75 belt horse power but a crazy ammount of torque. I've seen a stock 830 on duals pull 35k pound sled + a Mack wrecker in a tractor pull. Not bad for a 70 year old 2 cylinder.
Back in the 1960's I used a JD 720 to plant 12 rows I think I throttled down a hundred rpm because third gear was too fast for plates not to skip corn seeds.
We just upgraded from a kinze 2300 and 4440 to a 7200R and 1770nt with precision. You talk about a hell of a leap. Still getting the electronics figured out
I grew up on a farm in Mosselbaai, Werstern Cape, South Africa. Even though my dad was a Ford man, we both loved the sound of the JD 830/730/720. In our area we referred to this tractor as a "Klop" JD because of the "boot boot boot" sound. And yess, even though I'm also a Ford man, this sound will always sound good in my ears.
The green Kinze is an original Kinze. Kinze planters in the late 70’s and early 80’s were painted green and used John Deere planter boxes. The original purpose of. Kinze was that a farmer could have a folding 12, 16 or 24 row planter. In the late 70’s a 12 row was a big planter and the full line JD and IH planters did not fold up they had to be put on a trailer and towed from field to field. Along cane the Kinze frame that folded up on the go and it changed every thing. John Deere boxes were popular so the early Kinze were sold with them.
@@bigtractorpower Thanks very much for the explanation. I grew up on 600 acre irrigated farm out in Washington State so I don't ever remember seeing a Kinze until I traveled he Midwest. I follow you channel religiously. THANKS
I can remember it taking 9 or 10 hours to plant 80 acres of cotton or beans with my 6 row 38inch 7100 planter and a 4010 tractor in the 1970's and 1980's !
Thanks!! Once again, it shows that Old Iron can pull most of tiday's machineries, in a split of a cost of the new Tractors today. Most Small/Medium size farms don't need this heavy equipment of 500 HP on the ground, nor pay the cost of New Irons as Overheads.
I doubt the fender mounted radio on that 4620 was worth listening to with that straight pipe on it. Still 5-6 rigs were using markers and not GPS to plant but when you're planting up to 56 rows, you better be accurate.
I noticed that no-till is pretty uncommon in Kentucky. Why is that? wouldn't they want to have no-till to be able to get in the field and plant sooner with those larger farms?
No-till is very common here. In fact no/till corn planting was invented here in 1962. I film at all types of operations. This video includes farms from Kentucky, Illinois and Iowa.
it's been a long time since you been in action man best work on the tube 🎉🎉🎥🎥ever been a big fan since Day One keep it going don't stop congratulations on where you begin it from 😎😎😎😎.....
Thank you for watching. I posted 152 new videos this year. I normally post each Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday at 6 am CT. I enjoy sharing specs and history. Today’s new video features a 1975 Sperry New Holland TR 70.
You forgot my grandfathers Model A with a 4 row planter. Those were the days! especially when the wind was blowing in the same direction as the tractor.
That 4630 needs some row cleaners or the field needed to be run over again with a seed bed finisher. The gauge wheels were jumping all over the place, not ideal planting conditions
I pulled a 1750 6r30" vacuum planter with a late model 4020 no-tilling corn in 6th gear at about 1400rpms for years, powershift so I could drop down to 4th on the ends, no cab but had a canopy and I knew what every chain, seed disk and squeak were supposed to sound like when it was operating properly, pulled a 750 drill in 6th gear wide open with same tractor, did just fine farming 960 acres with 2 4020's
I will have a full video on the 830. The reason the kids are open is the farmer is checking the boxes at the end of each pass. There are no monitors on the 830 like a modern tractor that will tell you how each row is doing.
The arm makes a groove in the field to guide the tractor on the return trip. He aims the center of the tractor on the line and goes straight. The process is repeated until the field is planted. This is a 100+ year old technology before gps guidance.
Hay like ur vids I see you do alot Midwest an central us but I've never seen one from Maine not the bottom but the top of maine Aroostook county Maine marshill north be nice to see one keep up good video
The 4320 was at the Half Century of Progress in 2015. That was the plowing demonstration field. It had been plowed up 20 times that day. They were just showing a Classic Kinze planter at the end of the day. It was just drawing lines in the dirt as this was at the end of August. Just for fun.
But GPS and autosteer are slowly making the markers obsolete... I sometimes like to use them in farming simulator (for the old school realism)... I grew up on a farm in the 80s... Never thought how big and cool tractors and equipment are getting.
Finally some two cylinders! The diesels have a sound that stays with you forever
Goldinger Farms especially when you drive a 530 all day. You still hear it for a while. Not a bad thing.
@@jimmybland6519 530 sounds way better than a 2 cylinder JD.
What do you think a 530 is
75 belt horse power but a crazy ammount of torque. I've seen a stock 830 on duals pull 35k pound sled + a Mack wrecker in a tractor pull. Not bad for a 70 year old 2 cylinder.
Back in the 1960's I used a JD 720 to plant 12 rows I think I throttled down a hundred rpm because third gear was too fast for plates not to skip corn seeds.
Beautiful, so good to see these old JD tractors has been saved for the next generations, thanks for sharing with us
I love the 830 diesel pulling a 12 row Deere planter.
