Really great video. Interesting to see a JD with Trimble ? Rather than Starfire. Correct me if I'm wrong. Kverneland combo doing a fantastic job with producing that seedbed.
Hm, that 8 you have to drive every turn....on the lenght of the field we have seen....i would like to calculate the % of distance of total km driven that is, it will sum up fast on short fields.
660stihl bit hard when using a drone you have 2 options either music or the sound of the drone which Equates to 300 angry bees buzzing around your choice
Andy Hass they have more then just a plough on the farm that needs a good amount of HP they also have some hilly ground and they can't see the point of having just enough HP better to have more than you need so you not flogging the engine all the time
Farming Photography there is a reason they make 20+ furrow ploughs for these types of tractors. The biggest plough in the world is 65 furrow and was pulled by a t9 with smart tracks 535hp
+Theo Price you can have a 24furrow plough with the same working width as a 12furrow plough it all depends how much the working width off the individual furrow is. And how deep did they plough with that 65furrow plough? lol probably on a very flat, very dry ground and the soil was probably allready loosen with a cultivator ;-)
@@theoprice721 I bet its ploughing very sandy soil to achieve that. Not all fields have the same soil content. Rather than criticising the tractor plough combination give it a thumbs up, you will feel much better about yourself.
I left the farm in 1978, the only farmers still plowing were the very old timers. With all the modern deep tillage equipment why would anyone still use such out dated methods?
In the longterm you won't be able to achive/keep high quality soil, further it is immune to developing resistances speaking of plant protection. For fuck sake ploughing is necessary if you think about whats going on everywhere in agriculture.
And after 40 years ploughing is still best for soil, nobody came up with better solution yet, sure if its comes to dryland farming like some of northen america and australia its better to no till since the water lose would be too big. But for europe, nobody came with anything better. For example this autumn, theres so much water, at least in poland, that you could plough 20 times and the soil will still be wet.