this is why you need to go over your equipment every day before you go out to the fields. its a bugger when you find a problem but sometimes it saves you a ton of downtime.
If that tractor is hooked to the bailer I would be nervous about being inside that beast. I would be truly concerned about someone getting inside the tractor . No room for a mistake. Love the videos.
OMG I missed the fix chit videos.... and I absolutely love the banter, because that is 100% real farm life!!! Thanks Wes & the ever beautiful Theresa... you guys made my day!❤
Teresa definitely has to make a bad day better. She may be possibly the best and funniest farm wife on RU-vid. You two make my day. You guys stay safe and cool !!!
Back when I owned my factory and worked for a living (sold and retired) getting employees to properly lube machines was a serious and constant battle. Why? Hell if I know. I had grease guns for every machine that needed greasing and I would go out and ask the operator if they had greased it. Yup they would say. Where is the grease gun I would ask. Crickets. If the grease gun was there they would hand it to me. Empty.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts, ideas and videos. Always interesting and entertaining to watch you diagnose and fix farm equipment. You definitely hit the maximum jackpot when you found Theresa, she hits all the expected check marks plus she’s great to talk with when your working on frustrating or monotonous problems. That and she definitely does a great job with the camera. Wishing you and your family the best.
Haha.. i don't think that you get paid for this one! If you are going to spain you are really welcome we got a farm just on the other side of the pyrenees in France. Nice to see some vids wes i do appreciate it takes a lot off thime all that stuff 👍
Yeah, this is like hanging out with you, watching the work, and not being in the way. I know working in front of a camera makes the process take longer, but it’s not me in particular. See you next time. 👍
Metric is OK, SAE is OK, the nightmare begins when manufacturers start mixing the two on a machine. For my own personal reasons, I much prefer working with SAE.
I live in a metric country but I really enjoy SAE machines. I can always tell what spanner to use because there are less sizes to pick from... I know if that bolt is 11/16 or 3/4. In metric I'm always second guessing is that 16 or 17mm?