Print icon to print the report. In the Print dialog, you can select the pages and number of copies.
– Click the Export icon to export the report and save a copy.
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a. In the Export dialog, select the Format and Destination and then click
OK.
3 – Field Record Keeping b. In the Export Options dialog, select the page range that you want to export, or click
OK
to export the whole report.
c. In the Choose Export File dialog, select the folder or removable drive where you want to save the report, enter a name for the file in File name and then click
Save
.
The report is exported to the specified location where it can be printed, copied, or emailed.
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C H A P T E R
4
Mapping Software
In this chapter:
Downloading road and waterway data
Calibrating and geo-referencing images without GPS data
Drawing and importing boundaries
Field boundary display: View changes
Assigning colors to fields by crop enterprise
Setting up and selecting layer attributes
Creating Guidance / Feature layers
Working with yield and as-applied maps
Working with grids and contour maps
Copying a layer to a different Farm or Field
The Farm Works Mapping software provides unlimited layers for yield mapping, application logs, soil types, soil sample results, tile lines, and more.
If you import yield or application data into the
Farm Works Mapping software, it easily converts this spatial data into a field record.
See also, Chapter 6, Office Sync
.
4
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Toolbars
Toolbars contain icons (sometimes know as buttons) that enable you to perform many functions with
one click. For a description of these toolbars, see Toolbars, page 18 .
•
•
Job-Resource
Map
In addition, the Farm Works Mapping software contains the Map-Editing toolbar.
This toolbar appears when you right-click a Field name in the Farm tab and then select Edit
Boundaries or when you click the Edit Layer icon. Use the drawing tools to draw field boundaries.
Depending on the types of maps showing in the Map tab, the toolbar contains up to 23 icons.
Icon/Tool
Select
Action
Select objects in the Map tab. This can be used to select items in a rectangle, circle, polygon, or line by clicking the down arrow.
Use Invert Selection to reverse the items that are selected on the map.
Edit Node
Include Polygon
Exclude Polygon
Split Polygon
Measure
Move the node points on a boundary or area / polygon map as well as for a line map to adjust the boundary/area/polygon/line shape:
Not available for point maps.
• Click-and-drag a node to move it.
• Double-click a line segment to create a new node.
• Right-click a node and then select Delete to remove a node.
The size of the selected area is shown, and changes as you modify the polygon.
Draw or add to a field boundary or area / polygon: Not available for point maps.
Exclude areas such as ponds or ditches from a field boundary or area/polygon: Not available for point maps.
Split a field boundary or area / polygon into separate area / polygon: Not available for point maps.
Measure objects in Map. Click where you want to start measuring and click again to start another segment. Total length and distance in the X and Y directions appear in the bottom right corner of the screen. The X and Y values are of the last segment only. Right click to stop measuring.
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Icon/Tool
Buffer
Endpoint
Midpoint
Grid Snap
Horizontal
Vertical
Pan
Zoom
4 – Mapping Software
Action
Select a part or all of an area or field boundary. You then enter a distance or a size of an area; the software splits the area based on your settings. This option is useful when creating setbacks, refuge boundaries, or terraces.
Forces the cursor to snap directly to the end of a line segment.
Forces the cursor to snap to the exact center of a line segment.
Lays out a grid on the screen and forces the cursor to snap to the corner of each grid while drawing. Right-click this icon to change the grid size.
Forces the cursor to move perfectly horizontal while drawing.
Forces the cursor to move perfectly vertical while drawing.
Click this icon and then click-and-drag on the map to move the map across the screen.
Click to zoom in; right-click to zoom out. The map centers where you click.
You can also click-and-drag to zoom into a specifically sized area.
Zoom In
Zoom Out
Zoom Layer
Zoom All
Import shapefile
Auto Draw
Display Options
Background Imagery
Save
Cancel
Save and Close
Zoom in without re-centering the map
Zoom out without re-centering the map.
Zoom the active layer into view. The active layer is the one at the top of Displayed Layers.
Zoom to the extent of all visible layers.
Import the contents of a file onto the current layer, such as a field boundary.
Automatically draw field boundaries based on imported point data
(such as a yield map) for the field.
Change colors and appearance of objects; add labels to a layer.
Display the Roads and Streets and background imagery for the world.
You need an Internet connection to be able to use the background imagery.
Save the changes you have made to a map—you remain in map editing mode.
Save the changes you have made to a map and return to the Map tab.
Return to the Map tab without saving any changes.
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Downloading road and waterway data
Importing roads and waterways makes it easier to know where to draw your fields and it adds GPS coordinates to the maps that you draw by hand.
You can use the Background Imagery icon to view roads and aerial imagery. Many roads and streets worldwide can be shown, with labels.
North American Roads and Waterways can also be downloaded as line data; other types of aerial imagery are also available. For more information, refer to http://www.farmworks.com/support/faqs/index.php
.
Click the Background Imagery icon .
The roads for the area appear.
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Calibrating and geo-referencing images without GPS data
Some images (for example, scanned FSA maps) do not automatically have associated geo-referencing data. The software has a calibration feature that allows you to assign three GPS coordinates to these images so that they line up with other geo-referenced maps (such as road and waterway maps). To geo-reference an image you must register GPS points, calibrate the image, and then load the image into the software).
Registering GPS points
1. Obtain three GPS coordinates that are on the image you are working with—the easiest way to do this is to use road and waterway data downloaded into the Farm Works Mapping software.
2. Display the roads and waterways in the Map tab.
3. Right-click the first point that you can locate on the image and then select Register Location.
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4. The coordinates appear in the Registration Points dialog. Enter a Description that defines the location, for example,
Home 11 NW Corner,
and then click
OK
.
5. Repeat
to record two additional points.
Note – Calibration works best when the three points are not in a straight line and are spread out on the map. It is best if the three points form a right-angled triangle. The closer to a right-angled triangle, the more accurate the geo-referencing/calibration will be.
Calibrating the image
1. Select Start / Programs / Farm Works Software / Calibrate or
Start /All Programs / Farm Works Software / Calibrate.
2. Click
Open
. The Load Image dialog appears.
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3. Navigate to the location where you saved the image to be calibrated, select it and then click
Open
to load it.
4. To calibrate the image, zoom in on the area where the first point was registered (as described in the previous section) and then click the Register Points icon .
5. Locate and then click the first point on the map and then do one of the following:
–
–
Select the point you created earlier (for example, Home 11 NW Corner) from the Registered
Points drop-down list.
Leave the Registered Points field empty and enter the coordinates for the point. You would need to do this if you manually identified a GPS coordinate using a GPS receiver.
6. Click
OK
.
7. Repeat
to record the next two points. When the third point is recorded, the calibration process starts.
As soon as the calibration process is complete, the map should be oriented correctly. If the map is not calibrated correctly, repeat
to recalibrate or select new registration
points. See Registering GPS points, page 123 .
8. Once your map is calibrated, click the Save As icon .
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9. The Save As dialog appears. Enter a name for the file and then click
Save.
By default the program saves the file to C:\Farmproj\Images\Backdrop folder/directory.
10. Select File / Exit.
Loading the image
1. Exit the Calibrate program and return to the Farm Works Mapping software.
2. Select a Client, Farm, or Field name and then select Import Background.
3. Locate the calibrated image in the C:\Farmproj\Images\Backdrop folder and click
Open
.
The imported image is automatically displayed on the Map tab in the correct location.
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Drawing and importing boundaries
To add field boundary maps, do one of the following:
•
•
•
•
•
Draw them using the drawing and the free satellite imagery from the Internet. You can then trace outlines of your fields to draw more accurate boundaries.
Automatically draw them using imported yield data.
Import boundaries from third-party software (such as ArcView Shape File or .fgp file). To do this, right-click the name of the field and select Import Boundaries.
Read in other precision farming data using the Read Job Data option. See
.
.
After you draw or import field boundary maps, you can add labels with the names of the fields and change the colors of the maps to suit your needs. To easily view the field maps, select the names of the fields in the Farm tab: This shows every field boundary map for that farm.
Drawing field boundary maps
If you draw the fields by hand, you can use the roads and waterways, and imported background images to draw the fields as accurately as possible. If using yield data, you can use the Auto Draw
Drawing a field boundary map using the drawing tools
1. Select the Map tab to view the Map window and then select the Layers tab below the Map window to view Displayed Layers.
2. Click the Background Imagery icon to display roads and background imagery.
3. Use the zoom tools to find your field in the background image.
4. Right-click the field name in the Farm tab and then select Edit Boundaries.
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Note – If the Field is not in the Farm tab, see
Chapter 3, Field Record Keeping for instructions on how
to add the field.
5. On the Map-Editing toolbar, click the Include Tool - Polygon icon, to view the options—select
Include Tool - Rectangle, Include Tool - Circle Radius, Include Tool - Circle Diameter, or Include
Tool - Polygon. For a description of tools, see the
If you use the Rectangle or Circle tools, click-and-drag on the map where you want the boundary to be. When you release the mouse button, the polygon becomes complete. The Circle tool places the center of the circle where you click the mouse.
6. To draw a field boundary with Include Tool - Polygon: a. Click at one corner of the field. Move the cursor around the field and click to add as many nodes as needed. To create a curved effect, place the nodes closer together.
b. Move the Transparency slider to the left for a better view of the image through the polygon drawing.
c. To delete the last node added, right-click and then select Undo.
To cancel the polygon, right-click and then select Cancel.
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e. To complete the polygon, right-click, select Finish and then click
Save and Close
to exit editing and return to the Map tab.
7. If required, use the Node Edit tool to edit the field boundary. For more information, see
.
Use one or more of the following to change a field boundary. After you make changes, click
Save and
Close
.
•
Use the Exclude Polygon tool to remove any part of the field that is inside the boundary, for example, waterways, ponds, trees, and so on in the middle of a field.
Exclude tools work in the same manner as Include tools; they remove portions of the field, instead of adding them.
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•
To re-include an excluded area, select the area with the Include tool.
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• Use the Split Polygon tool to split the existing field boundary into separate polygons.
For example, use the Split Line tool to split every line segment that crosses the polygon into two polygons. In a simple split situation, it is easiest to use the Line option. You can also split using the rectangle, circle, and polygon split tools.
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To remove a section that was split from the original field and paste to another field: a. From the Farm tab, right-click the split field and then select Edit Boundaries.
b. On the Map tab, left-click the area that is to be split off and copied to another field. The portion to be split off will have a hatch-mark appearance.
c. Right-click the section of the field that will be assigned to the other field and then select
Copy. d. Right-click the same section of the filed and then select Delete. e. Click
Save and Close
to exit map editing
.
f.
From the Farm tab, right-click the field to which you want to add the split portion and then select Edit Boundaries.
g. Right-click outside the field boundaries and then select Paste Addition.
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[Shift]
key and then click each section. Once both sections are highlighted, right-click and then select Merge Polygons.
i.
Click
Save and Close
.
Automatically drawing fields from yield maps
If point maps, such as yield, planting, or spraying, are imported, the software can use that data to automatically draw field boundaries. This saves time, and the resulting maps are generally more accurate than those drawn by hand.
1. Select the Map tab.
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2. From the Farm tab tree view, double-click the job that includes the point data (yield or another job) from which to automatically draw the field-boundary map. The harvest map appears on the
Map tab.
3. Right-click the icon for the field that you want to draw a boundary for and then select Edit
Boundaries. The Map-Editing toolbar appears.
4. Click the Auto Draw icon on the toolbar above the displayed map. In the Layers dialog, select the layer to draw the boundary from. This should automatically default to the layer that is displayed.
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5. In the Auto Draw Options dialog, enter the equipment width that was used so that the software knows how far from the points to draw the field boundary. Enter a minimum area to prevent drawing small sections of the field around points that are not grouped together. You can modify this option to create a more accurate field boundary.
6. Click
OK
to begin the Auto Draw process. A progress bar appears.
7. Make any required changes to the field boundary before saving. If the boundary does not look correct because of holes in the middle of the field, or a small area was included that should not have been, either modify the boundary with the editing tools or delete the boundary and then try a different Minimum Area when using Auto Draw.
8. Click
Save and Close
.
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Importing field boundaries
You can import and view field boundary maps that were created with the mobile mapping software running on a handheld computer or other device, or maps created with other software, as long as they are in the correct file format. One of the most common file formats used for importing and exporting is ArcView shapefile. Before importing shapefiles of field-boundary maps, you must first save the shapefiles to a folder on your computer, and add the field names to the Farm tab for the maps you want to import. For more information, see
Chapter 5, Mapping Analysis and
Note – All shapefiles consist of three actual files: .shp, .shx, and .dbf. You must have all three to make a complete shapefile.
1. In the Farm tab, right-click the icon for the relevant field and then select Import Boundaries.
2. In the Import Boundaries dialog, locate the shapefile to import—only the .shp file appears—and then click Open.
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3. When prompted, click
Yes
to update Crop Enterprise with the same .shp file or click
No
to only apply it to the Field. The dialog only appears if you have created crop enterprises, for example
“2012 Corn”.
4. Under Coordinate System in the Import dialog, select the coordinate system that you used to create the shapefile. The program typically defaults to the coordinate system in which the shape file is assigned.
5. Click
OK
: The boundary is added to the boundary layer of the field and can be viewed in the Map tab.
6. Click
Save and Close
to save the map or click
Cancel
if you do not want to save the map.
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Viewing field boundary maps
Once you create a field boundary map, you can view the field boundary along with background images and other maps and field boundaries.
1. Select the appropriate Farm and then highlight the Field under that Farm. The field boundary appears in the Map tab.
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2. To view all of the field boundaries for one Farm, select the Farm. To view all of the boundaries for a client, select the Client. To view all field boundaries for all farms, click the User Information icon
at the top of Farm tree view.
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Field boundary display: View changes
To quickly see what was done recently to a field, what is growing in a field, or which fields belong to which farm, you can change the view on the boundary layer.
1. On the Farm tab, select the required Client, Farm, or Field.
2. If the Boundary Layer is not at the top of Displayed Layers, double-click it to move it there.
3. Change how the boundary layer appears under Views. There are seven options:
–
–
–
Clients: Boundaries are colored according to the Client to whom they are assigned.
Enterprises: Select a year to see fields colored according to the crop for the selected year.
Farms: Boundaries are colored according to the farm to which they are assigned.
–
–
Field Boundaries: All boundaries are colored the same.
Last Job: Select a year to see fields colored according to the crop for the selected year. They also have the pattern that was assigned to the last job for that year. Change a pattern from
Resources / Job Types.
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–
Restricted Entry: Select a date range to see which fields have restricted entry (based on REI chemical usage), for that time frame.
– Restricted Harvest: Select a date range to see which fields have a Pre-Harvest Interval (based on PHI usage), for that time frame.
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Exporting field boundary maps
Boundary maps can be exported in a number of formats so that they can be given to third parties for use in other software. Supported formats include ArcView Shape Files and Google Earth .kml files.
To export boundary maps:
1. Select the Map tab.
2. In the Farm tab, right-click the field to export and then select Export Boundaries. To export all of the field boundaries for a farm or client, right-click the Farm or Client name.
3. In the dialog that appears, select the folder or drive to save the exported file to and then enter a file name.
4. Select the type of file that you want to export the boundaries as (that is, .shp or .kml).
5. Click
Save
. The field-boundary map is saved to that folder or drive.
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Batch Shape File export
If you have multiple jobs that need to be exported as shape files, you can do this as a batch export:
1. Hold down the
[Ctrl]
key and then click the jobs you want to export.
