I just found this channel. Andrew, your videos are absolutely top notch! These machines from these eras are just wonderful! A gift that there are people who keep such machines alive, use them and preserve them with such beautiful videos. Thank you for that and keep it up! Greetings to the beloved USA! 🇺🇸👍🏻
Thank you for documenting the use of equipment like this. Doesn't seem too many working JD corn shellers around or equipment like this still in operation.
@@andrewssoundsofthepast110 Cut my teeth on the old 2 cylinder JD's not farming but restoring and pulling. Love it all, thank you for bringing us along, look fwd to more my friend!
@@andrewssoundsofthepast110 That setup is very sweet! Wow it seems to keep you busy, but I love it!! Thank you for all the different angles! Look fwd to more!
Wow... I've never thought of this being a one-man job. My Dad, brother, and I used to do the same job (with a mix of John Deere, Minneapolis-Moline and Oliver) and it kept us hop'n.
In the 50s custom sheller had setup but power with JDG this name was Rudolph but didn't have any reindeers had to trucks another operator had sheller mounted on chev truck chassis Combines came along fast and it all disappeared slowly next time
@@andrewssoundsofthepast110 If the Safety Sallys where gonna criticize one thing, I would have thought you being alone would have been it. (or hand feeding the corn, lol) One of the biggest dangers of ag work is just working alone. I don't recall fatalities near where grew up, but I did meet a guy who lost an uncle to a combine.
I'd sure like to find a sheller like that. I put up ear corn for my steers and lambs. The lambs in particular do better on shelled corn. John Deere or Minneapolis Moline seem to be the best. White continued to build the Minneapolis Moline 1200 until 1975. I don't know when John Deere discontinued their's.
Depends on the Sheller. The old hand cranks were around in the early 70s used by Pioneer Seed. The #50 that went directly behind the tractor mounted picker was still available in 1967 I know.
I just found this channel. Andrew, your videos are absolutely top notch! These machines from these eras are just wonderful! A gift that there are people who keep such machines alive, use them and preserve them with such beautiful videos.
Thank you for that and keep it up! Greetings to the beloved USA! 🇺🇸👍🏻
Thanks for watching
Shelling corn with my 43 created good memories, until cob elevator jammed up. That's when things went south real quick. Thanks for the video andrew!
Aside from a broken belt and learning leveling it is really important not much issues
Love the different camera angles. Keep up the good work.
Thank you for documenting the use of equipment like this. Doesn't seem too many working JD corn shellers around or equipment like this still in operation.
No there sure don’t seem to be
Great job on all the different angles really enjoyed watch and hearing that 2 cylinder
Thank you that 70 is my favorite tractor
Love the old equipment keep up the great work 👍
Still watching at work..😂😂 Love the old equipment!!!
First time ive ever used it really cool machine
@@andrewssoundsofthepast110 I love all the older stuff you use on your farm!
@@Pennies_on_the_dollar thanks so
E of its collection some of it still makes the farm go round
@@andrewssoundsofthepast110 Cut my teeth on the old 2 cylinder JD's not farming but restoring and pulling. Love it all, thank you for bringing us along, look fwd to more my friend!
@@andrewssoundsofthepast110 That setup is very sweet! Wow it seems to keep you busy, but I love it!! Thank you for all the different angles! Look fwd to more!
Great video! I love all your equipment, especially the sheller!
It’s one of my favorites till your at a show and everyone is an expert. But it’s a beautiful original
Cool video sure need a lot of stuff for corn 🌽 lol and land to 🥾👍💪🚜 nothing runs like a Deere lol should have a emoji for this
It’s a fun machine to run
Wow... I've never thought of this being a one-man job. My Dad, brother, and I used to do the same job (with a mix of John Deere, Minneapolis-Moline and Oliver) and it kept us hop'n.
If I was backed up to a crib I think I’d need at least one more person
Good video!
In the 50s custom sheller had setup but power with JDG this name was Rudolph but didn't have any reindeers had to trucks another operator had sheller mounted on chev truck chassis Combines came along fast and it all disappeared slowly next time
Dude I’m a red guy but gosh darn it that’s cool I always wanted a 720 diesel electric start wheatland
Those are some neat machines
This old iron is cool stuff. Simple machines
I wouldn’t say it’s all
Simple but still very cool
And interesting
We’re is the safety shield or caution tape around the long belt..remember cribbing fence ,we’re one made corn cribs
I mean I ran it alone I know better then to play with a belt
@@andrewssoundsofthepast110 If the Safety Sallys where gonna criticize one thing, I would have thought you being alone would have been it.
(or hand feeding the corn, lol)
One of the biggest dangers of ag work is just working alone.
I don't recall fatalities near where grew up, but I did meet a guy who lost an uncle to a combine.
@@l337pwnage I just try to pay attention to what’s going on I was right next to the road lots of people pass by
Nice
I'd sure like to find a sheller like that. I put up ear corn for my steers and lambs. The lambs in particular do better on shelled corn. John Deere or Minneapolis Moline seem to be the best. White continued to build the Minneapolis Moline 1200 until 1975. I don't know when John Deere discontinued their's.
I’m really not sure if I had to guess I’d say early 60s
Depends on the Sheller. The old hand cranks were around in the early 70s used by Pioneer Seed. The #50 that went directly behind the tractor mounted picker was still available in 1967 I know.
@@thegreenerthemeaner I have since acquired a Minneapolis Moline Model D which I can shell enough corn to fill my feed mixer in about 20 minutes.
It should be slower than that
What do you mean