I’m farmer who has this farm. You need to have it sprayed off and dry to get it to do any job if you go straight into grass some sort of cultivation or ploughing needs to be done first.
VEJA O COMENTÁRIO E AS RESPOSTAS DE KADU OLIVEIRA NO CANAL LUGAR SILENCIOSO. (NO VÍDEO DA TRÁGICA HISTÓRIA EM QUE UM SR ASSASSINOU A PRÓPRIA FAMILIA NA FRANÇA) Compartilhe (se quiser)
Depends on what you count as being classic these days my friend. I have a few older machines I have footage of that I am yet to upload, the oldest being a CLAAS Dominator 88. I hope that counts 😬. I will try my best to find more for you! Unfortunately anything truly classic is often relegated to vintage shows and ploughing matches these days rather than working hard in the field.
There are a number of biomass power stations which burn straw to create electricity. One example is Elean power station, which is the largest straw fired power station in the UK I believe.
I love how the tier 3 5400 series from Massey Ferguson mostly come with a straight piped exhaust from the factory. I remember my grandfather saying when our 5460 arrived “sounds like a V-1 buzz b*mb” 😳, it’s my favourite tractor. It definitely puts a JD 30 series exhaust sound to shame! Haha
Hey, great video! Those guys are doing a fantastic job!! I have the mchale 5400c. Can I ask how many rpm you have ln the pto while baling? I hope someone can answer… Greetings from sough tyrol, the northest part og italy. Wolfgang
Thank you for your comment, glad you enjoyed the video :). For the McHale F550 baler the PTO will be in the 540 RPM mode. The maximum you can run the PTO is 610 RPM. Normally running at 540 RPM is fine, but turning it up a little bit can help if the grass is wet. Hope this is helpful.
@@freddyfilmsthefarm hey! Thanks! Now I know, that I do nothing wrong. I often use the 540 eco PTO, that is able to run the baler with 750 RPM. So I can drive with less RPM on the motor to send 540 - 570 RPM to the baler. I save fuel and the baler works fine. On the slopes i usenevertheless the 540 PTO to have always enough power… Thanks again Feel free to visit my channel, so you can see me baling… 😉 Greetings
I’m really pleased you saw the video, Nick. Took me a while to get around to making it. Are you still farming or have you made the move to a safety based career?
Had 68 plus, lovely combine, but you had to blow off the engine bay regularly, chaff gathered right under the exhaust and it was a major fire risk on early models, that’s a 24ft cut 4 sections of 6ft each on the header