2. Right-click any one of these jobs and then select Export.
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3. In the File Export Type field select the file type (either Arcview Shape File or FODM (*.xml) and then select the storage location for the files.
File names are created based on Client_Farm_Field_JobType_Date. The following image shows examples of created files.
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Assigning colors to fields by crop enterprise
Each field can have a different color depending on which crop is growing there. For example, corn can have a different color from wheat or soybeans. This can be useful when looking to quickly see what is growing in each field.
1. From the Resources menu, select Commodities.
2. In the Commodities dialog, select the crop for which you want to assign a color, or select Add to add a new crop.
3. Click
Properties
to open the Commodity Properties dialog.
4. From the Color list, select a color for the crop and then click
OK
.
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Any field that has that a Crop Enterprise assigned to it, appears in the chosen color in the Map tab.
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Assigning patterns
To quickly see which field is planted, harvested, and so on, assign patterns to job types so when that job is performed in a field, that pattern is visible.
1. From the Resources menu, select Job Types.
2. In the Operation Types dialog, enter a Description for the new operation, for example Corn
Harvest.
3. Choose the pattern to assign to the job type and then click
OK
.
Any field that had that operation performed on it last now shows the selected pattern. The color still shows any Crop Enterprise previously selected.
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4. In Views, select the crop year under Last Job.
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Editing Enterprise maps
There may be years where more than one crop is planted in a field. Multiple crop enterprises can be assigned to a field, and enable you to map crop locations.
For more information on creating enterprise maps, see Setting up a Crop Enterprise, page 53 .
1. In the Farm tab, right-click the Crop Enterprise to edit and then select Edit Boundaries.
2. Use the Map-Editing toolbar to create and split field boundaries.
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3. From the Split tool list , select Split Line to section off the crop portions. Click outside the boundary where the split is to begin, click outside the boundary where the split is to end, rightclick and then select Finish.
4. With the Selection tool , click in each section to verify the acres, shown in the lower right corner.
5. If the acreage is not correct, use the Node Edit tool to adjust the nodes.
6. With the Selection tool: a. Right- click the section of the field that will be assigned to another crop and then select
Delete.
b. Right-click the remaining section and then click
Copy
.
c. Click
Save and Close
.
7. Right-click the other Crop Enterprise and then select Edit Boundaries. a. Right-click the boundary map and then select Paste Subtraction. This places the deleted portion on the mapping screen. b. Click
Save and Close
.
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8. To view the Crop Enterprise, select the Field from the Farm tab tree view: On the Map tab, under
Views, select Crop Enterprises and the current year.
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Setting up and selecting layer attributes
Attributes contain the data that is within a layer. For example, a yield layer imported from a yield monitor might contain the following attributes: Mass flow, moisture, dry yield, flags, region, and so on. When importing a background map (also known as a layer) or soil sample data, for example, you must specify each attribute and what type of attribute it is. There are many predefined attributes, and you can add more. Setting a type for an attribute is very important: While there are generic types of attributes, such as Numbers, Text, and Yes/No, defined attribute types can be very helpful because the units will always be the same when that attribute is selected and you can have one common legend for all layers. This is very helpful when visually comparing two different maps, for example, soil test levels from one field to another. This will also become critical when making formulas for prescription generation.
To add an attribute type:
1. From the Resources menu, select Attribute Types.
2. To add a type to the list, click
Add
.
Enter a description and then specify the type.
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3. In the Attribute Type Properties dialog:
Field
Attribute Type Description
Type
Action
Enter a description.
Select:
• Number, if the attribute will contain only numbers.
• Text, if the attribute will be text.
• Choice, if there is a set list of values that the attribute will use. Legends can then be created based on the different choices. When choice is selected, whenever that attribute is used on a layer, they will all have common legends.
• Yes/No, to return only one of those values. This is commonly used in yield monitors to specify whether the header is up or down
(engaged/disengaged).
Numeric
Properties
Decimals
Minimum
Maximum
Unit of Measure None
If you select Numbers, enter the number of decimal places to show.
If you select Numbers, enter a value. The software disregards anything outside these values.
Rate
If you select Numbers, enter a value if there are no units associated with the number.
If you select Numbers, enter a value if the units are <unit1>/<unit2> such as bushels/acre.
Simple Units If you select Numbers, enter a value for everything else (seconds, pounds, bushels, and so on.)
4. When finished, click
OK
.
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Creating Guidance / Feature layers
Layers can be used for many types of map information including guidance paths, soil types, roads, and waterways.
You can also add Guidance/Feature layers for export to precision farming displays, such as the
Trimble FmX
®
integrated display and the Trimble CFX-750
™
display. These layers include Guidance lines, Area features (for no-apply zones), Line features (tiling, identifying features, and so on), and
Point features.
Each Field can have only one of each of the four Guidance/Feature layers. Once a layer is created, double-click it on the Farm tab tree view and then the Edit tool to edit it.
When you use the Read Job Data option, the software automatically reads any layers that were collected with the device. These layers appear in the Farm tab tree view, and can be viewed and edited when you use the Write Job Data option.
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Working with Guidance Line Layers
Guidance lines can be read in from, and written to displays such as the Trimble FmX integrated display, the Trimble CFX-750 display, the CNH Pro 700 display, the New Holland IntelliView II display, and Ag Leader Integra and Versa Displays. For specific guidance line types and their supported monitors see the following chart.
Note – You can create guidance lines on a Trimble display and send them to a New Holland or AFS display and the other way around.
Supported platforms
Trimble (AgGPS folders)
Ag Leader
(*.agdata/*.agsetup files)
CNH
(*.cn1 folders/*.vy1 files)
Supported monitors
• FmX integrated display
• CFX-750 display
• EZ-Guide
®
500 lightbar guidance system
• Integra display
• Versa display
• Case AFS
™
200, Pro 300, Pro 600/700 displays
• New Holland Intelliview II, Plus II, III, IV displays
• FM-750
™ display (AgGPS folders)
• FM-1000
™
integrated display (AgGPS folders)
Supported platforms
Trimble
Compatible guidance line patterns
• Straight AB
• A+
• Curve
• Pivot
1
• Headland
• Freeform
Ag Leader • Straight AB
• Heading
• Pivot
1
• Adaptive Curve
• Identical Curve
• Smart Path
CNH • Straight
• Heading
• Circle
1
• Curve
• Spiral
1
• Field
1
Straight AB A+ Curve Pivot Headland Freeform: Trimble and Ag Leader pivot patterns and CNH circle and spiral patterns should not be edited in the Farm Works software. The patterns can be deleted; however, editing the patterns will make the lines unrecognizable by the display.
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Supported platforms
Trimble and CNH
CNH and Ag Leader
Trimble and Ag Leader
Guidance line exchange options
• Trimble Straight AB to CNH Straight
1
• Trimble A+ to CNH Straight
• CNH Heading to Trimble Straight AB
• Trimble Curve to CNH Curve
1
• CNH Field to Trimble Curve and Straight AB
• CNH Straight to Ag Leader Straight AB
1
• CNH Heading to Ag Leader Straight AB
• Ag Leader Heading to CNH Straight
• CNH Curve to Ag Leader Identical Curve
• Ag Leader Adaptive & Identical Curve to CNH Curve
• CNH Field to Ag Leader Identical Curve & Straight AB
• Trimble Straight AB to Ag Leader Straight AB
1
• Trimble A+ to Ag Leader Straight AB
• Ag Leader Heading to Trimble Straight AB
• Trimble Curve to Ag Leader Identical Curve
• Ag Leader Adaptive & Identical Curve to Trimble Curve
1
Can work in reverse.
1. In the Farm tab tree view, right-click the field, select Add Layer and then select Create Guidance
Lines. The layer opens in Map Editing mode.
2. From the Map toolbar select one of the options:
–
–
–
To create a curved guidance line, see page 155
To create a straight guidance line, see
.
To create a guidance line at a specific angle, see page 156
.
Creating a curved guidance line
1. From the Line tool drop-down list, select the Curved A-B Line Tool .
2. Click to create the first point and then click to create each new point along the required guidance path.
3. When finished, right-click and then select Finish.
4. In the dialog that appears, click
OK
to accept the assigned name or enter a different name and then click
OK
. The name that you enter here appears in the device that you use.
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An A-B designation is added to the Guidance layer.
Creating a straight guidance line
1. From the Line tool drop-down list, select the Straight Line A-B Line tool .
2. Click to create Point A and then click in the correct location to create Point B.
3. In the dialog that appears, click
OK
to accept the assigned name or enter a different name and then click
OK
. The name that you enter here appears in the device that you use.
An A-B designation is added to the Guidance layer.
Creating a line at a specific angle (A + Line)
1. From the Line tool drop-down list, select the A + Line tool . The line is automatically 1.55 miles long.
2. Click to create Point A.
3. Continue to hold down the left mouse button and then drag to draw a line in the required direction. When the guidance line is in the correct direction, release the mouse button.
The A+ Direction dialog shows the angle of the line.
4. If necessary, change this angle. If you do change the angle, the path changes accordingly.
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5. Click
OK
.
6. Enter a name for the guidance line and then click
OK
. An A+ Line is added to the Guidance layer.
You can do the following with guidance lines.
• Adjust the guidance line: a. Select the Node Edit tool.
•
• b. Click the A-B line.
c. Pass over one of the node points; the cursor shape changes to a hand.
d. To move a particular node, click-and-drag the node as required.
e. To add a node, double-click the line where the node is needed, or right-click and then select
Add.
f.
To delete a node, right-click it and then select Delete.
Adjust the line placement: a. Click the Select tool .
b. Click and hold on the guidance line; the cursor shape changes to a hand.
c. Click-and-drag the line as required.
Create an offset path:
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a. Click the Select Tool .
b. Right-click the A-B line and then select Create Offset.
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• c. Enter values in Original Implement Width and New Implement Width. The software automatically creates the Net Offset.
d. Enter the Offset Direction and then click
OK
.
e. Click
Save and Close
.
Copied from layer to layer: a. Display the layer that has the lines that you want to copy.
b. Right-click the line and then select Copy. c. From the Farm tab tree view, select the layer to copy the line to.
d. Right-click and then select Edit Layer, or double-click to view the layer and then select the
Edit Tool from the Map tab.
Creating area features
Area features can include a no spray zone, such as a grass waterway, or ponds, lagoons, and hazards.
1. From the Farm tab tree view, right-click the Field, select Add Layer and then select Create Area
Features.
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2. Create features using the Mapping tools. For example, use the Include Polygon tool to click
(right-click to finish) and create an exclusion area.
3. In the Area Feature dialog, select the type of feature from the Name list and then click
OK
.
Creating line features
You can add Line features including cables, tiling, and hazards, to a layer.
1. From the Farm tab tree view, right-click the Field, select Add Layer and then select Create Line
Features.
2. Do one of the following:
–
Copy an existing line: a. Right-click a line and then select Copy.
b. From the Farm tab tree view, select the layer to copy the line to. c. Right-click and then select Edit Layer, or double-click to view the layer and then select the
Edit tool from the Map tab.
d. In Map Editing, right-click and then select Paste.
–
Hand-draw a line with the line tool: a. Select the Feature Line layer and then select Edit mode.
b. Select the Line tool .
c. Click to create the first point and then click to create each new point along the required path.
d. When finished, right-click and then select Finish.
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OK
.
The drawn line features appear on the map.
Creating point features
Point features can represent landmarks such as rocks, trees, and other objects.
1. From the Farm tab tree view, right-click the Field, select Add Layer and then select Create Point
Features.
2. Do one of the following:
–
To manually create points, select the Define Points tool and then click to add a point. In the dialog that appears, select a point name (type) from the drop-down list.
The points appear on the map. a. Display the layer with the point that are needing to be copied. b. Right-click a point and then select Copy.
c. From the Farm tab tree view, select the layer to copy the point to.
d. Right-click and then select Edit Layer, or double-click to view the layer and then select the
Edit tool from the Map tab.
e. In Map Editing, right-click and then select Paste.
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Multi Swath Lines management
The Multi Swath Lines management (also known as Crop Row Management or Advanced Guidance
Line Management) features of the Farm Works Software solutions enable you to automatically generate swaths and planned planting swaths that can be used for guidance. In addition, the program can take completed planting swaths and then create crop rows that can be used for management on a row-by-row basis. This functionality can be particularly useful for sugarcane and other crops where single rows are harvested.
Note – Multi Swath Lines layers must be assigned to an actual crop in order to be written out. Layers under Unassigned Crop will not be written. When writing data to a display, the multi-swath lines under the latest crop year will be written.
Crop Row Management
Enabling Crop Row Management
If you are designing planned Multi Swath Lines before you start working in the field or if you are creating individual crop-rows (typically for sugarcane operations), you must enable the Crop Row
Management tools. If Crop Row Management is not enabled, you can still read and write multiswath lines and you can also edit, delete and create new multi-swath lines to be written back out.
To enable Crop Row Management:
1. Select File / Preferences / Crop Row Management:
2. Place a check mark next to Enabled.
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3. From the Default Crop drop-down list, select the typical crop enterprise, such as 2014 Sugarcane.
Note – When data is read into the software, the program will create a Multi Swath Lines layer that will be used for crop row management or guidance. If the collected data does not include an enterprise, the Multi Swath Lines layer will be added to the Default Crop enterprise or Unassigned
Crop if Crop Row Management is not enabled.
4. If your crop enterprise is not listed select <Add/Edit>.
a. Click Add and then select a Commodity from the list or select <New> to add your own.
b. If you selected <New>, complete the Commodity Properties dialog.
c. Select the correct year from the drop-down list on the Commodities Properties dialog.
d. Click OK to save the entry and exit the Commodity Properties dialog.
e. Click OK to save and exit the Commodities dialog.
5. If the Accounting software is installed, you must also select an account, which is used to keep track of costs associated with the crop, harvest, and other costs.
6. Click OK to return to the Crop Row Management dialog.
7. Once the enterprise is selected, click OK to exit.
Once Crop Row Management is enabled, you can import or read in your planting data to create crop rows. Planting data can be read in using the Read Job Data option or through the Office Sync option of the Connected Farm™ software. For more information on Office Sync, see
.
Reading job data
Supported displays
•
•
•
•
•
•
The software will read and write Multi Swath Lines data from the following displays:
Trimble FmX integrated display
Trimble CFX-750 display
Case Pro 700 display
New Holland Intelliview Plus IV display
FM-1000 integrated display
FM-750 display
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To read the job data, do the following:
1. Select File / Read Job Data.
2. In the left column of the Read Job Data dialog, click + next to the display the data was collected on and then select the specific data type listed below.
3. Under File Path, click Browse to find the storage card or folder where you saved the data.
4. In the Open dialog, select the appropriate file.
For example, to import Trimble data (from an FmX integrated, display, a CFX-750 display or an
EZ-Guide® system), navigate to and then select the AgGPS® folder; for Pro 700/Intelliview Plus IV data, select the *.CN1 folder.
5. To select the job(s) to import, highlight each one. To select multiple files, hold down the
[Ctrl]
key while selecting.
6. Click OK.
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The import progress is shown as the software reads each of the files.
The coverage maps and the Multi Swath Lines layer will be added under the appropriate Farm and
Field and Enterprise.
