Turning Precision Farming into a Daily Value for German Farms
translate

Spring fieldwork leaves little room for error. In Germany, farmers face tight schedules during seeding, fertilizing, and field preparation. Long hours in the cab add pressure, and small steering mistakes can lead to overlap, missed areas, and extra input costs.

That is why more farms now see precision farming as part of daily work. In Brockel, Germany, Wilhelm Lüdemann GmbH is helping drive that shift. Jan-Wilhelm Lüdemann, Managing Director, and Mathis Drewes, Sales Manager, support farmers across sales, service, and after-sales support. With a team of 14, the company helps more farmers adopt Sveaverken Auto Steer Systems in everyday operations.

 


Bringing Precision Farming to More Farms in Northern Germany

Wilhelm Lüdemann GmbH has been distributing Sveaverken Auto Steer Systems since May 2025 and has since served as the primary distributor for Schleswig-Holstein, Lower Saxony, and North Rhine-Westphalia.

Today, the team supports more than 50 active customers and continues to expand across Northern Germany. Their work covers the full process, from product sales to technical support and after-sales service.

For Jan and Mathis, the priority is clear. Farmers need solutions that fit real working conditions. They need systems that are easy to use, easy to connect, and backed by reliable local support.

Helping Farmers Stay Accurate During Busy Spring Work

During spring work, consistency matters. Manual steering becomes harder over time, especially across large fields and repetitive passes.

Sveaverken Auto Steer Systems help tractors hold a consistent line with accuracy of up to 2.5 centimetres. In daily work, this can reduce overlap, limit missed strips, and ease driver fatigue during long days in the cab.

All systems are RTK-capable and can connect through a standard SIM card or mobile hotspot. Setup is straightforward, making it easier for farmers to integrate precision farming into their day-to-day work without unnecessary complexity.

According to Jan, customers value the system because it feels intuitive and accessible. In real farm conditions, technology should support the operator, not slow the job down.

One System for More Daily Field Tasks

Spring fieldwork often means moving quickly between fields, machines, and tasks. Farmers need to stay productive without losing track of data.

With Sveaverken Auto Steer Systems, operators can create fields, map boundaries, set up tasks, record fertiliser rates, and run prescription maps. The system can also act as the main ISOBUS display, helping operators manage guidance and implement control from one screen.

In practice, that means less switching between tools and better control of records during busy days. 

Why Local Support Makes the Difference

In Germany, adopting precision farming is not only about the technology itself. Local service and ongoing support also play an important role in daily use.

This is where Wilhelm Lüdemann GmbH brings clear value. Jan, Mathis, and the team support farmers from the first consultation through ongoing after-sales service. Customers have a trusted local contact for setup, product questions, and daily use. That support is especially important during busy periods such as spring planting and field preparation.

With local support from Wilhelm Lüdemann GmbH, farmers in Northern Germany can bring Sveaverken Auto Steer Systems into daily fieldwork with greater confidence.

Whether you are a farmer looking for a practical precision farming solution or a business exploring partnership opportunities with Sveaverken, contact us today to reserve a demo.

Bu gönderiyi paylaş
Arşivle
Related Products
How Sveaverken Spring Version Software Improves Spring Fieldwork Efficiency