Whoa, whoa, whoa!!!! You guys completely misunderstood my point. I didn't mean to offend, not at all. My sincere apologies to those of you who mistook what I said, such as you Cornking and Rockpicker. I won't resort to namecalling as you have done, but please let me better explain what I meant. The lexion is a high capacity combine, agreedIJ One that is capable of amazing throughput with great performance. It is also not well understood by most of us since we haven't been around it for 20 years like the Axial Flow or the Gleaner. Those are familiar combines and many of their owners can fix nearly everything on those combines themselves. The same cannot generally be said of the lexion (there are always exceptions),primarily because it is still fairly new to us in North America. And when you look at the farmers who can justify a machine of such capacity, it more often than not tends to be the larger acreage farmers. I should have said that in the first place, rather than perhaps implying that the larger acreage farmers are more professional, whatever professional means. I was merely trying to point out the err in logic that suggested that lexions sell poorly on auctions because they are poor machines. That is absolute bogus and I cry foul! Auction values are based on supply and demand, and face it, there are fewer guys out there looking for BIG high capacity lexions than for 9600 John Deeres. Simple as that. When was the last time you met a 500 acre farmer who runs a lexionIJ That is all I was trying to say. P.S. Was the crowd really that full of lexion caps and coats at the auctionIJ I didn't realize that lexion apparel was so prevalent. P.S.S. "dum" is correctly spelled dumb. Also, the article "a" in front of IDIOT should be replaced with "an" in order to be grammatically correct. Good day, and again, my apologies for not being more clear.