Note – When data is read into the software, the program creates a Multi Swath Lines layer that will be used for crop row management or guidance. If the collected data does not include an enterprise, the Multi Swath Lines layer is added to the Default Crop enterprise or unassigned crop (if Crop Row
Management is not enabled).
Working with Multi Swath Lines as planting lines
1. In the Farm tab, locate the Multi Swath Lines layer under the applicable Client, Farm, Field and
Enterprise.
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2. Double-click the Multi Swath Lines layer to view it on the map.
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•
•
With the Multi Swath Lines displayed, the legend shows three different line types:
•
As Applied Line: The line that was actually driven when operating/planting.
Crop Row: Where the crop was planted based on the implement information entered into the
display (in this example, an FmX or FM-1000 integrated display).
Planned: Planned crop row lines that can be created and then sent to the FmX display to follow
during planting.
Editing row settings
If Crop Row Management is enabled, you can fix incorrect row settings that came from the display.
Note – This does not apply to Pro700/Intelliview Plus IV users. Implements for the Pro700/Intelliview
Plus IV are listed as Unknown and cannot be edited.
•
•
Enabling Crop Row Management allows you to have Planned, Applied, and Crop-Row Lines. If Crop
Row Management is not enabled, you will only have Applied lines. Crop Row Management allows you to:
Filter lines by Type (Planned, Applied, and Crop Rows).
Assign new lines to a Type (Planned, Applied or Crop Rows).
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•
Implement Options that are used to generate Crop Rows.
If Crop Row Management is enabled and you write data to a display, the following rules apply:
•
•
•
If there are Applied Lines, they will be written to the display.
If there are Planned but no Applied lines, then the Planned Lines are written out.
Crop Rows are always written out if they are there. These are written along with the Applied or
Planned lines.
To edit Row Settings:
1. With the Multi Swath Lines displayed, click the Edit Layer icon .
2. Use the Filter drop-down list to show only certain lines, such as As Applied Lines, Crop Row, or
Planned Lines. Select < All > to view all lines.
3. Under Implement Options click Edit Implement.
4. Change the implement Width and/or the number of Rows, and then click OK.
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5. Click Update Crop Rows to make the changes to the multi swath lines. All of the Crop Row lines will be deleted and recreated based on the new settings.
6. Click Save and Close to save and exit Map Editing.
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Creating planned Multi Swath Lines
The software enables you to create planned Multi Swath Lines from scratch. These lines can be based on any other lines including a portion of a field boundary. To create planned Multi Swath Lines:
1. In the Farm tab, locate the crop enterprise under the applicable Farm and Field.
2. Right-click the crop enterprise, select Add Layer and then select Create Multi Swath Lines.
A Multi Swath Lines layer appears below the Farm, Field, and Enterprise.
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3. Double-click the Multi Swath Lines layer to view the map.
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4. With the Multi Swath Lines displayed, click the Edit Layer icon .
5. From the Filter drop-down list select either Planned or < All >.
6. Under the New Lines section select Planned, so that all new lines are created as Planned lines.
Alternatively, select As Applied Line if you are working with actual driven lines.
7. Select the Smooth check box for the program to automatically smooth corners or turns when the planned line is created.
If you select this option, you must enter a turn radius value in the Smooth Options field.
8. Select the Extend and Clip check box for the program to automatically extend or clip the lines to the enterprise boundary for the field.
9. To manually create planned lines, select the Line tool from the Map Editing Toolbar.
10. Click to create the first point and then click to create each new point along the required path.
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11. When finished, right-click and then select Finish.
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The drawn line appears on the map in red
12. Repeat Step 10 through Step 11 for each line needed to complete the planned planting map.
Note – If the "Extend and Clip" option is enabled, any drawn lines that go outside the enterprise boundary will be clipped to the boundary. In addition, any lines that are within the enterprise boundary and do not intersect it, will be extended to the boundary.
Copying planned Multi Swath Lines from other sources
Lines can also be copied from another source/layer. This is useful if you have mapped a feature such as a terrace or low spot in the field as a "Feature Lines" or Path/Line layer. To copy lines:
1. Open the layer that contains the lines that you want to copy (such as a Feature Lines layer).
2. Right-click on a blank area of the map screen and then select Invert Selection to select all the lines on the layer.
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3. Right-click again and then select Copy.
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4. Open the Multi Swath Lines layer.
5. Click the Edit Layer icon .
6. In the New Lines section, select Planned from the Type drop-down list.
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7. Right-click on a blank area of the map screen and then select Paste Addition to copy and paste the lines to the Multi Swath Lines layer.
8. To assign an implement to a line, right-click on the line, select Properties and then select the correct implement. If no implement is listed, select Unknown. If the line should have an implement, it should be an As Applied Line. Click OK to save the information. Implements are only needed if you want to generate crop rows from the data.
9. To create Crop Row Lines from the As Applied Line, select the implement from the drop-down list in the lower left corner. If an implement is not listed, select Unknown.
10. Click Edit Implement and then enter the swath Width and number of Rows to be created for each As Applied Line.
11. Select the Save as Default check box to default these settings for all future implements and then click OK.
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12. Click Update Crop Rows.
13. When prompted to confirm that the program will delete and recreate all crop rows based on the settings for the selected implement, click Yes. Crop rows are created based on the implement settings.
If you did not select Extend and Clip or Smooth, or you copied lines from another layer, you can still choose to extend the line and clip it to the boundary, and to smooth the line, as follows:
1. Click one or more of the existing lines on the map so that they are highlighted and flashing.
2. Right-click on the line and then select Extend. The selected line(s) will be extended and/or clipped to the enterprise boundary for the field.
3. To smooth lines, select them, right-click and then select Smooth.
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Working with offsets
Use the Offset Options dialog to map multiple lines that are evenly spaced out based on one of the already drawn lines. The offset option can be used with both Planned and As Applied lines.
1. Click one of the existing lines on the map so that it is highlighted and flashing.
2. In the Offset Options section, enter a Distance. This should be the distance between the lines
(typically the width of the implement that will be used - likely a planter).
3. Enter a Count that represents the number of lines that will be created.
Note – Lines will be clipped to the enterprise boundary so the program will never create more lines than will fit within the enterprise boundary.
4. Select a Direction that is relative to the order of points that make up the path. The selected line will have an A and B at the ends so that you can identify the direction.
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5. Do one of the following:
–
–
Click Create to create the offsets on the map.
Click Select to select the lines that were just created. The number and total length of the selected lines appear in the Information tab.
–
Click Undo to remove the last offset that was created. If you click Undo multiple times, it will undo each previous set of lines that were created with the Create button.
If the line that was initially used for the offset has an Swath ID (right-click the line and select
Properties to see the line ID), the new lines that are created will also have Swath IDs. These IDs are numbered sequentially based on the ID of the line that was used.
Note – The Undo button will only undo lines that were made as a result of the Create button.
6. Click Save and Close to save and then exit Map Editing.
Working with Swath IDs for Case and New Holland displays
This option is available on Multi Swath Line layers for Case and New Holland displays only.
Swath IDs appear on the Case and New Holland displays and can be used to select individual Multi
Swath Lines. When Multi Swath Lines are read from a display, the ID is shown in the software. These
IDs can be changed if needed. In addition, Multi Swath Lines that you create in the software will have
IDs that are written and used on the displays.
To display labels for Swath IDs:
1. With the Multi Swath Lines displayed, click the Edit Layer icon .
2. From the Select Tool drop down list, select the Select Tool - Line option:
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3. Click outside the lines where the selection is to begin, click outside the line where the selection is to end and then right-click and select Finish.
4. The lines that the select line tool crossed should now be flashing.
5. Right click and select Add Label.
6. From the Layer Labels, select Swath ID and then click OK.
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All lines should now be numbered with the Swath ID:
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Editing individual line Swath IDs
1. With the Multi Swath Lines displayed, click the Edit Layer icon .
2. Click one of the existing lines on the map so that it is highlighted and flashing.
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3. Right click and select Properties.
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The Properties dialog displays details about the selected line such as the Type (of line), Name, and the Swath ID:
Lines are automatically assigned a Swath ID number, either from the display itself or when manually created in the program.
4. To change the Swath ID for the individual line, delete the existing number in the Properties screen and then enter the new number. Only the number for this particular line is changed.
5. Click OK to save the changes.
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Editing Swath IDs for multiple lines
1. From the Select Tool drop down list, select the Select Tool: Line option.
2. Click outside the lines where the selection is to begin, click outside the line where the selection is to end and then right-click and select Finish.
The lines that the select line tool cross should now be flashing.
3. Right click and select Properties.
4. In the Properties dialog, enter a new Swath ID and then click OK. Based on the number you enter here, all the highlighted lines will be renumbered sequentially.
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If the select line tool order was from left to right, the Swath ID will start with the new number at the left.
Creating clip lines
The program allows you to quickly and easily create lines based on other lines such as terraces that were mapped as feature lines. Additionally, the program enables you to clip created lines to other lines such as nearby terrace lines.
If the terrace lines exist on another layer (such as a Feature Lines layer) they must first be copied to the Multi Swath Lines layer. See the section Copying planned planting lines from other sources.
1. Double-click the Multi Swath Lines layer to view on the map.
2. With the Multi Swath Lines displayed, click the Edit Layer icon .
3. Click one of the existing lines on the map so that it is highlighted and flashing.
4. Right-click and then select Set as Clip Line. By making a line a clipping line, the program ensures that any created offset lines will be clipped to this line.
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The line and the outer boundary will be highlighted in green showing they are clip lines.
When you select another Planned line and choose the Offset option, the program will use the selected clip lines and boundaries as the stopping point for the offset.
5. To remove the Clip Lines, click Clear Clip Lines.
6. Click Save and Close to save changes and exit Map Editing.
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Clipping lines to an area
1. Select the clip lines that surround the area that you want to clip to and then make each line a clipping line.
2. Click somewhere inside the area.
3. Right-click and then select Set as Clip Area.
The lines surrounding this area will be red.
4. Click the line that you want to use as the offset.
5. Enter the required Distance, Count, and Direction.
6. Click Create. The program will create new offset lines that are clipped to the highlighted area.
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Writing out planned and crop row lines for use with a display
Planned lines and crop rows can be used with an FmX or FM-1000 display. These lines will be used as feature guidance lines that the display will guide to. All of the Planting Lines (including Planned and
Crop Rows), will be written when you select the FmX option in the Write Job Data dialog. In addition, these lines will be sent when you click Resource List in the Connected Farm tab.
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Working with the Buffer tool
Use the Buffer tool to create setback lines (Buffer zones).
1. If you are working with an area layer, select the Edit Layer Button on the toolbar to display Map
Editing. If you are working with the boundary layer, right-click the field or commodity name and then select Edit Boundaries.
2. On the Map Editing toobar, click the Buffer Tool icon .
3. Click a boundary line—this will highlight the line in blue.
To select more than one line hold down
[Ctrl]
and then click each individual line, or “rubber band” the entire area.
4. Right-click the highlighted line and then select Buffer All.
5. In the Buffer dialog, enter the Size and unit of measure to use to create the buffer, in Count enter the number of buffers you want to create and then click
OK
.
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The buffer is created.
6. To remove the buffer, select the Pointer tool. Hold down
[Ctrl]
and then click each section.
7. Right-click the selected section and then select Merge Polygons.
8. When the editing is complete, click
Save and Close Editing
.
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Working with yield and as-applied maps
The software can read job data from many different farming displays. This includes yield and coverage maps collected from devices such as the Trimble FmX® and CFX-750
™
displays and from the
CNH Pro 700 and FM-1000
™
displays.
Importing Job data
Use the Read Job Data option to read in precision agriculture data, including yield and as-applied maps. Insert the storage card or USB drive from your precision farming display into the computer card reader and then select Read Job Data. The Smart Import wizard guides you through the process.
1. From the File menu, select Read Job Data, or click the Read Job Data icon on the
Job/Resource Tools toolbar.
2. In the left column of the Read Job Data dialog, click
+
next to the type of monitor that the data was collected with and then select the specific data type underneath it. This filters the files shown in the right side of the dialog so that only the selected file types appear.
3. Under File Path, click
Browse
to find the storage card or folder where you saved the yield or as-
applied data.
4. In the Open dialog, select the appropriate file. For example, to import Trimble data (from an FmX integrated display, a CFX-750 display, or an EZ-Guide system) browse to and then select the
AgGPS
®
folder; for Voyager Data, select the Index File.
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5. All jobs included in the selected file or folder appear in the Read Job Data dialog. To select the job(s) to import, highligh each one. To select multiple files, hold down the
[Ctrl]
key while
selecting.
6. To change calibration and combine delay options, click
Advanced Setup
. Each monitor has its own
Advanced Setup, which can include settings for Combine Delays, Start Delays, and Stop Delays:
–
–
The Combine Delay sets the time from when the crop enters the header until the grain passes the sensor. If this value is incorrect, you will notice a “jagged” appearance from one pass to another in your high and low yielding areas.
The Start Delay is the time from when the header goes down until the crop starts passing the sensor. If this is too long, you may notice gaps when entering each pass: If too short, you may notice very low yielding areas at the start of each pass.
– The Stop Delay is the time from when the header goes up until the crop stops passing the sensor. If this value is incorrect, you may notice gaps when coming out of each pass or very low yielding areas at the end of each pass.
7. To filter out any data that might be considered bad, click
Harvest Filter
.
a. Select Use the harvest filter.
b. Enter values against any of the items to attempt to filter out incorrect data. Minimum and
Maximum filters can be set for Grain Flow, Mass Yield, Moisture, and Speed. You can use as many filters as needed, but be cautious about being too strict with a filter. Otherwise, good data may be filtered out.
If required, you can modify these filters after the file is imported.
8. Choose whether to:
– Delete fly away points to filter out any points that are away from the field because of bad GPS data. This is recommended.
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–
–
–
–
Import Fields Without Tasks allows field names that were set up on the monitor to be imported and set up in the Client Farm and Field List without having to first log a job for that field.
Update Field Boundaries. For certain monitors, this option allows a boundary that was logged and saved to the card to be updated when the jobs are read in.
Skip confirming Farm/Field Information. Select this option to have new Clients, Farms, and
Fields added to the Farm tab without being asked to confirm the name of each Client / Farm
/ Field
Skip confirming Supplies, Equipment and People. Select this option to have new Supplies,
Equipment, and People added to the Inputs tab without being asked to confirm the name of each.
9. Click
OK
. The import progress is shown as it reads each of the files.
The Linker dialog appears if the data includes anything (such as Client, Farms, Fields, Crops, or
Inputs) that does not already exist in your project. This links new resources from the data that have already been set up in the software.
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The Linker dialog shows two lists of resources: Operation (items created on the terminal) and
Desktop (items created in the desktop software). Items under Operation Resources must be created or linked with items under Desktop Resources.
a. Select an item in Operation Resources and then do one of the following:
– If it is a new item, click
Create-->
and then enter all of the applicable information in the screen that appears about that item. This creates a new resource in the desktop software. You can also leave the item linked to new and when the Linker screen is completed you are prompted to create the new item. If you selected the Skip confirming Farm and Field information check box, the program automatically creates those clients, farms and fields, under the appropriate location
– If the item is the same as an item already listed under Desktop Resources, highlight both resources and then click
<--Link-->
.
b. If a resource does not appear under Desktop Resources, it may be a retired item: Select Show
Retired.
c. Once all items are linked or created, click
OK
.
