Insight

RCI 2018 Hay and Forage Equipment Early Order Program

RCI is offering an Early-Order Program Discount for select RCI hay and forage products.

This program varies by product and ends on Friday, December 22, 2017 at 4:00pm CST.

Product: NEW! R1 Merger Attachment for W200-Series Windrowers
Program: Order an R1 Merger Attachment and receive a 50% discount on any spare parts for the attachment, including belts. Spare parts will ship with the Merger Attachment in early 2018.

Product: 186M Windrow Merger
Program: Order a 186M Windrow Merger and take delivery by January 5, 2018 for $750 discount.

Product: 812A Combine Header Adapter for 8000-Series SPFH
Program: Order an 812A AND 8A Bumper Attachment    OR    812A AND Recutter Screen Bundle and receive a $250 discount.

Product: Tandems For PTFH
Program: $1,000 discount on any tandem bundles while inventory remains.

This Early Order Program Discount is valid on current 2017 prices.  See your local John Deere Dealer for more information, or contact RCI with any questions.

RCI Introduces the R1 Merger Attachment for John Deere W200-Series Windrowers

RCI R1 Merger Attachment for John Deere W200-Series Windrowers
RCI Engineering of Mayville, Wisconsin, introduces the R1 Merger Attachment for John Deere W200-Series Windrowers. The R1 Merger Attachment is available for John Deere W235 and W260 Windrowers equipped with 500R Rotary Platforms.

The R1 allows for merging of windrows with the windrower in front of a self-propelled forage harvester or in conditions that do not require wide swaths for dry-down. The R1 can eliminate the need for raking or merging passes through the field.

All controls for the attachment are integrated into the controls of the windrower. The unit can be disabled for center-dumping, and can merge up to three windrows into one as needed.

Many improvements have been made in the design over previous generations. The key improvements are as follows:

• Forming shields can be adjusted for changing windrow width when the merger attachment is not used.
• Belt tensioning is now automatic and does not require any maintenance.
• Improved scrapers are incorporated to the roller supports to keep the rollers clean in even the harshest conditions.
• The structure has been simplified to shorten the installation time and to reduce the load on the windrower.

To learn more about the R1 Merger Attachment, see your local John Deere dealer or visit RCIengineering.com.  RCI is a John Deere Allied Supplier.

Contact:

RCI Engineering, LLC
208 River Knoll Drive
Mayville, WI 53050
Phone: (920)387-9804

 

STEAM Day at RCI

April 3, 2017

STEAM Day at RCI

RCI Engineering, an engineering and manufacturing company in Mayville, Wisconsin, hosted the 4th Grade of the Mayville School District to provide an experience with STEAM.  STEAM represents Science, Technology, Engineering, Agriculture, and Math.

88 Students participated in several activities to learn about all of the activities RCI performs in bringing new products to market.  Stations were set up in each key area as follows:

  • Marketing
  • Product Design
  • Design Analysis
  • Order Procurement
  • Electrical Engineering
  • 3D Printing
  • NIR (Near-Infrared) Technology
  • Assembly
  • Shipping and Receiving
  • Welding
  • Product Testing
  • Machining
  • Laser Scanning

Students then participated in a Lego challenge, where they worked alone and in teams to assemble simple Lego Creations.  3D Printed Awards were presented for students that worked the best in teams.

By presenting the different areas of STEAM in a fun and educational way, it is our hope to show these young students all the different possibilities that exist between engineering, agriculture and manufacturing….applying what they are learning in STEAM fields.  An emphasis on STEAM in school helps prepare our students to take advantage of all that our industry has to offer.

RCI firmly believes in the importance in STEAM in the classroom.  By exposing our kids to more possibilities, and by giving them opportunities to see how to apply what they are learning in school, we hope that they have more visibility to different fields.  Ultimately, we hope someday they can choose a career path that they can find joy in.  Several students, in showing their appreciation for the event, indicated that they might like to be an engineer, assembler, or welder, but that they did not know about it before today.  Mission accomplished!

RCI specializes in the manufacture of agricultural and off-road equipment and also provides engineering services to other OEM’s of this equipment.  Based in Mayville, RCI supports customers across North America and ships products for different agricultural producers around the world.  Learn more at http://www.RCIengineering.com

STEAM Power For Agriculture and Manufacturing (Mayville)

This week is National FFA Week and Engineering Week.  These two are very important on their own, but combined they can have amazing potential.  You may have heard of STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math).  It’s a growing trend in our education system today.  But it is important to reflect on how it may be a tool to strengthen our own community.  For Mayville, this can be referred to as STEAM.  The “A” is for Agriculture (and some may present the case for the Arts).  But how does STEAM power our local community in 2017?

