small farm in southwest Minnesota, raising cattle, grain crops (corn, soy beans), and alfalfa hay. We use older Allis Chalmers tractors along with a variety of other equipment brands. I will be showing how we farm with our equipment along with fixing and repairing broken equipment as well.
Thank you, that was a very well shot video, I have a used 605c that I will be running for the 1st time in a round baler. Good insight on how it works. Thank you again.
Looks like it really got that bottom of windrow exposed to the sun... I could see how that would cut some time off the drying process, when every minute counts !
You might want to add an adjustable hydraulic flow reducer valve inline with your spout rotator. IMO yours is slamming around too fast. Things break easier in the cold.
Thanks for making a video. I’ve been beating on that unloader pulley the wrong way for awhile. Thankfully I started researching before I got the sledgehammer
I don't know why they aren't more common. Put the weight over the drive wheels. Get the hood out of the way so you can see what you are doing. Turning is sharper. Similar to an F10 loader I built nearly 50 years ago with the steering in the back.
Not sure what you do with your soybeans, but if you plan to bring them to market and sell them at a grain elevator, do you run the beans through anything to reduce the amount of foreign matter / pods beforehand? Just curious as it looks like your setup would allow for "cleaning" the beans before going into your storage silo or when coming out.
Gotta Love the Champion graders. Volvo bought Champion then Goderich built Volvo badged graders then Volvo closed the plant and not long after that they quit building graders all together. Champion had a 100yr history of building road maintenance machines. What a dumb move by Volvo as the market was/is there for another grader manufacturer. Ill never buy a Volvo anything now.....
Good story My cousin worked their on the floor then on the road for sales He loved working there When I working on the township near Godrich in the seventies we had I believe a740 and a 600 and old Addams grader
My Honda HSS1332ATD snowblower with "tank treads" works much better and faster than how this Kubota snow thrower appears to work. And the Honda has an electric chute that turns and pivots up-and-down via a joystick on the control deck. One really cool thing about this particular Honda model is that you won't have to worry about replacing shear pins in most cases if the augers get stopped by a large rock or frozen newspaper. The machine shuts itself off and resets itself after you clear the obstruction and restart the snowblower.
If you put some cheap welded wire fencing on after bale #12 of tier 5, you won't need tie tiers. In my experience, the stacks are more stable and stand better than with tie tiers. If you're loading out with a grapple it's easier without tie tiers.