10. In the Farming dialog that appears, enter any necessary information for the farming operation(s) and then click
OK
. You can also edit jobs later in the Jobs tab. For more information, see
Chapter 3, Field Record Keeping
.
The yield or as-applied maps are added to Jobs under the appropriate Farm and Field.
11. To view the imported map: a. Make sure that Show Jobs In Land Areas is selected on the View menu.
b. Select the Map tab. c. In the Farm tab, locate the job under the applicable Farm and Field.
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d. Double-click the job with the yield or as-applied data to view the map.
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12. To view a different data type, select the points layer under Displayed Layers in the Layers tab and then select the required data. For more information on viewing yield data and modifying views, see the following sections.
Importing CNH vault data
The program allows you to import CNH data from AFS or PLM software using the Data Repository option (from the Read Job Data screen).
Note – Depending on how much data there was previously this process may take a few minutes to several hours.
1. Select File / Read Job Data, or click the Read Job Data icon on the Job/Resource Tools toolbar.
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2. On the left of the Read Job Data dialog, click + to expand the AFS CaseIH or New Holland option and then select AFS Data Vault (if you have AFS CaseIH data) or PLM Data Vault (if you have New
Holland PLM Data). This filters the files so that only the selected files appear in the right-hand side of the dialog.
3. Click
Browse
to locate the data:
If you are running the Windows 7 or Windows Vista operating system, this data will most likely be at:
C:\ProgramData\CaseIH AFS\AFS\Data\, or
C:\ProgramData\Ag Leader\SMS\Data\
If you are running the Windows XP operating system, this data will most likely be at:
C:/Documents and Settings/All Users/Case IH /AFS/Data, or
C:/Documents and Settings/All Users/ Ag Leader/SMS /Data
4. In the Open dialog, select the Data folder and then click
OK
.
Depending on the location selected, the program will find all the *.CN1 folders underneath it.
This process can take from several minutes to several hours.
5. To complete the data import, complete Step 5
of Importing Job data, page 186
.
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Importing CNH large square baler data
You can use the Large Square Bale functionality in the Farm Works Software solution to analyze yield data created with a yield monitor with a large square bale harvester. When Large Square Bale data is read into the software, the program creates the following:
•
•
•
Harvest Summary data that includes the total harvest, date/time of the harvest, and the equipment used.
A map that shows where each bale dropped with details for each bale including the weight and moisture for each bale.
An instantaneous yield map that shows details logged by the harvester at a regular interval
(typically every few seconds).
Importing Harvest jobs
1. Do one of the following:
–
–
Select File / Read Job Data.
Click the Read Job Data icon on the Job / Resource Tools toolbar.
2. In the left column of the Read Job Data dialog, click + next to Case IH or New Holland and then select Large Square Baler Pro 700 (for Case IH) or Large Square Baler Intelliview IV (for New
Holland).
3. In the File Path field, click
Browse
to find the storage card or folder where you saved the data.
4. In the Open dialog, select the CN1 folder.
All jobs included in the CN1 folder appear in the Read Job Data dialog.
5. Select the job(s) that you want to import. To select multiple files, hold down the
[Ctrl]
key while selecting.
6. To filter out any corrupt data, click
Harvest Filter
and then select one of the following:
–
–
Delete fly-away points.
Import Fields without tasks.
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–
–
Update field boundaries.
Skip confirming Farm/Field Information
For more on Harvest Filter settings and options, see
The Harvest filter, page 225 .
7. Click
OK
. The import progress is shown as each file is read.
The Linker dialog appears if the data includes anything (such as Client, Farms, Fields, Crops, or
Inputs) that does not already exist in your project. This links new resources from the data that has already been set up in the software.
See also
Linking resources when synchronizing or importing jobs, page 84
.
8. Once all items are linked or created, click
OK
.
Manually entering the area harvested
Some monitors do not log enough information to calculate the area harvested (number of acres/hectares harvested). When this information is not provided, the software cannot automatically calculate the average yield per acre/hectare. To manually enter the area harvested:
1. Select the Jobs tab.
2. Find the harvest job to update.
3. Right-click the job and then select Properties.
4. In the Area Farmed field, enter the number of acres/hectares that were harvested and then click
OK
to save the change.
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If you are unsure of the area of the field, you can create a boundary for the field. The program will then compute the size of the area.
The maps are added to the Jobs tab. Importing Large Square Bale data will give you two separate jobs and maps:
•
The Stuffer map shows the GPS points that have been logged and details such as total and average weight.
The Harvest map shows only where the bales have been dropped.
•
In the Jobs tab, select the check-box in the View column for either the Stuffer or Harvest map and then select the Map tab to view the selected map.
To overlay the bale drop locations, you can select to display the Stuffer map and then select to display the Harvest map.
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To increase the point size of the Harvest map so that the bale locations are visible:
1. Click
Display Options
and then enter a larger Point Size.
2. If required, select the Border option to create a border around the harvested points.
3. Click
OK
.
The bale drop location points should now be larger and easier to see.
Analyzing yield and as-applied data
After you import job data, you may notice some patterns or areas of the map that are more or less different from others.
To compare and analyze the data in these imported maps.
1. In the Farm tab, double-click the required job to show the map.
2. In the Layers tab under Views, select the attribute and the view to analyze.
Attributes can include application rates, elevation and other details logged by the display.
Different displays will record different attributes:
–
Some displays on some equipment (including select models made by CNH and Trimble) will log advanced planting data that will be listed in this area.
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–
Some displays on some equipment (including select models of CNH displays) will log engine details that will also be listed in this area.
3. Select the Information tab to view attributes for the data you are about to select.
4. Choose one of the Select tools.
5. To view information about the entire field, click-and-drag around all of the points to select
(highlight) them.
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The minimum, maximum, and average for all of the mapped attributes appear in the Information tab. The average is an average of each point and its yield only and does not represent the average yield of the field.
6. To select sections of the field to analyze, for example, a pattern or area that appears different, use one of the Select tools and then highlight the area to analyze on the map.
If you use the Polygon Select tool, click each corner of the area, right-click and then select Finish to close the polygon and select the points.
7. When you finish viewing the data, for example, average dry yield, select Invert Selection to reverse the point selection.
8. You can now compare this information to the data that was originally selected.
You can also use the Show Me feature when analyzing yield maps.
1. Click the Show Me icon and then select the attribute to be compared.
2. Enter the Range to view: From: 1 To: 1; From: 2 To: 2; From: 3 To: 3.
All the data not specified will be hidden.
3. Use the Select tool to highlight all data still on the map.
4. In the Information tab, view the data for the selection. For example, Region 2.
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5. Repeat
above to show and analyze each part of the field. For example,
Regions 1 and 3.
Comparing Dry Yield for each region shows Region 1 was the best while Regions 2 and 3 are exactly the same.
6. To cancel the selection, click the Show Me icon again and then select Make All Data Visible.
You can also use this method to analyze grid and contour maps, but be careful as these points have already been averaged.
Reprocessing Trimble yield data
The software allows you to reprocess Trimble Yield data by applying previously created calibrations to other yield data that was collected with the same controller. This is useful when you have some yield maps with better calibration data that you want to apply to other existing maps. You can also use this to correct data if an operator using a Trimble FmX or CFX-750 display makes a mistake and uses the wrong calibration data in the field.
To reprocess Trimble yield data:
1. Select Tools / Reprocess Yield Data.
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The Reprocess Yield Data dialog lists all the yield regions for yields logged with an FmX or
CFX-750 display.
2. From the Monitor drop-down list, select the serial number of the FmX or CFX-750 display.
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3. Select the Commodity you are working with. Once you have done this, all the regions for the selected Monitor and Commodity appear.
To sort the Yield Regions, click any column header (for example, Date or Calibration). To reverse the sort order, click the same header again.
4. To further limit the yield regions that are displayed, use the Crop Year drop-down list.
5. From the Calibration drop-down list, select the calibration you want to use for reprocessing.
Details on this calibration will be displayed below the list.
6. Select the Regions to which you want to apply the selected calibration. To select multiple regions, hold down
[Ctrl]
on your keyboard and then click each region in turn. To select a series of regions, click the first region, hold down
[Shift]
and then click the last region in the series.
7. Click
Reprocess Regions
to apply the selected calibration to the selected regions—this applies the
Yield, Start, and Stop Delays. In addition, the Crop Density and its related calibration data is used to change the yield values for the yield data within each region.
Merging jobs
When you have imported yield data or application maps, you may have multiple jobs that you want to merge into one. Before you can do this, you must ensure that the jobs have the same client, farm and field name, job type, and crop enterprise.
To merge jobs, do the following:
1. In the tree view, find the farm and field the jobs you want to merge were recorded for and them select the correct crop enterprise.
2. Select the Filter Jobs by Selection checkbox.
The list of jobs for the selected crop enterprise appear in the Jobs tab.
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3. Hold down the
[Ctrl]
key and click each job that you want to merge.
4. Do one of the following:
– At the bottom of the Jobs tab, click
Merge
–
Right-click the selected jobs and then select Merge.
.
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Once the jobs have been merged, only one job appears in the Jobs tab.
Splitting point data
If you have data that includes multiple fields within a single job, the software allows you to split the job so that it can be assigned to the correct field.
1. To display the point layer, find the job in the Jobs tab and then select the check box against that job in the View column.
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2. With the layer displayed on the Map tab, “rubber-band” the points that belong to another field.
The selected area appears in black.
3. Right-click and then select Split.
4. To split the selected points to a new task, click
Yes
when prompted.
The newly split job appears in the Jobs tab—it has the same name as the current job, with the checkbox in the View column in bold.
5. To change the field name, right-click the newly split job and then select Properties.
6. In the Properties dialog, change the Field Name and any other information required and then click
OK
. This places the point data under the correct field.
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Creating reconciled yield maps
Once a yield map is imported from a yield monitor into the software, the program allows you to edit the harvested quantities to match scale tickets or other sources. Editing the harvested quantity also allows you to create a Reconciled Yield Map.
1. Find the job you want to edit, see
Finding an existing job, page 79
, right-click the job and then select Properties.
2. In the Farming dialog, select Scale Ticket and enter the scale ticket details if required, or change the bu/ac or the total Qty Harvested manually and then click
OK.
See also Entering Scale Tickets, page 75
.
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3. When prompted to create the reconciled map, click
Yes
to create the reconciled map; click
No
to make the change without creating the reconciled map, or click
Cancel
to cancel the changes and return to the Farming dialog.
If you select
Yes
, a Dry Yield (Reconciled) view appears in the view column of the displayed layers tab when the map is displayed.
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Creating polygon variety maps
The program can automatically create a polygon variety map based on a planting job associated with a crop enterprise imported into the software using the Read Job Data option. These polygon variety maps can then be used for the variety locator on specific devices that are capable of variety locator features. The maps are included when you select a supported device (such as the FmX integrated display or the CNH Pro 700 display) in the Write Job Data field.
In addition, if you have yield maps, the program compares the varieties on this map to your yield maps and creates a yield by variety that is included on the Yield Variety Report.
If the planting job was not associated with a crop enterprise, but you have a planting job with a seed supply, you can add a variety map. You can also create a polygon variety map using the mapping tools if an imported variety planting map is not available.
Adding polygon variety maps
1. In the Farm tab, right-click the enterprise containing the field for which you want to create a variety map (for example, 2012 Corn), and then select Add Layer/ Add Variety Layer.
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The variety layer is listed under the enterprise.
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2. Double click the Variety Map polygon layer to display it in the Map tab. It is displayed as a polygon/area map with the different varieties displayed in one map.
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Hand-drawing polygon variety maps
If you did not use GPS to map where your varieties were planted, you can also create a polygon variety map manually. These maps are not as accurate as a map created using GPS, but they provide a good estimate if you use variety locators and calculate yield by variety in the Yield Variety Report.
1. In the Farm tab, right-click the enterprise containing the field for which you want to create a variety map (for example, 2012 Soybeans), and then select Add Layer / Add Variety Layer.
2. Typically you will want to use the field boundary as a starting point. To do this, click the field name. The boundary appears in the Map tab.
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3. Right-click the field boundary and then select Copy.
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4. The variety layer is listed beneath the enterprise. Double-click the Variety Map polygon layer—as this is not an imported variety planting map the layer in the Map tab is blank.
5. With the Variety Layer as the top layer, click the Edit Layer icon .
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6. Right-click anywhere on the map and then select Paste Addition to paste the field boundary into the Variety Map.
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7. Click the Split Tool icon and then select Split Line from the drop-down list to section the varieties. Click outside the boundary where the split is to begin, click outside the boundary where the split is to end and then right-click and select Finish.
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8. Select the Selection tool and then right-click one of the split sections and select Properties.
9. In the Object Properties screen, select the correct variety for that selection from the Variety field
Data drop-down list and then click
OK
.
10. Repeat
to assign the correct variety to other sections.
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11. Click
Save and Close
to save the changes. The Variety Map now shows the separate varieties with the corresponding legend.
Writing Variety maps to a supported device
To write the variety maps to a supported device (such as the FmX integrated display or the CNH Pro
700 display), use the program’s Write Job Data option.
1. From the Write Job Data screen, select the correct device and format.
2. If applicable, select
Advanced Setup
.
3. Make sure that Export Varieties is marked as True or Yes.
4. Click
OK
.
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Yield Variety report
The Yield Variety report uses the polygon variety map and any imported yield data map to create an average yield by variety for a particular commodity. It will then compare the results to give you the average yield for each planted variety.
To display a Yield Variety report:
1. Do one of the following:
–
–
Select Reports / All Reports.
Click the Report icon .
2. Click
+
beside the field category or click Expand All.
3. Select the Yield Variety Report and then click
OK
.
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4. Select each item that you want to include in the report or click
Select All
to select all items.
5. Click Preview.
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The Print Preview window shows the first page of the report. To view other pages, click the next page
>
or previous page icon
<
.
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Split Planting maps
Planting Maps are automatically created when split planting data is imported into the software using the Read Job Data option. Planting Maps appear as point data that can show rate unlike the Polygon
Variety maps that just shows variety.
To display the Planting map:
1. Click
+
to open the Client, Farm, Field and Crop Enterprise the job was recorded for. Double-click to display the map.
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2. The Planting map appears on the Map tab.
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The application rate appears in the legend at the bottom right.
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Editing legends
After you import yield or as-applied data, the software automatically creates a legend. You can change the color schemes to suit your needs, and add information to the legend, such as a description for each color range.
1. Double-click the job in the Farm tab.
2. Select the Layers tab.
3. In Views, select the data for which you want to edit the legend.
4. Click the Legend icon .
To change a legend to give a map a different appearance, do one of the following:
•
•
•
•
Use ranges that are created by the software. See
Using ranges created by the software, page 218
Create your own ranges. See Creating your own ranges, page 220
.
Change the colors. See
.
Creating a template, page 224 .
.
Using ranges created by the software
1. Select the Ranges calculate ranges.
tab. There are four different options that the software uses to
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–
Equal Ranges makes each range the same size. For example, each range could represent 10 units (10-20, 20-30, 30-40, and so on). You must enter three of the four following items: High
Value, Low Value, Spacing, or Divisions. The software calculates the fourth value.
– Equal Count places the same number of points/areas in each range. Enter the number of divisions you want the legend to have. The software calculates where the division breaks are.
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–
Statistical calculates ranges based on the calculated standard deviation of the points in the layer. One standard deviation includes 68% of all points (centered on the average). Choose the interval spacing in standard deviations (1, ½, or ¼). You can also choose to round the range values to whole numbers to give the legend a cleaner look.
