Hans Dieter KUTZBACH
Nowadays machine tests are also performed by
agricultural journals. These tests are very fast,
they are for the consumers, and they reach a lot
of the readers of these journals and the farmers.
So how do you handle this aspect? Is this a
severe competition for our institutional tests?
Francis SEVILA
I would like to ask the two speakers about the
cost of these testing approaches. We all know
that these are expensive services. A lot of people
are needed to operate expensive equipment,
instrumentation and so on. If I remember
correctly, because I once used to work for such
an institute, the cost is not totally paid by the
industry who is asking for the tests. And also, if
I remember correctly, the situation is not the
same in every country, concerning how much
the public money is contributed or not. So the
first question is: what is the situation in Japan?
Who is paying for the tests? And my second
question - I don’t put the same question for
Europe because it would take too much time -
but in this agreement that you have been
showing us, what is your strategy to ensure fair
competition between testing stations? I believe
that these European testing stations range from
no cost for the test to full cost for the test. And
I’m afraid that this is not a sustainable
situation.
144
Derek H. SUTTON
Three hopefully short questions. The first one is
a factual one. I’d be most interested to know
what proportion of tests result in a rejection or
a failure; in other words you don’t award the
certificate or whatever. And in those cases, can
they resubmit with a redesigned model of the
same machine within a certain time? What is the
procedure on that score? The second question
concerns the difficulties of standardising test
procedures. I’m remembering the early days of
OECD, it was a terrific business to get
agreement on the standard test procedures for
tractors. And in their attempts to reach
agreement on combine test procedures, I don’t
think they ever reached a common agreement -
an agreed procedure. And I particularly would
be interested in the case of soil tillage
equipment, where if you carry out a test of a soil
working implement in sandy soils in Denmark,
and get approval for it, and then work it in very
heavy soils in southern Italy or something...
there may be a very different situation for
durability. And I’d be interested to know how
much progress is being made on reaching
agreement on those procedures. The last
question is - really what is the reaction
generally of manufacturers to your excellent co-
ordination proposals?
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