2007 Case IH 8010 running John Deere 635f Hydraflex and John Deere 843 corn head in Eastern Iowa (corn and soybeans). Ran this in 2021 for the first time. Got the combine at auctions for very reasonable price. Acre eating monster.
Like I mentioned the other day in a video on here- Case/IH makes some darn fine looking combines, but if the back of this one is supposed to be that way, it looks like they missed the mark a little with this one. It looks like some body panels are missing.
All the panels are in place. When this was filmed the combine had run about 100 acres since delivery from the dealer. The back deck area where the engine is an open area.
Case Combines aren't that bad but I still prefer Gleaner Combines. There is a chart of Case IH vs Gleaner combine wise. If you search it up find the pdf version. Also great video.
I film all brands of combines and I find the S9 Gleaners are the best on the market for clean grain and little loss. The Case IH 250 combines are very good. They just power through the harvest.
@@bigtractorpower you've got a good point there. As long they are taken care of they'll last for years. My dad told if Gleaner would put a service dealer closer whi h would be nice my farmer neighbors would buy and yes we live in a rural area in Grace Idaho.
Viewed 7-28-22 from Illinois good video as always............observation......the header height control needs to be adjusted for a slower response. Noting the head is cycling to fast, constantly bouncing up and down while combine does not indicate the field being that rough.
Thank you for watching. The farmer just traded a Deere S660 and 630FD header in for the red harvest team. Just a little seat time and setting work such have it running extra well in soybeans.
I live in South Central Kansas and I work for a farm that grows corn because they run a dairy farm. Their agronomist said they didn't think any of their corn would make 60 bushel corn. Last year was a great year, because he thought our dryland corn was 150 bushel corn. Their corn got cooked pretty badly from all the heat and parched ground.
I have a friend who who runs two 40ft Terra Flexes and would not harvest with anything else. Another farm I film at has two 40ft Terra Flexes and traded them after one season for the Geringoff Razor. 2022 is the last year for Terra Flex as Case IH has partnered with MacDon again for drapers.
My uncle works for a guy that custom harvests for some people around Conway Springs, KS in the summer and fall, and the guy he works for owns a Case 8010 combine with a MacDon FD70 flex draper head.
Have you considered making a special trip out into the PNW to experience harvest on such different and vast rolling hills and contours? Might be worth looking into! Would make a great few videos
If they run a system of constant vehicular passes, they would want all machine footprints to be in the one place, regardless of what stage the crop is at or what machine is running. Just a suggestion.
The duals help reduce compaction and increase traction. In the past decade as combines increased in size and horse power the duals size have gotten larger to handle bigger heads. The bigger tires help carry the 40ft and 45ft grain and corn heads. This 7250 has a 30ft head so the smaller tires carry the header well.