– Discrete ranges are generally not a good choice for job data. This option creates a separate range for each discrete value in the layer. This is used more for attributes that do not have many distinct values, such as soil test data.
Equal count, Statistical, and Discrete ranges give you statistical information about the data in the layer. The number of items (points), the number of unique values, minimum and maximum values, the average (mean), and the standard deviation are all calculated for you. These can help when deciding which type of range to use to view your data.
Creating your own ranges
1. Enter minimum and maximum values for each range. When you enter a minimum value for a range, the software enters the maximum value for the range directly below it and vice versa.
–
–
To add a range, click
+
at the top or bottom of the ranges.
To delete a range, click
-
to the left of it.
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2. Once you select the type of range to use, click
Apply
.
Changing the colors
1. Select the Colors tab.
You can use color ranges created by the software or select your own, and you can save a color scheme to use on multiple layers. There are four color range options:
–
Narrow spectrum allows you to choose the top and bottom colors; the software creates a spectrum in between based on three basic colors. To select the colors, click the color button at the top or bottom of the spectrum.
In the color palette, select basic or custom colors for the spectrum.
–
Wide spectrum also allows you to choose the top and bottom colors, but bases the spectrum on five basic colors.
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–
3 Color spectrum is similar to Narrow spectrum, but it allows you to choose the center color.
–
Contrast gives each consecutive range a contrasting color, instead of creating a spectrum of colors. This allows you to distinctly tell the difference between each range. This is not recommended for yield maps as you cannot easily differentiate between high and low values.
The
Invert Colors
button re-orders the colors from top to bottom.
2. To save a color scheme for later use, enter a description for the scheme and then click
Save Color
Scheme
. The scheme name now appears in the drop-down list.
3. To delete a saved color scheme, select it in the drop-down list and then click
Delete
.
4. Once you choose the colors for the legend, click
Apply
. The selected colors or spectrum appear beside each range in the legend.
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5. To choose individual colors from the color palette for each range, select the color button beside the range you want to change.
There are four options that can be used on the legend for a layer.
– Range Count shows how many individual values (points or areas) are in each range. If Equal
Count was used, each range should contain approximately the same number of points or areas.
– Histogram shows a chart comparing the number of values in each range. If a Statistical Range is chosen, the histogram should appear as a bell curve.
– Range Descriptions allows you to enter a description beside each range. Use this to add information to a map where numbers alone are not enough.
–
Values & Descriptions shows the values for each range and the description.
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Creating a template
This may be useful when comparing maps. For example, use the same legend for all corn yield maps and a different one for all soybean yield maps: If the same legend is not used for each map, the map color may be confusing. You can add a template to be used for a specific commodity or for all commodities.
1. In the Templates tab, right-click a Commodity and then select Add.
2. Enter a template name.
3. To use a template that was previously created, select the template and then click
Apply
.
Alternatively, right-click the template name and then select Apply.
4. To make a created legend the default for a certain attribute in a layer, right-click the template and then select Default.
5. To change a saved template, make any range and color changes, right-click the template name and then select Update.
6. To delete a saved template, right-click the template name and then select Delete.
The top area of the Legend dialog shows information about the current legend.
7. When finished modifying the legend, click
OK.
The created legend is applied to the attribute on the selected layer.
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The Harvest filter
When you import yield or as-applied data, some of it, such as bad GPS data, or incorrect flow readings, may be considered invalid. In such cases, use the Harvest filter.
To enable and/or modify the filter:
1. On the Map tab, click the Harvest filter icon .
2. Select Use the harvest filter.
3. Enter minimum and maximum values for any items to filter out incorrect data.
Note – You can use as many filters as needed, but do not be too strict or you may exclude good data.
4. Click
OK
.
Any data that falls outside the filter conditions is removed.
This data is only temporarily filtered; original data remains intact.
5. To remove or modify the filter, click the Harvest filter icon.
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The Show Me feature
When you view yield or as-applied data, you may want to see a certain mapped attribute or property, or see only data that meets certain conditions. This may be useful when analyzing yield data, for example. In such cases, use the Show Me feature.
1. On the Map tab, click the Show Me icon .
2. In the Use column, select one or more Data Item(s) to filter. Items not selected will be hidden.
–
If a selected item has choice data or distinct values, for example, markers, or engaged, associated with it, that information appears.
–
If the selected item has numbers associated with it, enter a range to view.
Note – You can use as many filters as needed, but do not be too strict or you may exclude too much data.
For example, to see all points that yield above 200 bu/ac but below 21% moisture, enter
200
into
From and then enter
21
in To.
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The Show Me window shows the required details.
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3. Click
OK
.
Any data that falls outside the filter conditions is hidden.
This data is only temporarily filtered; original data remains intact.
4. To remove the Show Me filter, click the Show Me icon again and then click
Make all data visible
.
5. To change the filter conditions, click
Edit
beside the Data Item.
Markers
Many monitors can place markers (or flags) on a map to show the location of obstacles or other points of interest, such as rocks, tile holes, and wet spots, which you can view on a yield map for future reference or printing.
To view markers on a yield or as-applied map:
1. Click the Markers icon .
2. In the Markers dialog, select the marker to display.
3. Select the symbol to represent the marker.
4. Select the color button beside the symbol to choose a different color for the marker.
You can show as many markers as needed.
5. Click
OK
.
Markers appear on the map where the selected items are located, and descriptions appear in the
Legend tab.
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Working with grids and contour maps
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Adding grids or contours to a map
Showing all collected points can make a yield or as-applied map look cluttered, and can make it difficult to see patterns across a field or to analyze data. To avoid this, you can create different views for each layer, such as grids and contours. You can also use grid or contoured maps to make variable rate application maps.
Note – A field must have a field boundary drawn before you can create a grid or contoured view.
To create a different view of a yield or as-applied map:
1. In the Farm tab, double-click the job to show it on the map.
2. In the Layers tab, highlight the layer to create a new view on.
3. Select the data attribute (such as Dry Yield) to show in the Views tab and then click the Add View icon .
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4. In then New View dialog, select grid/contour options.
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Option
Output
Cell
Resolution
Action
Select Grid to see the data gridded.
Select Contour to see contoured zones of the data.
Select Area to base the view on another set of area map data such as a soil type map.
Enter a cell size.
• A smaller cell size gives more resolution, but takes longer to calculate.
• A larger cell sizes looks “smoother” but may not accurately represent the actual data.
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Option
Cell Data
Contour
Method
Search
Radius
Action
Select Average or Inverse Distance.
• Average uses all points within the cell size and weights them all the same. It is typically used with yield data and application maps that have a large number of points.
• Inverse Distance places more weight on points close to the center of each grid and less weight on points farther away. Enter the Search Radius and
Neighbors. It is typically used for soil test results and maps where you do not have a large number of points.
Enter the distance from the center point to look for points to use in the calculation.
Neighbors Enter the number of neighboring points to use in the calculation.
Fill Blanks If there are ‘holes’ in the data, select this to avoid gaps in the field.
Smoothing Move the slider to smooth transitions between ranges. This makes the map appear less ‘choppy’ and random looking.
Minimum
Area
Enter a minimum area for each zone. Larger minimum areas look smoother, but may not be entirely represent everything inside that zone.
5. When finished, click
OK
.
–
–
–
Each view appears with a description under Views.
To see a view in the Map window, highlight it.
To see how many acres are in each range for a grid or contour map, click
Range Count
under
Legend.
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For more information, see
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– To put a border around each contour or grid, click the Display Options icon , Border and then select the color of the border from the drop-down list.
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6. To view the original map points, click
Base Data
.
Base Data is listed below the attribute the contour was based on. For example, if you used Dry
Yield information to complete the contour, the Base Data and the Contour View are listed in the
Views column.
7. To delete a view, right-click it in Views and then select Delete View.
Example
The following describes how the program creates a view using Inverse Distance:
1. The program breaks the fields into grids based on the grid size that was entered.
2. To figure the value of the grid, the program draws a circle that has a radius of the size that is entered.
3. The program takes the values of the X points (defined as the # of neighbors to use) that are nearest to the center of the circle.
4. The program figures the value for the grid by weighting the points based on their distance from the circle so that the point that is closest to the center of the circle is weighted more heavily than the point that is further away.
5. The program takes the value that it computes, references the legend, and determines the color.
Averaging polygons
The software enables you to average all points that fall in a polygon from a different layer, which can help when comparing yields versus soil types.
You must have a layer with polygons over the same area as your points layer. For example, a soil type map for a field that your yield map is in.
1. Show the points layer to average and then select the attribute under Views to analyze.
2. Click
Add View
and then select Area in New View.
3. Click
Browse
and then find the area layer to use for the analysis.
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4. Do one of the following:
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–
Select Grid then average base data to have the program grid the points before it averages them over the polygon. This helps to smooth out the data.
– Select Create new composite layer to create a new polygon layer that includes all the attributes from both layers (point and polygon). The new layer will be an area layer that has the same areas/layers that existed on the selected Area layer. However, the attributes will include the attributes from the point layer (as well as the area attributes).
5. Click
OK
.
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The software creates a new view that averages all points within each polygon.
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Animating layers
Click the Layer Animation icon to see any map replayed in the order in which it was created. This is useful if you want to replay how a field was worked.
1. Make sure that the visible layer is at the top in Displayed Layers.
2. Click the Start Layer Animation icon .
3. Once the playback starts, the Stop Layer Animation icon becomes active. Click it to stop the current playback.
4. As required, click the arrow and then select a playback speed.
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The Transparency slider
Use the Transparency slider to reference a map layer directly below the current map:
1. In the Farm tab, double-click required layers to move them to the Displayed Layers list.
2. Highlight the layer to make transparent and then move the Transparency slider in the lower right corner to “see through” the top layer and onto the second layer.
You can adjust any visible layer and then change the display order using the display order buttons next to the list.
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Soil Type maps
If the Farm Works Mapping software is installed, you can import ArcView shapefiles and generic text files that contain soil type data. If the files have GPS coordinate data, the software can clip the contoured soil type maps to the boundaries of your fields. If you download large soil type maps, the clipping shows only the soil types within your field boundaries. After you import the soil-type maps, the software automatically creates a legend. You can view soil type maps overlaid on yield maps to perform analysis based on soil type.
Note – You must have a field boundary drawn to clip soil types to a field.
Downloading and importing soil type maps
To download available digitized soil type maps, go to http://www.ncgc.nrcs.usda.gov/products/datasets/ssurgo/ .
To import a soil type map:
1. In the Farm tab, right-click the field for which you want to import the soil type and then select
Import Background.
2. Locate the soil type map to import and then click
Open
. You must select Clip background to field
boundary to limit the soil type map by the field boundary. To access this option, you must rightclick a Field name (not the Farm or Client).
3. In the Shapefile Import dialog, select the Coordinate System, Datum, and Zone. This information is usually in a text file downloaded with the soil type data.
4. Click
OK
. The soil type map is imported and clipped to the boundary of the selected field.
5. Select the property to show in Views. A legend is created based on the current attributes.
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6. If required, select an area and view the data in it on the Information tab.
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Soil samples
You can easily create soil-sampling grids for use with the mobile mapping software running on a handheld, laptop, or tablet computer. The exported grids provide the target points used for soil sampling while out in the field. Soil Sample grids can now be created as a planned job for syncing over to the mobile mapping software and other consoles.
Later, when you receive a digital file with the soil test results from a lab, the data can easily be imported. The software shows the soil test data and enables you to quickly create grid or contour views of the test results. You can also create VRA prescription maps from imported test results.
Creating a soil sample grid map
You must use a field that has a boundary map and you must know how large you want the soil sample grids to be. You can create the soil-sample grid map, create the sampling points and then export the map to the mobile mapping software.
1. In the Farm tab, highlight the field you want to create a sampling grid for.
2. In the Map tab, right-click the field boundary map and then select Make Sampling Grid.
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3. In the Create Sampling Grid dialog, configure the following options:
–
–
–
Include sampling Points and/or include Areas.
Create a planned job. If you select this, you do not have an option to clear Points.
Select the size of the Grid in Feet, Miles, or Acres (Meters, Kilometers, or Hectares).
– Select how to lay out the Grid Pattern.
Uniform places the points in the center of each grid.
Stagger Vertically places the points in the center of the grid from side to side, but staggers them up and down.
–
Stagger Horizontally does the opposite.
Select whether you want to create Sample IDs and specify the number from which to start assigning IDs.
The cursor changes to a grid.
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4. Click in one corner of the field, move the cursor in the direction that you want the grids to be aligned and numbered and then click again.
–
–
The soil sample grid is created, the layer is added to Displayed Layers, and the grids appear in the
Map tab.
If you selected points and areas, there is a separate layer for each.
If you selected job and area, you will have a separate layer for the area.
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–
If you selected planned job, it contain the points; there is no separate layer.
5. To view labels for the Soil Sample Point IDs: a. Click the Display Options icon and then make sure that Show Labels is selected. To change the font and size, click the Default Font icon.
b. Click the Edit Layer icon to show the Map – Editing toolbar.
c. Click-and-drag around all points to select them. d. Right-click and then select Add Label.
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Save and Close
, or click
Cancel
to discard the labels.
Modifying soil sample grid maps
As required, you can move, add, or delete sample points:
1. Under Displayed Layers, double-click the points layer, or use the arrows to move the layer to the top of the list.
2. Click the Edit Layer icon to show the Map – Editing toolbar.
3. To move a point, click and hold it until the cursor turns to a hand. Drag-and-drop the point to the new location.
4. To add a sample point to the map, click the Define Points icon and then click the map where you want the new sample location.
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5. If you chose to create Sample IDs, you can enter an ID for the new point.
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6. To delete a point, select it and then press
[Delete]
.
Alternatively, right-click and then select Delete.
7. When you finish modifying sample points, click
Save and Close
, or click
Cancel
to discard changes.
Exporting soil sample grid maps
You can export the soil-sample grid points and area maps for use with mobile mapping software. If you created a planned job:
1. In the Jobs tab, scroll to the job or use the sorting and filtering options to find the job(s). See
Finding a job in the Jobs tab, page 79
. Planned jobs are in orange and show the Planned icon.
2. Select the job(s).
3. Right-click any selected job and then select Work Order / Mobile. The Export icon is added to each planned job you select. After you synchronize with the mobile mapping software, the export icon is removed from the jobs.
You can mark a job for export (as a work order) and synchronize as many times as required.
Once these soil-sample grid maps are transferred to the device, you can view them as background layers and then navigate to each point or area on the map to pull a sample.
1. In the Farm tab, select the Sample Grid layer(s) to export. Double-click the layer(s) to display the map in the Map tab.
2. In the Farm tab, right-click the layer and then select Export.
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3. In the Layer Export dialog, select the following:
Field
Export Type
Layer
View
Action
Select:
• AgLeader Basic or Advanced (for use with a PF3000 vehicle, for example).
• ArcView shapefile (GIS software)
• Comma Separated Values (Microsoft Excel
®
spreadsheet)
The export option for exporting the Sample Grid Layer are ArcView shapefile and
Google Earth .kml files.
Enter the required layer.
As you right-clicked the layer and selected Export, the Layer defaults automatically and cannot be changed.
If you created multiple views, select which view to export.
For this particular export, your only option is Base data.
4. Click
Browse
to select the location to export to.
5. Click
OK
.