First, let’s look at what STEAM really is.  President Obama said “STEM is more than a school subject, or the periodic table, or the properties of waves.  It is an approach to the world, a critical way to understand and explore and engage with the world, and then have the capacity to change that world…”

STEM traces its roots to US Congress in 2007.  At that time, the America COMPETES Act became law and was intended to increase America’s investment in science and engineering research, and in STEM education.

However, STEM is basically an ideology, a guideline if you will, for a focus on directing education towards science, technology, engineering, and math to help America grow in a global market.  Therefore, it can be applied differently at any given level.  There is not a one-size-fits-all program for schools to follow.  There are various recommendations at different levels, but it is not a boiler-plate plan.  At our local level, we can adapt this for our community.

Mayville is a community that is supported by industry.  Any given community has basic “Pillars” on which the community stands.  A Pillar is necessary for the community to continue in its current state or to prosper.  Without a Pillar, the community falls apart.  For Mayville, the Pillars of the community can be viewed as manufacturing and agriculture.  Yes, you read that right, agriculture.  Take a minute of this FFA Week to think about it.  Manufacturing is the backbone of the community, but without agriculture, the community would falter.  Do not think of cows, sows and plows, but rather think of cheese processors, milk processors, refrigeration warehouses, cooperatives, canning factories, farms producing products, and the supporting businesses such as trucking companies and repair parts stores supporting all those businesses.  Mayville also has a unique situation where the manufacturers are heavily dependent on the manufacturing of agricultural equipment that is used around the world.  Take agriculture out of the community, and it would fall apart.  Take manufacturing out of the community, and it would fall apart.  One is dependent on the other, and the community relies on this.

There are other supports of the community like tourism, service based businesses, and other businesses.  These can be considered Arches that rest on the Pillars of the community.  The community can still hold together if the Arches fall apart.  Arches can be rebuilt as long as the Pillars are in place.  And so, everything in Mayville as we know it is dependent on manufacturing and agriculture.

This is why STEAM is so important to the future of Mayville and the country.  To compete in a global market, and to continue to flourish in agriculture and manufacturing, we need a population that can support this industry.  Without the people, the industry cannot survive.  We need to be smarter, more focused, and geared towards the future in all that we do so that our Pillars remain intact.

STEAM is the rallying message behind the ambition.  We need to focus on our youth, to educate them, to empower them, for the world they are preparing to enter.  The demand in this part of the world is in manufacturing and agriculture.  If we want the Pillars to hold up over time, we need to reinforce them with a population that excels in the skills needed to maintain and grow the foundation.

When we talk about skills, we are not just talking about dairy science and welding 101.  Agriculture involves everything from Food Science to Plant Genetics, Natural Resources, and Animal Genomes.  Manufacturing of today and tomorrow may deal with a standard MIG welder, but also involves 3D printers, fiber-optic 3D laser cutting units, and laser etching systems along with fully automated robotic forming and welding units.  All of these are in need of people that can grow with the technology over time and not only operate the basic functions, but service and support and design products for these operations.  We are talking about everything from general labor positions to engineering positions in research and development of new products and goods that take advantage of the technologies available.

This is the beauty of STEAM.  It gives us a focal point in our endeavors in education.  It helps to prepare students for the future by giving them a foundation on the basics of all this technology and science, while giving them options to pursue advanced fields in the future through engineering and technology degrees, should they so choose.  It also gives us the freedom to adapt the program to our needs as a community.  That is, we can help expose more students to the many faces of STEAM to help show them what is possible in the world, while building a basic skill set that will help them to learn and grow for the rest of their lives.  Therefore, upon graduation from Mayville, our next generation will have many more options for their future than any generation before.  That is, to join the local workforce, or to pursue advanced degrees.

Long term, such a program can help more people to move back to the Mayville area.  That is, to have folks go out into the world and learn and grow in a field related to STEAM, and return back to the Mayville area later in life to raise their next generation in a community with values and opportunities that they want to pass on.

No matter how one looks at it, STEAM is something to embrace for Mayville.  It gives us a focus on what matters most…giving our next generation the foundation they need for their own lives while shoring up our own Pillars in Mayville.  What better way to celebrate agriculture, engineering, and manufacturing during FFA Week and Engineering week!  Consider all that a STEAM program has to offer and reflect on and celebrate the work of those that create and support the Pillars of our community!