Yes, that's exactly what we're saying, and all you need to do to convince yourself of this is to get to the show a day or two early to see the manufacturers doing test-runs to set their machines. They're not just tweaking them 'good enough' to run the claimed 3.5 mph with respectable performance. They're pulling out all the stops to do everything they can to make sure these machines perform at their design limits, and when they do, whether at a farm show or simply two or more different makes running in the same field together, the lexion will certainly shine. If you want to talk Husker Harvest Days last fall, my green-shorted neighbor and I were there too and the lexion was the only machine running at or above 4.5 mph with good performance. Even he had to admit defeat. The STS was leaving a golden path of corn behind it when it tried matching the lexion, and the 8010 and CR NH, while not as bad as the awful STS, still threw far too much over when trying to match the capacity of the lexion. Back up in ND, I have had the opportunity to run all the units you mention, the CR, 8010, 9790, R75, 9750_9860STS, and trust me, they are all quickly humbled when in the field with the lexion. Every machine has a limiting factor in its design; it is thus logical that each machine will reach its limiting factor at a different point in capacity. Moral of the story is: Not all combines are created equal.