Importing soil sample data
When you receive the results of soil sample tests from a lab, you can to import this data directly into the Soil Sample layer that was used when sampling. The software can then create grid or contour maps based on nutrient values. You can also use this information to create variable rate prescription maps.
1. Click the Read Job Data icon .
2. Select the appropriate type of file under Generic Import (.csv, .txt, or .shp).
3. Click
Browse
to locate the file that contains the soil sample data.
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4. Select the file and then click
OK
.
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5. Choose whether the file contains latitude and longitude coordinates along with soil sample values or if it needs to be joined with another file to obtain the coordinates.
You can open the .csv or .txt files in a spreadsheet to see if coordinates are included: With data sent directly from the lab, coordinates are not normally included. If the file must be joined with another, and you created the sampling points, export the points layer as described in
Exporting soil sample grid maps, page 244 .
It is often easier to open the file that contains the data in a spreadsheet while going through the import process.
If you will import more than one file, you can create and save a template to make the import process much faster. If a template already exists, select it from the drop-down list. You can also delete any previously created templates.
6. Select the type of delimiter within the file. If you open the file using aa text-editing software, such as Notepad, whatever character separates the values from each other is the delimiter. CSV files are comma delimited.
The Header row shows how many rows there are in the file before the data. The software skips these rows when importing the data.
The Title row contains the name of the attribute to be imported. For example, Client, Field, pH, K, or OM.
7. If you join a file with a shapefile, you must select an attribute to match the rows in the data file to the points in the shapefile. SampleID is generally used to do this.
8. Select which columns in the data file to use: Select the check box above each of the attributes to be imported. If you selected the correct Title row, that row is populated.
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9. Enter the Attribute Type, Units, and so on in each column. To view example data directly from the file, scroll down in this window. Use this to determine the correct number of header rows and
the title row. For more information, see Setting up and selecting layer attributes, page 151 .
–
–
–
– a. Enter or select values for the following:
Used: Select each attribute to import.
Type: Select a type for under each attribute to be imported. To add a new type, select
Add/Edit. You must select the correct type. If legends are to be shared from one layer to another, an attribute type must be created for that attribute. Otherwise, you can select Text or Number for the type.
Title: If you select Text or Number, enter a title.
If the attribute is a Number, you can select the units that are associated with the attribute as well as set minimum and maximum values on what is imported. Anything outside these values is not imported.
– No Data: If you enter a value in this row, anything matching this value is not imported.
b. When finished, click
OK
.
10. To save the template to import a similar file later, click
Save Template
and then give the template a name.
11. Click
OK
.
12. In the Farming dialog, enter all of the applicable information.
13. Select the correct Field Name and then click
OK
. The job is placed under the selected field.
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14. To view the map, double-click the job name in the Farm tab.
15. You can now select any of the attributes to automatically create a legend under Views.
16. You can create grid and contour maps with soil sample points, similar to yield maps. When you draw a grid or a contour map from soil sample data compared to yield data, consider changing the parameters. For example, use fewer neighbors—6 instead of 800—and a larger search radius since there are fewer points.
You can now use these grid and contour maps to create variable rate prescription maps. See the following sections.
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Selecting attributes and attribute types
When you import a generic file (.csv, .txt, and so on) or a shapefile, you must choose which attributes to use and then set their properties and limits. The soil sample import above is used as an example here.
1. Enter or select values for the following:
–
–
Used: Select each attribute to import.
Type: Select a type for under each attribute to be imported. To add a new type, select
Add/Edit. You must select the correct type. If legends are to be shared from one layer to another, an attribute type must be created for that attribute. Otherwise, you can select Text or Number for the type.
Title: If you select Text or Number, enter a title. –
–
–
If the attribute is a Number, you can select the units that are associated with the attribute as well as set minimum and maximum values on what is imported. Anything outside these values is not imported.
No Data: If you enter a value in this row, anything matching this value is not imported.
2. When finished, click
OK
.
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Copying a layer to a different Farm or Field
You may need to copy a layer from one Farm, Field, or Category to another. For example, if the layer was incorrectly placed, or you need a copy for another crop—if you use the same soil sample locations in different years.
1. In the Farm tab, right-click the layer to copy and then select Copy.
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2. Right-click the Farm, Field, or Category to paste the layer into and then select Paste.
Once you have selected Paste, you are prompted to select one of the following:
All Data: This copies the attributes and the map.
Map Objects Only: This copies the map only.
Layer Objects Only: This copies the layer properties only.
The layer should now appear with the correct properties showing below the new location
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Creating VRA maps
You can use soil type maps or any imported soil sampling maps to create VRA maps. You can export the application maps that you create for use with most commonly used variable rate controllers and hardware systems.
1. Add the people, machines, and supplies that will be used for the job to the Working Group. If you prefer, you can choose to add only the supplies used now and add the people and equipment later.
2. In the Farm tab, double-click the layer to use to create a VRA map to show it in the Map tab. This must be an area layer that has different zones (soil type layer, for example) or a points layer that
has grid or contour views created. To create your own layer with custom-drawn zones, Editing
3. Under Views, select the attribute and the view to create the VRA map from.
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4. Right-click the view and then select Create Application Plan.
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The Farming dialog appears, which enables you to create a planned VRA job.
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5. Make any necessary changes to the plan and then click
OK
.
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6. Enter the Default Rate, which is the rate applied any time the machine travels outside of the VRA map.
7. Select the product to be varied and then enter the prescription values into the cells that correspond with the zone colors on the map.
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The average rate, total quantity, and cost are automatically calculated. This information can be extremely helpful when purchasing supplies.
8. To adjust the total quantity to be used on the job, click
Adjust
and then make the changes. This changes the rate in each zone to compensate for the added/subtracted total quantity.
9. If there is a layer visible underneath the application layer, adjust the Transparency slider to view that layer through the new application layer.
10. When you finish creating the VRA map, click
Save and Close
.
The planned job appears under the appropriate Field in the Jobs tab and the Farm tab.
Exporting VRA maps
After you create a VRA prescription map, you can export it to use with various hardware systems, and software applications, such as the mobile mapping software.
Depending on your needs, you can export:
•
•
•
Just the map as a shapefile to a removable device, such as a USB drive or storage card.
The planned job, with the map, to a device such as a Nomad® or Juno® handheld running the mobile mapping software.
The map, with inputs, field names, boundaries, and (if applicable) polygon variety maps to a third-party controller or monitor, using the Write Job Data process.
Note – You must first create the polygon variety map, see Creating polygon variety maps, page 205
.
The variety map can then be used for the variety locator on devices that can use variety locator features.
Exporting a VRA map as a shapefile
To export a VRA prescription map as a shapefile for use with a third-party variable rate controller:
1. In the Map tab, select the Jobs tab below the Map window.
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2. Find the planned job that contains the prescription map to export and then select the View check box. The prescription map appears the in Map window.
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3. Right-click the job and then select Export.
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4. In the Job Export dialog, select the location to save the prescription map to, enter a name for the file and then select Arcview shapefiles under Save as type.
5. Click
Save
.
You can now copy the shapefile or use it where needed from where it is saved.
Note – Remember when copying and pasting a shapefile that it contains three files (.shp, .shx, and
.dbf).
Exporting VRA map to a third-party controller or monitor
1. In the Map tab. select the Jobs tab below the Map window.
2. Find the planned job that contains the prescription map to export and then select the View check box. The prescription map appears in the Map window.
3. Right-click the job, select Work Order and then select Console.
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The Write Job Export icon appears in the row for that job.
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4. Do one of the following:
–
–
Select the Write Job Data icon .
Select File / Write Job Data.
The Write Job Data dialog shows third-party controllers and monitors to which that you can write
VRA maps, inputs, field names, and boundaries.
5. If your particular controller or monitor is not listed click
Cancel
and then select Help / Check for
Updates.
Newer versions of data drivers or data drivers that have not been installed are listed here.
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6. Check for updates: a. Go to the Help menu and check for updates.
Checking for updated data drivers (an Internet connection is required) will show all updates that are available for programs or drivers that have been installed before.
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4 – Mapping Software b. If you select the Show all available components check box, all updates that are available appear, even if they have not been installed before.
c. If you select the Check for updates at start-up check box, the server will check each time the program opens (an Internet connection is required).
7. To download updates, select the checkbox next to the correct driver and then click
OK.
8. You are prompted to close the program. Click
OK
.
A Farm Works Office Updates screen appears that lists all the updates that must be installed.
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9. Highlight the driver and then click
Install
.
10. Continue the procedure to complete the driver installation.
11. When prompted to restart the software, click
Yes
.
12. With the program opened continue the import process.
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13. In the Write Job Data dialog, click the plus sign next to the correct third-party device.
Depending on the device, there may be several formats for writing information.
14. Select the correct format, so that it is highlighted.
15. Click
Resource List
. Here you can limit the Clients/Farms/Fields and Inputs that will be written out along with the planned job.
Note – If you have selected to write out to a Trimble FmX integrated display, there is a Job Types option that enables you to send only certain Job Types or events to the display.
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16. Depending on the selected device, you may have an Advanced Setup option with settings that also depend on the selected device. Complete the options as appropriate.
17. Click
Browse
to select the drive reading your removable device, such as a Storage Card or USB.
18. Highlight the correct drive in the Browse for Folder window and then click
OK
.
The correct drive now appears under File Location.
19. Click
OK
. A progress bar appears while the software writes the selected information.
20. When the confirmation message appears, click
OK
.
21. You can now take the card to your device.
Note – You can write the Inputs and Farm/Field information to a third-party device without selecting a job for export.
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Printing maps
When printing maps, the legend that was created for the map (including histograms and descriptions), as well as details about the job are included on the printout.
To print a map of yield or as-applied data:
1. From Job/Resource Tools, click the Map Report icon .
2. Under Layout, select the layout to use: Portrait and Landscape are standard layouts. To create your own layout, select <Add/Edit>.
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3. If you select <Add/Edit>, the Map Print Layout dialog appears.
4 – Mapping Software a. Enter a description and then select the orientation of your page. b. If required, change the margins of the printed area on the paper.
c. If required, adjust the size of the items on the page: Select items and then drag their borders. d. To remove an item select it and then press
[Delete]
. e. To move an item, drag-and-drop it.
f.
In the Items tab, select items (to add to the page) or deselect items (to remove from the page).
g. To save and apply your layout, click
Record
and then click
Done
. This layout now appears in the drop-down list for future use.
4. Select the area to print:
–
–
–
–
Window prints whatever is on the Map tab.
All prints all of the displayed layers and zooms out to the full extents.
Select Area allows you to drag a box around the area to print.
Specific Field prints only the field you choose.
Note – You can click-and-drag the bars to the left and bottom of the map area to change the size of the map window. This changes what will be printed if you select Window. Once set, it will continue to print in that aspect ratio.
5. You can enter a specific scale or select best fit, which scales the map to fit the paper.
6. You can choose to print the map with the default information or you can give the map a title and then enter map information.
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7. Under Logo Options, you can choose to print the software logo in color or black and white. You can also choose to print a personal logo on the map.
8. Under Printer Setup, choose which printer to use.
9. Click
. View the map in the Print Preview screen and then print it.
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C H A P T E R
5
Mapping Analysis
In this chapter:
The software provides critical analysis tools for multi-year yield averaging, profit/loss mapping, and formula-based VRA (Variable Rate
Application) prescription maps.
5
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Enterprise summary
Below each Crop Enterprise is an Enterprise Summary (Area layer map) with the following Views:
Expenses (Flat), Expenses (VRA), Income, Profit, and Variety.
The Enterprise Summary layer shows the best and worst profit areas graphically:
•
•
•
•
If you are using Variable Rate Application on your farm, the costs will be varied across the fields, based on where more or less product was applied.
If you are using a yield monitor, the crop revenues are spread across the field based on the yield data.
If you are just using the Farm Works Mapping software, costs are based on the costs that you manually entered for each input.
If you are also using the Farm Works Accounting software, the costs are based on the actual costs incurred which includes indirect costs such as land rents and overhead costs.
To view this in the Map tab, double-click the Enterprise Summary.
To see the breakdown under Legend, click a View.
Move the legend cursor to the right to see the acreage graph breakdown.
Double-click another Enterprise Summary so that two statements appear above the boundary. Using the Transparency slider to fade out the top layer provides a fast comparison, as the high and low colors are the same for each.
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Double-click additional Enterprise Summaries; under the displayed layer, highlight each individually to view Legend details.
Normalized yield
1. In the Farm tab tree view, right-click a Field and then select Normalize Yield.
Field
Cell Data
Crop Year
Commoditie s
Cell Size
Neighbors
Action
Enter the size of each field cell. The default unit is ft (feet).
Search Radius Enter a Search Radius size. The search radius will extend from the center of a cell to the number entered here. In this example, the search begin in the center of a 50 ft. cell and extend to a 100 ft. radius.
Enter the number of Neighbors to be included in the data. In this example, 12 neighbors are included. If fewer than 12 neighbors are in the radius, all are included. If more than 12 neighbors are in the radius, the 12 nearest neighbors are included.
Select the Crop Year from which the data is to be derived. In this example, all years are selected. Usually you will want to exclude any years that do not reflect typical years, for example, extremely dry or wet years. If you are normalizing the data for just one crop, the program automatically ignores any years that do no have this crop.
Select one or more Commodities to include.
B
Tip – When the program creates a normalized map, it puts each year’s yield map on a scale of
100 where 100 represents 100% of the average yield for that year. For example, if a field averaged 200 bushels per acre, and one cell has a value of 180, it receives a value of 90 (which
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5 – Mapping Analysis represents 90% of the average yield of 200). Once each year has been put to a scale of 100, all the selected years are averaged together. This makes it possible to average yields from different crops together.
2. Click
OK
.
The Yield Normalization map appears under the Crop Enterprises of the selected Field(s) as an area layer.
3. Double-click the layer to view it on the Map tab. A Legend is automatically created for this normalized data.
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Generating formulas
The software includes a Tri State recommendation example formula. This option appears automatically.
To set up Formulas, select Resources / Formulas.
•
•
Note the following:
•
•
You cannot use formulas on an area/polygon layer or on an average view of a point layer. To use formulas, you must have a grid view of a point layer. See
Adding grids or contours to a map, page 228
.
Gridded views will include all attributes on the layer accessible to formulas.
Currently, any data item that is to be used in a formula must be a defined attribute type such as pH, N, P, K, and so on. You cannot use a Number attribute in a formula.
To verify that the attributes are defined correctly, do the following:
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5 – Mapping Analysis a. In the Farm tab, right click the job or layer you want to use to create the formula prescription and then select Layer Properties.
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5 – Mapping Analysis b. Verify that the Attributes being used to create the formula application do not have Number as the Type.
• Before you create a prescription from a formula, move the supply to be varied (fertilizer, seed, and so on) from the Inputs tab to the Working Group.
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•
Right-click in the Attribute area on the view (grid or contour for point data) of an attribute to be used and then select Create Formula Application.
•
•
Existing formulas appear in the drop-down list. You can select an existing formula to use it or edit it. Alternatively, select <New> to create a new formula.
– Creating a new formula creates a new .xml file in the Formulas folder below the directory where the software is installed (typically C:\farmproj).
– You can email formulas for the use of other users that have this software installed.
To set up a new formula: a. Enter a Name for the formula.
b. Click
+
to add all the variables used in the formula. Variables are the items such as soil pH, N,
P, K, and so on that will be used in the formula.
c. Select from Type and then enter an attribute name. Attribute names should be as short as possible so that they can easily be entered into the formula.
d. Select Constant for anything that you want to manually enter a value for.
