I love watching the beginning off this beast! I think it's paid for itself in a year! I can hear the pride in your voice. You all did a great job in building it. Way to go!
Mike, until watching you and MBTS build the tile plow I did not even know they existed. You have a really good channel. I enjoy being able to go to RU-vid and know there is a good chance of You, Wade & Chris having something good on. Thanks for all the good videos you provide I think my first episode to watch was you explaining how you charge for your work I thought that was nice to be able to know some prices. I'm disabled for the past 9 years. watching RU-vid is what i have now and all of y'all I mentioned along with many others make real good RU-vid. Thank you
Yeah; That was a "lucky" grab (set-up by a great business man) of collective cooperation; A great example of dream/idea to fruition! Low hours, Tracks, Plow, a complete package, very impressive!
That is one amazing design job on the plow. In my experience (45 years) Things usually need more tweaks when starting out on a new design. Maybe a metal shoe to slide on the end when unloading to stop the launch tube digging into the ground. Congratulations Mr Mike! You are a operator for sure!............or just lucky ha ha 😂 G'day from Tasmania, Australia
DP you are blessed to have people that care helping you Being a good manager helps to get good workers and keeping them. I appreciate your style of management as well as the content of your videos. Keep up the good job and I look forward to every video.
So he says “ if it gets that deep I’m going home”, well gentlemen, the water may not get that deep, but they ain’t no way they make wadders to protect you from the depth of the BS between the both of you.😂nice job, well done, must be a relief to have it that far along. Thanks for the ride along.
Mike, you are rapidly becoming the king of tile pipe layers. Of course that rig you invented and built goes a long wat to making that a reality. Thanks for the Monday morning entertainment. Always a hoot watching you and Matt working together. Matt finally wore rubber booted waders.
It was demonstration day! Trucking skills and precision excavator skills all wrapped up with teamwork. I thought the plan was to put the tile plow in the ground and then unhook it but what you guys did looked good. Thanks Mike.
SO, SO much work and thought based on FACTS "under ground"!!! NEVER underestimate the power or direction of "WATER" and that's what makes everything you guys do SO important. To me, a dummy layman, the ground seemed too wet for all you guys accomplished. NICE knowing what you're doing!!!
I’m a truck driver for 34 years and I have hauled heavy equipment and you would never see my truck as dirty as yours…..pride goes a long way Mr. Dirt Perfect 👍
Greetings from No VT - That plow is beyond awesome, especially with the tweaks and mods to refine the fittings and structure. At one point you yelled at Mr. Millennial to watch his head - I suspect what you really meant was to move his head so he wouldn't damage your trenching bucket!
omg too funny with the offloading of the 850J .. I literally spilt my coffee laughing. Really surprised how easy the plow came off! That's some good engineering there with you and Aaron on the design of the plow there Mike. Thanks as always for sharing
The system of the tile and risers is brilliant so too is the tile plow. Of course the plow would remain on the 850j for loading and unloading - Dirt Perfect had possibly designed it to do so. Loved the waders idea - one never knows when they will be needed.
All you need are a couple of railroad ties for loading to split the difference in height to keep the plow from digging in and you can use them to lay plow on when it's off the machine, they are a manageable weight to move and strong enough to hold the machine.👍 Glad to see the success for all that hard work.👌 Too bad Aaron isn't able to watch his welds plowin in the dirt.🤙
Thanks for sharing, that worked great, nicely balanced. I second the idea of laying it on the ground, any type of upright position would leave the potential of it falling over onto someone or something not able to carry the load. Knowing just how heavy a load is before you pick it is always a good thing. I’ll never forget a story a Senior Plant Operator told me once about lifting a rotor from the unit during an overhaul. As soon as he picked the load the breaking resistor bank for the crane overheated and burst into flames. The supervising engineers all yelled for him to set the load back down. The load was so Heavy that once picked it wouldn’t stop going down until it hit solid rock. He calmly backed the crane out of the plant and set it on the solid stone outside of the plant. There was no place to set it inside the plant once it was lifted from it’s bearings and realigning it would take longer than moving it as was the plan all along.
Kubota engineering lol I'm just picking Mike I'm truly amazed at the craftsmanship that you have put into the plow, it shows that there are still people out there that have the knowledge and want to build their own stuff instead of letting someone else do it for them.
Maybe grease those pins before you put them in? Wonderful to see it working to plan!😄 I nearly had a heart attack when you laid the plow on its right side, though. Some rather delicate instruments there. So smooth and so magically perfect.
Mikey… that came off startlingly easy. You are rightfully proud! Next time I suggest using RU-vid finger-snap magic. Because if that works you can take it on and off like those Ariat Slippers! Congrats on the whole tile laying process. I have a feeling it will be a real moneymaker!!!
Well the banter alone was worth the viewing guys. Maybe a couple of portable ramp extensions are needed on the trailer bro when the plough is used. All made for a great video anyway. Safe travels
We always put a hedge post on the lower side of the intake and use #9 wire to tie it to the post. That way you hit the post before you get the tile intake.
Just a suggestion, how about a pair of blind hydraulic pipe sockets on the plow and then you have something to clip the lines into when not in use keeping them safe and clean.
The old bulldog with doing some pulling I’m glad to see all yawls hard work on the Tile plough paid off nice work be safe God bless hope you have a good year this year without your project
A great run through of all it's abilities, you really have proven what a damn fine job you've made of that whole rig, design and build. Amazing how easily the pins came out, that really showed that despite the turning in the ground etc it is robust enough to stand it. I bet you feel good, and so you should !!
A ingenious folding “kickstand” is a great idea….it would be the “cherry” on the cake! You could just back the machine right up to it to install it just like you back the truck up to the low boy to hook it up!
@@DirtPerfect I will think about it because as a Fabricator with over 40 years experience building race cars, prototype fabrication is right in my wheel house!
Hey DP next time removing the plow dig yourself a hole and use it like a saddle to hold the plow upright setting inside the hole ! Great pin design for quick removal also !! 👍👍👍👍
@@DirtPerfect I just figured it would keep from bending the redneck gps bracket but after giving it more thought would be a pain with chain hook but it still wold LQQk cool !!!
8" corrugated pipe in North MS is $5/ft. Each roll is 800 feet. Well, if we could get it. I think DP bought it all up for the moment, cause ours is a 9 week wait period. You have installed several $$$$$ worth of pipe dear sir. Millenial is really coming along well. Enjoy the week!
Impressive as always,definitely a difference before pipe to after pipe in the field.just keep doing what your doing and continue with the sarcasm.at least nothing broke,yet.👍👍👍😎😎😎
Hey Mike to stop the drag with the pipe plow see if Wade can mill up some oak or locust @ 8" X12" X 12' long with a taper @ the end to 2" to 8" over a 6' slope that should stop the drag completely.