The Sunshine Harvester
The Sunshine Harvester was a major improvement of the Wheat stripper because it included the winnowing.


In 1883, Hugh Victor McKay, a 17 year old, tired of turning the heavy handle on his fathers’ winnowing machine in country Victoria, wondered if a harvester could be made to winnow as well. With the help of his brothers George and John, he built a prototype made of old metal scraps and farm tools.
It was finished in 1884 and called the Sunshine Harvester. It was an immediate success because it separated the grain, straw and chaff using a rotary fan making the entire harvesting process automatic.
He soon established a factory and was selling thousands of the machines in Australia and overseas. In 1904 McKay purchased land for a plant in Braybrook near Melbourne.
So important was the Sunshine Harvester to Australian agriculture that the entire area surrounding the new plant was officially renamed Sunshine in recognition of its contribution.