When you set up a constant in a formula, you are prompted for the value when you run the equation. For example, if a formula uses a Yield Goal where you want to enter the yield goal for next year’s crop to be used in the formula.
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The following operators are available:
/
^
+
-
*
<
<=
>
>=
&
:
Operator
?
Meaning
If/then
Example
pH<5 ? 6
If the pH is less than 5, it uses 6.
Else pH<5 ? 6: 7
If the pH is less than 5, it uses 6. Otherwise it uses 7
Every If statement must have at least one Then statement.
You cannot have just:
pH<5 ? 6
You need at least:
pH<5 ? 6 : 0
. In which case the rate would be 6 if pH is less than 5 and zero in all other cases.
If you have multiple If statements, the software processes them sequentially. If the first If applies, it does not look at any remaining statements. So the results of the following statements:
K > 2.9 ? 0:
K > 2.7 ? 50:
K > 2.5 ? 100:
K > 2.1 ? 125:150
Are the same as this:
K > 2.9 ? 0:
K > 2.7 & K <= 2.9 ? 50:
K > 2.5 & K <= 2.7 ? 100:
K > 2.1 & K <= 2.5 ? 125:
K <= 2.1 ? 150: 0
Less than
Less than or equal to
Greater than
Greater than or equal to
And pH<=5 & pH >= 4 ? 1,000 : 0
If the pH is less than or equal to 5 and greater than or equal to 4, it uses a rate of 1,000. Otherwise, it uses a rate of zero.
Plus
Minus
Multiply A variable followed by a number is assumed to be multiplication.
5pH is assumed to be 5 * pH.
Divide
Power x^2 is x squared.
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Operator Meaning
() Set priorities
# Comments
Example
The default order is division, multiplication, addition and then subtraction. So X+2*3/4 is processed as ¾ then * 2 then add to x.
To specify the order, enter
((x+2)3)/4
. This is processed as X +2, the result is multiplied by 3 and the result of that is divided by 4.
Everything after # is ignored and not used in the formula. Typically, this is added to the end a formula to explain what it is for.
K < 75+2.5*CEC ? yield_potential*0.27 + 20 + (75+2.5*CEC - K)*(1 +
0.05*CEC) : #buildup
Note – The software attempts to strip out spaces in a formula.
4. In the Prescription dialog, select the correct Formula, enter the required Settings and then click
OK
to create the formula prescription map. The options are:
–
Rounding: Determine how the generated values are to be rounded. If you enter a Rounding value of 10, and the formula calculates, for example, a value of 7, it will be rounded to a rate of 10.
– Minimum: The program will assign the minimum value to any area where the generated number is equal to or less than the minimum value. For example, if a minimum value of 10 is entered, when the formula is generated any value equal to or less than 10 will be assigned a value of 10.
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–
–
Maximum: The program will assign the maximum value to any area where the generated number is equal to or greater than the maximum value. For example, if a maximum value of
350 is entered, when the formula is generated any value equal to or greater than 350 will be assigned a value of 350.
Default Rate: The Default Rate has no effect on the rates that will be calculated with your formula. This is a default rate that is sent to some variable rate controllers. Typically the
Default Rate is the rate that the controller uses when it has a GPS position that is located outside the Variable Rate Prescription map.
5. Once the map is created, the Planned Farming dialog appears. This allows you to create a
Planned Job. If required, you can change the Job Name to a description that helps identify the job. This is useful when you wants to run multiple scenarios of a formula (for example, with different Yield Goals). In this case, you can enter Job Names such as Aggressive, Conservative, and Average.
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6. Click
OK
to record the planned job. The formula-based prescription map should now appear in
the Map tab. For more information on editing prescription maps, see Chapter 4, Mapping
.
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Office Sync
In this chapter:
C H A P T E R
6
6
The Office Sync tool is an addition to the software suite. It provides wireless data transfer capabilities and enhanced information management for growers and agribusinesses.
See also Chapter 4, Mapping Software .
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Overview
The Connected Farm software can be used with wireless-capable displays including the following:
•
•
•
•
•
Trimble FmX integrated display.
Trimble CFX-750 display.
Devices running the Windows operating system and with the Farm Works Mobile software installed. These include the Trimble Juno® 3D, Nomad® T41X and Yuma® 2 CX & CLX handhelds.
Agco Varioterminal display (when used with Agco VarioDoc).
Smartphones and tablets (such as an iPhone, iPAD, or Android Phone) with the Connected Farm
App installed.
You no longer need a memory card or storage device to link the field to your office.
When you collect data in the field, the software saves it securely and then transfers it as required.
This data can include planned and completed jobs, guidance lines, soil sampling and scouting maps, application maps, and variable rate prescription maps.
This data can include work orders with variable rate prescription maps. Once you complete a job in the field, you can send the “as applied” map to the office to streamline data management.
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Using Office Sync
Trimble Office Sync uses a web server to upload and download data.
Working with mobile devices
Office Sync works with your mobile device as follows:
•
•
•
•
•
•
The Office Sync module communicates with the Office Sync server on a regular basis—typically, every minute. Each time that it communicates, it uploads any new information that was created in the desktop software to your Office Sync storage area. This includes clients, farms, fields, inputs (supplies and equipment), and guidance paths that were selected using the
Resource List
button.
Mobile devices such as an FmX integrated display or a device with the mobile mapping software loaded, or smartphones that have the Connected Farm App installed, look for updated information such as clients, farms, fields, inputs, and guidance paths to download from your
Office Sync storage area.
When communication is established, jobs that are completed in the field (using required hardware) are sent to the web server. If a mobile device loses communication with the web server, completed jobs are sent once it re-establishes communication. All data is safe and secure.
The Office Sync module checks your Office Sync storage area for any completed jobs, which it then downloads to your computer hard-drive. It also notifies you of the number of jobs associated with each mobile device.
The Office Sync module enables you to send work orders from a desktop computer, through your
Office Sync storage area on the server, to a remote device.
The Office Sync server backs up your raw data in your storage area, even after it is downloaded to your desktop software.
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Logging in to your Office Sync account
1. Select File / Preferences / Connected Farm.
6 – Office Sync
2. Enter your User name and Password. This information is provided to you when you order your
Office Sync service. This is typically done through the online store or through your reseller.
3. Click
Login and Refresh Options
. The system verifies your Username and Password and confirms that the login was successful.
4. Select the File Transfer (Sync) checkbox to enable the Office Sync features.
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5. Click
OK
to confirm and then click
OK
in the Office Sync tab to return to the main program.
Note – You need to enter this information only once, unless you have to reinstall the software from scratch, for example, after a computer failure or on a new machine.
Office Sync tab
The Office Sync tab shows all of the remote devices that are linked to your Office Sync account.
Each device shows the following information:
Column
Name
Inbox
Outbox
Device Inbox
Description
The name of each device. The name is set up on the mobile device—the FmX display or a device with mobile mapping software installed.
The number of jobs completed on the mobile device, uploaded to the Office Sync server and then downloaded to the computer hard drive. These jobs are not added to your project until you click Process Inbox. Jobs are then removed from the Inbox and added to your project. This functionality is available if you are using the Sync services.
To upload resources (Clients, Farms, Fields, Inputs, and A/B lines) to the Office Sync server, click
Resource List.
The resources wait in the Outbox until the Office Sync module communicates with the server (typically, once a minute), then they are uploaded. If your desktop computer is not currently connected to the Internet, jobs wait in the Outbox until a connection is established. This functionality is available if you are using the Sync services.
Once Resources or Work Orders are sent to the Office Sync server, they are assigned to an
Inbox for a specific device. They stay in the Device Inbox until that device has a valid wireless connection and is communicating with the Office Sync server, at which time it downloads the items. This functionality is available if you are using the Sync services.
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To sort the mobile devices list, click a column header as follows:
Header
Name
Inbox, Outbox
Device Inbox
Action
Devices are sorted alphabetically according to their device name.
To reverse the order, click again.
Devices are sorted according to the number of jobs in that category: Those with the least number of jobs are listed first.
To reverse the order, click again.
Uploading resources
Use the desktop software to create resources such as clients, farms, and fields. Resources also include inputs, such as supplies and equipment, and guidance lines. Use the Office Sync software to synchronize the latest resources with your mobile devices.
The Resource List icon
Click
Resource List
to upload the latest resources to the Office Sync server so that they can be downloaded to mobile devices. You can also use this option to limit which resources are uploaded, which is useful if you want to load only the fields for a certain client or farm that will be worked, for example.
To update the Resource list on your Office Sync area:
1. Click
Resource List
.
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2. In the Farms/Fields tab, select the Clients/Farms/Fields to upload.
6 – Office Sync
3. In the Inputs tab, select the People/Equipment/Supplies to upload.
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4. Select the Job Types tab to select and then send certain Job types or events to the FmX display.
5. Select the Options tab to send field boundaries and/or field history when using the Office Sync module with a handheld device running the Mobile software, for example the Nomad handheld running the mobile mapping software. See also
Synchronizing with the Mobile software, page 302
.
6. Click
OK
.
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7. Select the Mobile Device(s) to upload the resources to and then click
OK
.
6 – Office Sync
The selected resources are added to the Outbox for the mobile devices that you chose. As soon as the software communicates with the Office Sync server (typically, once a minute when you have
Internet access), the data is uploaded and moved to the Device Inbox where it stays until the mobile device downloads the resources.
Sending a Work Order
A Work Orders consists of a planned job to be performed on selected fields. It can include people, equipment, supplies, and maps (such as variable rate and target soil sample maps). Use the Office
Sync module to send a Work Order to mobile devices, such as an FmX integrated display or a device with the mobile mapping software loaded, through the Office Sync server.
Note – Work orders cannot be sent to a smartphone that has the Connected Farm App installed.
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1. Select the Jobs tab.
2. Select the planned job(s) to send. To select multiple jobs, hold down the computer
[Ctrl]
key as you click each job. Planned jobs appear in brown text.
3. Right-click, select Work Order and then select the mobile device to send the job to.
The job is sent to the Office Sync server. Once the mobile device communicates with the server, the job is transferred.
Processing the Inbox
As mobile devices complete jobs, they are uploaded to the Office Sync server. The Office Sync module downloads these jobs as they are completed and saves them in the Devices Inbox. This data can then be processed and imported to the Farm Works Mapping or Farm Works Surface software so that you can print reports or maps, and analyze the data. To process the Inbox and read the job data into the software:
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1. In the Office Sync tab, click
Process Inbox
.
If the jobs being imported include any new items such as Clients, Farms, Fields, or Inputs, the
Linker dialog appears. The Operation Resources list shows the name of the item as it was entered on the mobile device. The Desktop resources list shows available resources as they were set up in the desktop software.
2. To link these lists, select the appropriate item in each list and then click
<-Link->
.
3. Before you click
Create
, do one of the following:
– To use an existing Client or Farm, select it in the Desktop Resources list.
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–
If the item is new, select it from the Operation Resources list. In the Client/Farm and Field
Properties dialogs that appear, enter information to create a new Client, Farm, and Field.
4. If the job contains any new inputs (such as supplies or equipment), you can also link the new items or create them, as required.
For more information refer to
Chapter 3, Field Record Keeping .
If the jobs came from the mobile mapping software, the Job Properties dialog appears, with a summary of the job data.
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5. Make changes here, as required.
6 – Office Sync
Once the jobs are read into the software, they appear in the Jobs tab and are associated with the correct field(s).
For more information, see
Chapter 3, Field Record Keeping .
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Previous files
This option reprocesses jobs that were previously read into the software using Office Sync (from the
Connected Farm tab of the Farm Works software). This enables you to read jobs into more than one
Farm Works project and installation so that data can be shared with different parties.
•
•
•
This feature will only support files transferred from the following devices:
Trimble TMX-2050™ display
Trimble FmX integrated display (firmware version 7.3 or higher)
Connected Farm scout app
To use this feature:
1. In the Office Sync tab, click
Previous Files
.
2. In the Office Sync Files dialog, enter the Date Range that the jobs fall within and then click
OK
.
Another dialog appears to show the program’s file searching progress. A message appears when the files are available.
The reprocessed jobs are listed in the Inbox for that particular device waiting for the user to process the inbox. See also
Processing the Inbox, page 287 .
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Using the VarioDoc account
This section describes how to access and use the Farm Works Software solutions and the Trimble
Connected Farm software to access data collected using the Agco VarioDoc system.
Logging in to the VarioDoc account in the Farm Works
Software solutions
1. In the Farm Works software, select File / Preferences / Connected Farm.
2. In the Connected Farm screen, select the VarioDoc tab and then enter your User name and
Password.
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The User name and Password are provided by AGCO for the VarioDoc Pro system. For VarioDoc
(Basic with Bluetooth
®
only) the customer can select this. Make sure that the user name and password entered in the software match the entry that was used in the VarioDoc Manager.
3. Select one of the following, depending on what you purchased:
–
VarioDoc - enables you to transfers non-GPS records using Bluetooth
®
wireless technology.
– VarioDoc Pro - enables to you to transfer field records and GPS maps using a cellular modem.
4. Click
Login and Refresh Features
. The system verifies your User name and Password and confirms that the login was successful.
5. Click
OK
to confirm your changes.
Note – You need to enter this information only once, unless you have to reinstall the software from scratch, for example, after a computer failure or on a new machine.
Note – This documentation refers to VarioDoc data being sent via servers as is done with the
VarioDoc Pro system. When VarioDoc (Basic with Bluetooth only) is used, data is sent from the display the computer using Bluetooth
®
wireless technology. This does not involve the use of a server.
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Connected Farm tab
The Connected Farm tab in the Farm Works Mapping software shows all the remote devices that are linked via the Connected Farm software. This includes devices used with the Agco VarioDoc application.
The following information is shown for each device:
Column
Name
Inbox
Outbox
Device
Inbox
Description
The name of each device. The name is the Vehicle Identification Number for the tractor that
VarioDoc is being used on.
The number of jobs completed on the mobile device, uploaded to the VarioDoc servers and sent via the Connected Farm software to be downloaded to your computer hard drive. These jobs are not added to your project until you click Process Inbox. Jobs are then removed from the Inbox and added to your project.
To upload resources (Clients, Farms, Fields, Inputs, and A/B lines) to the VarioDoc servers via the Connected Farm software, click Resource List. The resources remain in the Outbox until they are sent to the VarioDoc server (typically, once a minute). If your desktop computer is not currently connected to the Internet, jobs remain in the Outbox until a connection is established.
Once Resources or Work Orders are sent to the VarioDoc server, they are assigned to the Inbox for a specific device. They stay in the Device Inbox until that device has a valid wireless connection and is communicating with the VarioDoc server, at which time it downloads the items.
To sort the mobile devices list, click a column header as follows:
Header
Name
Inbox
Outbox
Device Inbox
Action
Devices are sorted alphabetically according to their device name.
To reverse the order, click the heading again.
Devices are sorted according to the number of jobs in that category: Those with the least number of jobs are listed first.
To reverse the order, click the heading again.
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Uploading resources
Use the desktop software to create resources. Resources include:
•
•
Clients, farms, and fields.
Inputs, such as supplies and equipment.
You can also use this option to limit which resources are uploaded, which is useful if, for example, you want to load only the fields for a certain client or farm that will be worked.
