Smart mechanization is a continuous improvement process: the case of a conservation agriculture machinery manufacturer




The building of local capacities is one of the objectives MasAgro pursues to achieve the adoption of conservation agriculture in Mexico. As part of this vision, MasAgro helps develop local machine manufacturers with the capacity to supply and service the implements farmers across the country need to implement conservation agriculture systems.
MartĂn SĂĄnchez GĂłmez welcomed us to Sembradoras TIMS, the shop where he manufactures farm machinery, located in San JoaquĂn Coapango, Texcoco, State of Mexico. When we arrived, SĂĄnchez and his family were in the middle of checking the details in preparation for an event to show the implements they have developed for conservation agriculture systems. They set up tents, chairs and a demonstration plot. This is the first demonstration SĂĄnchez and his family have organized to show the machines they manufacture, and they invited several partners, such as CIMMYT, to attend.
Sembradoras TIMS is a family business that used to be a car repair shop before transitioning into the manufacture of farm implements five years ago, when the family started working with CIMMYT and learned about farm machine prototypes.

It all began when CIMMYT staff in charge of El BatĂĄn Experiment Station asked them to replace a harvesterâs four-cylinder engine with a six-cylinder one.
âI have always liked the idea of building things, but I didnât know how these machines work,â says SĂĄnchez. The first seeder they developed was the multiuse-multicrop seeder. During the process, âwe would go to CIMMYT, make changes in the shop, test the machines, make new changes and then tried to find ways of improving them. If we were told âthis doesnât work,â we would change it. Later, CIMMYT started to give technicians our contact information and we started to get calls from other states of Mexico,â says SĂĄnchez. Due to these requests, they had more work at the shop, so SĂĄnchez asked the whole family to join in. Thatâs when they decided to make a complete change and focus on manufacturing machinery.

After the âbigâ seeders, TIMS began manufacturing manual and animal-drawn machines.
âI canât say weâve done everything ourselves, because we learned a lot from CIMMYT staff like Gabriel MartĂnez, JesĂșs LĂłpez, Javier Vargas, Jelle Van Loon, and Dr. Bram Govaerts, who never lost faith in us, and that counts for a lot.â
Thatâs how the SĂĄnchez-GĂłmez family started a business where innovation and continuous improvements have allowed them to market different types of seeders. Just recently they started manufacturing hermetic metal silos for post-harvest management.