They are impressive. We posted this video a few weeks ago of the same 9620RX out in a large field @ ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-H2TRHOjTFNA.html We also filmed on last fall working tillage ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-nxd5eZeh9oI.html
This is indeed a good video, no silly music and all that, just real sound and good informativ "telling". :) More and more of John Deere 9R and the like from other brands find thier way to our fields, but not those big seeders ect. as most our fields are to small or to heavy soil. Nice video. :)
it only took them 39 years to reach versatile big roys 600HP, and the fact this thing is pulling a 60 foot air drill when versatile had to make a special 60 foot cultivator back in the way for it to pull, is accurate how much power it is
We have a 57 foot 1870 with a 430 bushel cart and we pull it fine with a New Holland 9682, 360 horsepower. I don't know why all these farmers need a huge fucking tractor.
Let me ask when do you plant and what do you plant? This 60ft drill is planting soybeans into summer dry ground at the end of June into fresh cut wheat stubble with all the fresh straw on the surface. The combine left the field 5 minutes before the drill arrived in this video. The temp was 95 degrees. Hard ground and fresh cut stubble is different than spring or fall softer ground in cooler temps were the residue has decomposed.
We do peas, wheat, barley, mustard and flax. We plant in April where the ground is typically softer but we have some heavy soil and lots of hills. We literally just upgraded to a T9040 which I dont know much about it, but its a 75 horsepower increase and its tires have a much bigger bite. it'll be more than enough to make up for our 9682's shortcomings. We could only go 4 miles per hour and had limited fan speed because of our hydraulic pump but the old 9682 was still chugging along. I stand by my word.
But still Case had to buy Steiger for that.. Case doesn’t even really make tractors on their own since even their models are the same as New Holland and Steyr including the engines.
That's a small drill we just had JD brought us there new 76ft Air drill with there new 850 buschel grain cart hooked to there 9620R ( Demo unit)the biggest down fall is they didn't bring us a 9620RX the wheeled 9620R had trouble pulling the 76 seeder it would spin out in the hills even with weights . I work for a big farmer in Saskatchewan Canada.
Here in Kentucky it seems the 40ft drills are tow between and the 60ft drills are tow behind. I will have to ask Welkers how farm’s up their way decide to tow the cart.
Do you in the USA need a certain license to drive this size of tractor and implement on the road between fields, here in New Zealand you would need your heavy traffic license ie your truck and trailor
A license is not needed to operate tractors in the United States. You can drive them from field to field. Here in Kentucky you can operate a farm semi truck with a regular drivers license. Other states require a CDL drivers license to operate a large truck even in a farm.
It has the power. Here in Kentucky a 60ft drill is about as wide as you can go and move down the road. Many area farms run 40ft and 50ft drills because of narrow roads.
@@clearingbaffles It is a IVT trans. The drill has 19" turbo Coulters. Might be the 10" spacing helps. We plant mostly cotton and corn because there is no profit in growing wheat except for seed. Most around here use a 8370R to pull this drill. But this is flat country.
Robert Reznik are you considering a future in politics? You didn’t even approach my question much less answer it There are MANY hydraulic rams on that drill that require a volume (oz/pints/quarts/gallons/liters/cc/ml) to persuade them to move. I built tuna seiners that have LARGE hydraulic systems driven by Caterpillar 3408’s I believe and I’ve seen the reservoir drop 2’ when then are using the power block
People moan,whine & complain at the fact that John Deere introduced the 9RX last year in 2015.HOw they copied the ones made in Fargo so on & so forth.THere was nt a peep out of many of these same people when New Holland & Versatile got their 4 track tractors it least 2 years to market before John Deere did.
The whole argument is retarded. No car companies accuses another of copying the wheel. Tracks were invented 1770. Not like case invented them either. Putting them on a tractor was an inevitable, logical innovation. Someone would have done it if not case. The real question should be which ones are best, not which ones were first.
Anything that's not driven is mounted in reverse. Nothing to do with tire wear. It's for floatation. If u think about it it pushed the mud to the middle vs clearing the mud like a drive tire.
God this comment on EVERY jd rx video is getting so old. Did you read that somewhere and think you sound smart repeating it? Their track designs are nothing alike.
Mackenzie owen and how is case so bad eh LMAO we have one and gues what its good qualety unlike jd 9rx bdw FULL QUADTRAC COPY and its plastic on the outside AND its ugly af and it cant even pull a quadtrac the quadtrac walked away with it
Interesting how various companies have used and expanded upon the quad track concept. Does tracks cost more to run versus singles or duals for the tractor type?
Permission is not needed. Most of the time a farm will have a pick up truck run ahead to flag and block the road at a narrow point. Sometimes a tractor can just head out in the road by itself.