1. Do one of the following:
–
–
Click the Write Job Data icon .
Select File / Write Job Data.
The Write Job Data dialog shows third-party controllers and monitors to which you can write VRA maps, inputs, field names, and boundaries.
2. From the AGCO option, select Agco (ISO Task) VarioDoc and then click
Resource List
.
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3. In the Farms/Fields tab, select the check boxes for the Clients/Farms/Fields that you want to upload.
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4. In the Inputs tab, select the checkboxes for the People/Equipment/Supplies that you want to upload.
5. Click
OK
to return to the Resource List and then click
OK
again to return to the main Write Job
Data screen.
6. Click
OK
in the Write Job Data screen.
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7. Select the Mobile Device(s) to upload the resources to and then click
OK
.
6 – Office Sync
The selected resources are added to the Outbox for the mobile devices that you selected. As soon as the software communicates with the server (typically, once a minute when you have Internet access), the data is uploaded and moved to the Device Inbox where it stays until the mobile device downloads the resources.
Sending a Work Order
A Work Order consists of a planned job to be performed on selected fields. It can include people, equipment, supplies, and maps (such as variable rate and target soil sample maps).
1. Select the Jobs tab:
2. Select the planned job(s) that you want to send. To select multiple jobs, hold down the computer
[Ctrl]
key as you click each job. Planned jobs appear in brown text.
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3. Right-click the jobs, select Work Order and then select the Console:
6 – Office Sync
.
Processing the Inbox
As mobile devices complete jobs, they are uploaded to the VarioDoc server. These jobs are downloaded as they are completed and are saved in the Device Inbox. This data can then be processed and imported so that you can print reports or maps, and analyze the data.
To process the Inbox and read the job data into the software:
1. In the Connected Farm tab, click
Process Inbox
.
If the jobs being imported include any new items such as Clients, Farms, Fields, or Inputs, the
Linker dialog appears. The Operation Resources list shows the name of the item as it was entered on the mobile device. The Desktop Resources list shows available resources as they were set up in the desktop software.
2. To link these lists, select the appropriate item in each list and then click
<-Link->.
3. Before you click
Create
, do one of the following:
–
–
To use an existing Client or Farm, select it from the Desktop Resources list.
If the item is new, select it from the Operation Resources list. In the Client/Farm and Field
Properties dialogs that appear, enter information to create a new Client, Farm, and Field.
4. Once the jobs are read into the software, they appear in the Jobs tab and are associated with the correct field(s).
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C H A P T E R
7
Synchronizing Data with the
Mobile Software
7
In this chapter:
Marking planned jobs as work orders to the
Synchronizing with the Mobile software
Synchronizing GreenSeeker® data from the
This chapter describes how to synchronize information to and from a device running the mobile mapping software.
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Marking planned jobs as work orders to the
Mobile software
You can write jobs specifically to be used with the Mobile software. Once you synchronize with a field computer (for example, a Juno
®
or Nomad
®
series handheld or a Yuma
®
tablet computer), you can open and complete any planned jobs in the field.
Note – Only a planned job can be written as a work order.
1. Create a planned job. See Creating a planned job, page 63
and
2. In the Jobs tab, scroll to the job or use the sorting and filtering options to find the job(s). See
Finding a job in the Jobs tab, page 79
. Planned jobs have orange text and the Planned icon .
3. Select the job(s).
4. Right-click any selected job and then select Work Order / Mobile.
The Export icon is added to each planned job you select. After you synchronize with the
Mobile software, the export icon is removed from the jobs. You can mark a job for export (as a work order) and synchronize as many times as required.
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Synchronizing with the Mobile software
The process of exchanging data between the field and desktop software is called synchronizing. This process updates crop records on the desktop with those entered in the field, and updates the field software with any new items added to the list of fields, equipment, or supplies. Any planned jobs created in the desktop software are also updated.
To synchronize more than one project, you must complete the synchronization process while you are within an individual project in the desktop software.
The software allows you to synchronize more than one client's information. Only clients that are selected from the resource list are synchronized when the process is complete.
1. Make sure that the field software is not running on the mobile device.
2. Use ActiveSync
®
technology or the Windows Mobile
®
Device Center to create a partnership between the handheld computer and the office computer.
Alternatively, insert a USB drive into a USB port on your office computer.
3. Select File / Synchronize Mobile or click the Synchronize icon .
4. In Location:
– Select CE Device if you are synchronizing with a handheld computer, or select Local Drive if you are synchronizing with a USB drive.
– From the drop-down list, select the location where you are synchronizing to. Select:
CE Main Memory to use the main memory of the connected handheld computer. (This is volatile memory that can be lost if the handheld computer's battery discharges. New handhelds will not lose files if the battery is discharged.)
CE SD Card to use the removable storage card of the connected handheld computer. This is the recommended option.
The drive for the USB drive to use the removable drive for use with devices that do not communicate using ActiveSync technology.
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5. In Options, select one or more of the following:
–
–
Preview job details before recording: To view or edit the operation before the synchronization process is complete. If selected, the Farming field appears, from where you can view or edit the farming operation.
Note – This is only for jobs completed on the handheld that are being synchronized with the desktop program.
–
Upload Field Boundaries: To view field boundaries as a background map in the field software.
(Applies only if the Mobile software is installed.)
Upload Field History: When the Mobile software is used, this uploads field history from the selected date forward. The history includes a brief summary of each job, including supplies used, rate, date, cost, and notes. You must also select a date in the From field.
6. Click
Resource List
to limit the Clients, Farms, Fields, and Inputs written for use with the field software.
7. Click
OK
.
The Synchronization screen lists any jobs that were entered using the Mobile software:
– The Field Records tab lists jobs that were completed using the Field Record Job option in the mobile mapping software.
–
–
The Mapping tab lists jobs that were completed using the New Mapping Job, New Sensor
Job, and so on.
The GPS Logs tab lists New Mapping Jobs, New Sensor Jobs, and so on that were completed and that did not use the automatic file naming option.
8. Select the jobs that you want to synchronize for each tab. Click
Select All
to select all jobs, or
Select None
to clear all listed jobs.
9. Click
OK
.
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Completed jobs appears in the Jobs tab in black; planned jobs that were marked for export are exported to the handheld or USB drive for use within the Mobile software as work orders.
Synchronizing GreenSeeker
®
data from the
Mobile software
1. Select File / Synchronize Mobile or click the Synchronize icon .
2. In Location:
–
Select CE Device if you are synchronizing with a handheld computer, or select Local Drive if you are synchronizing with a USB drive.
–
From the drop-down list, select the location where you are synchronizing to. Select:
CE Main Memory to use the main memory of the connected handheld computer. (This is volatile memory that can be lost if the handheld computer's battery discharges. New handhelds will not lose files if the battery is discharged.)
CE SD Card to use the removable storage card of the connected handheld computer. This is the recommended option.
The drive for the USB drive to use the removable drive for use with devices that do not communicate using ActiveSync technology.
3. In Options, select Preview job details before recording: To view or edit the operation before the synchronization process is complete. Once selected, the Farming field appears, from where you can view or edit the farming operation.
Note – This is only for jobs completed on the handheld that are being synchronized with the desktop program.
4. Click
OK
.
The Synchronization dialog lists any jobs that were entered using the Mobile software.
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7 – Synchronizing Data with the Mobile Software
–
–
The Field Records tab lists jobs that were completed using the Field Record Job option in the mobile mapping software.
The Mapping tab lists jobs that were completed using the New Mapping Job, New Sensor
Job, and so on.
–
The GPS Logs tab lists New Mapping Jobs, New Sensor Jobs, and so on that were completed and that did not use the automatic file naming option.
5. Select the jobs that you want to synchronize for each tab. Click
Select All
to select all jobs, or
Select None
to clear all listed jobs.
6. Click
OK
.
The Linker dialog appears. This links resources used during the operation with resources on the desktop computer. Any new fields are also added here.
When importing jobs from a data file, some resources and job entry items may not exist in the desktop software. For example, when entering a resource in the field, you may enter a different name from that used in the office. When you import jobs, the Linker dialog either creates new resources or links them with current ones. If they are linked, the software assumes that the two different items are the same.
The Linker dialog shows two lists. Items that appear in the Operation Resources list must be created or linked with items that appear in the Desktop Resources list. For more information, see
Linking resources when synchronizing or importing jobs, page 84 .
7. Once all items are linked or created, click
OK
.
8. The Farming dialog appears. Enter any information necessary for the farming operation(s) and then click
OK
.
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Note – You can also edit jobs later in the Jobs tab. For more information, see
Marking planned jobs as work orders to the Mobile software, page 301 .
9. In the Sensor Configuration screen, enter the correct sensor settings for the following:
– GPS Antenna Position
–
–
Boom Position
Layer Point Size
–
Sensor Positions (left or right of center)
10. You are prompted to enter the configuration settings for each job that is selected for import.
When you have done this, click
OK
.
The GreenSeeker maps are added to Jobs under the appropriate Farm and Field.
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11. To view the imported map: a. Make sure that Show Jobs In Land Areas is selected on the View menu.
b. Select the Map tab.
c. In the Farm tab, locate the job under the applicable Farm and Field.
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Table of contents
- 2 Contact and Legal Information
- 8 Getting Started
- 9 Related information and technical support
- 10 Installing the software
- 10 Windows Vista and Windows 7 operating system
- 10 Registering the software
- 11 Running the software for the first time
- 11 Creating and opening a farm project
- 13 Selecting a measurement system
- 14 Changing user information
- 15 Changing the working date / system date
- 16 Changing languages
- 17 Interface overview
- 17 Menus, submenus, and contextual menus
- 18 Toolbars
- 20 Backing up projects
- 22 Restoring project backups
- 24 Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
- 25 Setting Up Farms, Fields, and Inputs
- 25 Setup options
- 28 Client / Farm / Field or Inputs tabs
- 29 Setting up a Client
- 31 Setting up a Farm
- 32 Setting up a Field
- 35 Setting up a Landlord
- 39 Setting up a Structure
- 40 Setting up a Person
- 42 Setting up a Machine
- 45 Setting up a Supply
- 45 Adding a new Supply
- 49 Adding a new Tank Mix
- 52 Setting up an Animal Group
- 53 Setting up a Crop Enterprise
- 56 Editing a Commodity
- 58 Managing Farms, Fields, and Inputs
- 58 Viewing or modifying information
- 58 Deleting a farm, field, or input
- 59 Retiring a farm, field, or input
- 61 Field Record Keeping
- 62 Jobs tab
- 62 Using the View menu
- 63 Creating a planned job
- 68 Completing planned jobs
- 68 Recording tillage operations (manually)
- 71 Recording planting operations (manually)
- 73 Recording harvesting operations (manually)
- 75 Entering Scale Tickets
- 78 Editing landlord/sharecrop information when completing a job
- 79 Finding an existing job
- 79 Finding a job in the Farm tab
- 79 Finding a job in the Jobs tab
- 81 Finding a job in the Inputs tab
- 81 Editing jobs
- 81 Removing/deleting jobs
- 82 Exporting jobs
- 82 Exporting CSV or XML files
- 83 Importing FODM XML files
- 84 Linking resources when synchronizing or importing jobs
- 86 Merging crop enterprises
- 87 Weather tab
- 87 Adding weather information
- 88 Viewing and printing a weather report
- 91 Creating invoices
- 94 Submitting crop insurance data
- 94 Assigning a County and State to each field
- 95 Assigning RMA Identities to Commodities
- 97 Assigning a Practice and Type
- 99 Submitting data to Great American Insurance Group
- 101 Linking crops
- 102 Changing Practices and Types
- 103 Filtering listed fields
- 104 Submitted data
- 109 Reports
- 109 Printing Job reports
- 111 Printing a Job Efficiency report
- 114 Printing Field, Equipment, and Supply usage reports
- 119 Mapping Software
- 120 Toolbars
- 122 Downloading road and waterway data
- 123 Calibrating and geo-referencing images without GPS data
- 123 Registering GPS points
- 124 Calibrating the image
- 126 Loading the image
- 127 Drawing and importing boundaries
- 127 Drawing field boundary maps
- 132 Automatically drawing fields from yield maps
- 135 Importing field boundaries
- 137 Viewing field boundary maps
- 139 Field boundary display: View changes
- 141 Exporting field boundary maps
- 142 Batch Shape File export
- 144 Assigning colors to fields by crop enterprise
- 146 Assigning patterns
- 148 Editing Enterprise maps
- 151 Setting up and selecting layer attributes
- 153 Creating Guidance / Feature layers
- 154 Working with Guidance Line Layers
- 158 Creating area features
- 159 Creating line features
- 160 Creating point features
- 161 Multi Swath Lines management
- 161 Crop Row Management
- 164 Working with Multi Swath Lines as planting lines
- 165 Editing row settings
- 168 Creating planned Multi Swath Lines
- 170 Copying planned Multi Swath Lines from other sources
- 174 Working with offsets
- 175 Working with Swath IDs for Case and New Holland displays
- 177 Editing individual line Swath IDs
- 179 Editing Swath IDs for multiple lines
- 180 Creating clip lines
- 182 Clipping lines to an area
- 183 Writing out planned and crop row lines for use with a display
- 184 Working with the Buffer tool
- 186 Working with yield and as-applied maps
- 186 Importing Job data
- 190 Importing CNH vault data
- 192 Importing CNH large square baler data
- 195 Analyzing yield and as-applied data
- 198 Reprocessing Trimble yield data
- 200 Merging jobs
- 201 Splitting point data
- 203 Creating reconciled yield maps
- 205 Creating polygon variety maps
- 205 Adding polygon variety maps
- 207 Hand-drawing polygon variety maps
- 212 Writing Variety maps to a supported device
- 213 Yield Variety report
- 216 Split Planting maps
- 218 Editing legends
- 218 Using ranges created by the software
- 220 Creating your own ranges
- 221 Changing the colors
- 224 Creating a template
- 225 The Harvest filter
- 226 The Show Me feature
- 227 Markers
- 228 Working with grids and contour maps
- 228 Adding grids or contours to a map
- 232 Averaging polygons
- 235 Animating layers
- 236 The Transparency slider
- 237 Soil Type maps
- 237 Downloading and importing soil type maps
- 239 Soil samples
- 239 Creating a soil sample grid map
- 243 Modifying soil sample grid maps
- 244 Exporting soil sample grid maps
- 245 Importing soil sample data
- 250 Copying a layer to a different Farm or Field
- 252 Creating VRA maps
- 255 Exporting VRA maps
- 257 Exporting VRA map to a third-party controller or monitor
- 263 Printing maps
- 266 Mapping Analysis
- 267 Enterprise summary
- 268 Normalized yield
- 270 Generating formulas
- 278 Office Sync
- 279 Overview
- 280 Using Office Sync
- 280 Working with mobile devices
- 281 Logging in to your Office Sync account
- 282 Office Sync tab
- 283 Uploading resources
- 286 Sending a Work Order
- 287 Processing the Inbox
- 291 Previous files
- 292 Using the VarioDoc account
- 292 Logging in to the VarioDoc account in the Farm Works Software solutions
- 294 Connected Farm tab
- 295 Uploading resources
- 298 Sending a Work Order
- 299 Processing the Inbox
- 300 Synchronizing Data with the Mobile Software
- 301 Marking planned jobs as work orders to the Mobile software
- 302 Synchronizing with the Mobile software
- 304 Synchronizing GreenSeeker® data from the Mobile software