Description
When harvest season comes around and your combine’s feeder house starts slipping or squealing, it’s usually this upper drive belt that’s telling you it’s time for a replacement. This PIX vari-speed feeder drive belt keeps the crop flowing smoothly from your header into the threshing system, and when it starts failing, you’ll notice sluggish feeding that can bog down your whole operation. Don’t let a worn belt turn a good harvest day into a breakdown nightmare.
What You’re Getting
- Genuine PIX construction built specifically for the demanding conditions of combine harvesting
- Variable-speed design that maintains proper tension across different engine RPMs and crop loads
- Upper belt position ensures optimal power transfer to the feeder house mechanism
- Direct replacement that fits like the original—no modifications or adjustments needed
- Heavy-duty construction that handles the constant flexing and high loads of harvest operations
Built for Real Harvest Work
This belt powers the feeder house on your New Holland TR-series combines, the workhorses that handle everything from corn and soybeans to wheat and specialty crops. Whether you’re running a TR89 through tall corn or pushing a TR99 through heavy wheat, this belt keeps the crop moving steadily into the machine. The vari-speed feature is critical when you’re adjusting engine RPM for different crop conditions—it automatically compensates to maintain proper feeding speed.
Made to Last
PIX belts feature premium construction that far outlasts standard belts, with materials specifically chosen for the high-stress environment of combine operations. The belt handles the constant dirt, chaff, and debris that comes with harvest work, plus the temperature swings from cool morning starts to hot afternoon runs. It’s engineered to keep working when you need it most.
Good to Know
This belt fits TR96 combines from serial number 528561 and on—earlier machines used a different design, so check your serial number before ordering. Installation typically takes about an hour once you get the feeder house covers off. Keep track of when you install it and your combine hours—knowing your belt life helps you plan ahead for next season, and keeping the old belt as a spare is never a bad idea.






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