My 1 year old nearly 2 loves this harvest video and falls asleep watching it but fights it so hard because he can’t take his eyes off the tractors and farm equipment.
Big tractor you’ve got some great videos of forming and harvesting crops I really like watching your videos every day so stay safe and keep them coming
really enjoy the narration you have added to your videos. Not being a farmer I find them very helpful in understanding the content. Keep up the good work.
Outstanding. My 18-month old grandson has watched this several times; he never tires of it, and when the header is shown finishing the 40-foot swath, he is just thrilled. Thank you!
I am glad to hear he enjoys this harvest video. I just released a new 16 row folding corn head video a few days ago he might enjoy even more. It is posted at ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-cMmlQYP1Rh4.html
16 rows at a time, and we thought we were living large when we got a three row corn picker for our JD70. Even with the hopper extensions, the hopper will fill up real fast, it takes a big wagon to keep up with that!
Very nice machine. I remember the old two row head we used when I was young. Got a four row and really thought we were something special. Farming has come a long way.
Just curious here, but is there a pronounced advantage of having a tracked combine over a wheeled one, other than perhaps being better able to navigate marshy ground? The tracked tractors definitely seem to have a significant advantage for traction and pulling power, as evidenced by the tug-of-war vids.
This John Deere Combine Harvester toy set would make a great Christmas present for the kids or grandkids. Watch our video to see what you get! ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-36_qnpt2YYM.html
Sad thing that all that equipment costs insanely expensive just to harvest cheap corn wheat or whatever what a waste that high dollar equipment looks great til its wore out or has expensive overhaul costs these monster machine are very high maintence
These videos are excellent & a pleasure watching with a great narrator. Long ago I grew up on a New England farm (corn, potatoes, dairy, maple syrup, timber, saw mill) with old John Deere equipment (example: one big cylinder diesel tractor with iron-spiked wheels for Spring/wet work). So, this brings back memories in a much bigger way. (Farm still here for haying-only) Thanks.
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Here is a question you probably never been asked. I used to go to our local feed store back in the day (been closed). The owner would buy shelled corn used to mill it up for corn meal for human consumption. It was not ground fairly coarse so the coin meal would stick together if you squeezed a handful in your hand. If I find a feed store and wanted to buy some shelled corn to make corn meal what would I ask for?
Buy regular corn from the farmer. Put it on as many cookie sheets as you can in your oven and bake at 110 for 40 min. Should be dried enough that grinding will be easy.
But, with all the fancy and high tech and not to mention good look n, today's combines, that dust eats them alive three harvest and it's done,,,,,where do they go,,,,,,
I love this stuff when I was a girl my daddy would put me on his seat of 🚜 . he was a small man and he'd let me put my hands on that old 🚜 Steering wheel and I thought I was driving it. Was the greatest thing in the world to me. Scrawny little muppet blonde tomboy one of the boys. The camaraderie That men share is wonderful. For me only when respectful of their little sister being around.
Hola cómo estás soy dominicano y megusta manijar tractores y combinada soy chofer y megusta eso república dominicana esperando trabajar con ustedes algundias
Well that's only a 40 foot wide you should see the 45-foot white 18 Raw then you may say you have something but then again I heard of the 60 foot wide that's usually across the world.
Most grain "carts" are not propelled. The rear tires on some combines are powered -- if they have tractor treads they are powered, if they have straight treads then they probably are not.
I would like to see these machines tested in irrigated farmland. The major manufactures build machines to work in the Midwest which are there main customers. Although, when tested to the yields of irrigated farming the machines struggle to process the matter in front of them. What works in the MW with a class 9 combine and 24 row head would not work in my area. Class 9 combines with 8 row heads struggle and carry about the same speed as the combine in this video. I like the video, but in my area, that's what dreaming is for......
The custom harvest company I currently am working for runs S670's and 612c's in irrigated corn yielding around 300 bph in North Texas. We can run 4 mph or faster through that corn.
That's why there's different header widths. The width of the header, mass of crop matter to be handled and optimal operating ground speed are all to be matched to make the best harvest speed. Those huge heads would also be a real pain to move very far so I wonder if many of the big custom cutter crews use them.
Wild Turkey the 16 row 30" spacing corn heads are 40 ft. which is the same length as most drapers and flex drapers that get run. Most people don't run that big of a head unless they have 680 or 690's. A 670 could handle 16 rows, but its ground speed would be super slow. If you push a 670 a little bit in irrigated corn, you can do 3.5-4 depending on conditions, dryland usually yields much less, and we can run anywhere from 4.5-5.5 in those conditions with a 12 row (30ft)
There are really not too many weeds. Maybe in a low spot or on the edge. They just get cut and dropped under the header. Very little other than the ear or corn goes into the combine.
Great machine as long as you don't mind waiting a month to get it worked on when the software takes a dump and you can't repair it yourself. Buy a New Holland.
It's more a function of how far they have to haul the grain and how long to unload. A small combine can keep several trucks busy if the drive is long enough.
Like someone said depending on the drive time and how long they have to wait at the least it keeps the equipment running and not having to wait for trucks