That Guy has really cut his overhead!
@@paulratzlaff2935 Oh yeah!!.His fuel cost is practically ZILCH!!.
I love the sound of them
@@paulratzlaff2935 🤣🤣😂😂
55
I always wonder what my grandpa would think if you saw the tractors that are being made today thank you’ll be amazed and impressed Brad from Minnesota
Brad Olsen clearly you and I have the same interests because I see you in the comments of nearly every video I watch
You're not alone, I still remember my Grandpa's Belgian draft horses. I can remember when Grandpa got his first tractor.
1960 4 row JD & 3020, Big time. And 303 IH combine 2row, jealous neighbors, but I WAS STYLING. !!!! Old/new like Both thanks Jason..
Watching those huge planters flex over uneven ground was a thing of beauty.
We just upgraded from a kinze 2300 and 4440 to a 7200R and 1770nt with precision. You talk about a hell of a leap. Still getting the electronics figured out
I get to plant with the farms new 8370r this year and I'm still jealous of this Old iron. Just beautiful rigs
You do a wonderful service for TH-cam, BTP. Your videos are great for people interest in farming machinery.
that 4620 is probably my favorite
I’m eating corn for dinner and you post a video on corn planting. Perfect timing bro!
I grew up on a farm in Mosselbaai, Werstern Cape, South Africa. Even though my dad was a Ford man, we both loved the sound of the JD 830/730/720. In our area we referred to this tractor as a "Klop" JD because of the "boot boot boot" sound. And yess, even though I'm also a Ford man, this sound will always sound good in my ears.
Opening scene with the Dualed up 2 Lunger was best of the show. I never saw a green Kinze before either
The green Kinze is an original Kinze. Kinze planters in the late 70’s and early 80’s were painted green and used John Deere planter boxes. The original purpose of. Kinze was that a farmer could have a folding 12, 16 or 24 row planter. In the late 70’s a 12 row was a big planter and the full line JD and IH planters did not fold up they had to be put on a trailer and towed from field to field. Along cane the Kinze frame that folded up on the go and it changed every thing. John Deere boxes were popular so the early Kinze were sold with them.
@@bigtractorpower Thanks very much for the explanation. I grew up on 600 acre irrigated farm out in Washington State so I don't ever remember seeing a Kinze until I traveled he Midwest. I follow you channel religiously. THANKS
The 830 sounds like it is just strolling along, working with ease!
👍👍
that 54 row planter is just SICK
It covers some serious ground.
My favourite is the older ones; the 830, the 4320 and 4620.
Awsome video BTP!! My heart skipped a beat when I saw the 4840 out still gettin it done.
We still plant corn qith a 7000 series from.the 80s 16 row JD and a 4840
@@RichardGood6761 sweet👍
Go to Cole the cornstar's channel they will be planting with a 4840 this year
The 830 and 4960 were to best of all. Cheers :)
👍👍
I can remember it taking 9 or 10 hours to plant 80 acres of cotton or beans with my 6 row 38inch 7100 planter and a 4010 tractor in the 1970's and 1980's !
The 4320 dropped his marker the wrong side. Makes it interesting when turned around
My first thought too😁
instablaster
That was cool video. Like seeing that 830 planting
I shared this video with my dad. Love all John Deere tractors.
Thank you. 😁👍
There is no better tractor than that 830. I love the sound of that tractor.
Fantastic!!! Thanks so much for all of the John Deere equipment. - Dean from Minnesota
Probably not many of those green Kinze planters around anymore. Neat find
Kinze not in blue. That's heresy lol
We restored one
That 830 is charming 👍👍
Love the 830 pulling the 12 row.
👍👍
Nice saw my old 4630 and 12 row harkens me back to my youth!
Crazy how big the planters are getting
Cool to see how corn planting has changed over the years👍
My Grandpa used to plant corn with a 4630 and 7200 planter
Thanks!! Once again, it shows that Old Iron can pull most of tiday's machineries, in a split of a cost of the new Tractors today. Most Small/Medium size farms don't need this heavy equipment of 500 HP on the ground, nor pay the cost of New Irons as Overheads.
Is someone forcing them to buy equipment they don't need or want?
I use a cabless Allis Chalmers diesel 180 to pull our John Deere 12 row 7000 planter. Great setup for planting.
I doubt the fender mounted radio on that 4620 was worth listening to with that straight pipe on it. Still 5-6 rigs were using markers and not GPS to plant but when you're planting up to 56 rows, you better be accurate.
Those are a far cry ahead of the 2 row planters we used with a 9n ford here in the ozarks in the 60s
Maybe it's the only tractors they have available , but I just think 500 hp. is over kill on any planter. Great vid again BTP.
Thank you brings back old memories.
I noticed that no-till is pretty uncommon in Kentucky. Why is that? wouldn't they want to have no-till to be able to get in the field and plant sooner with those larger farms?
No-till is very common here. In fact no/till corn planting was invented here in 1962. I film at all types of operations. This video includes farms from Kentucky, Illinois and Iowa.
bigtractorpower how about no till beans? Is that common? Asking from a 100% no-till farm in Ohio
That 54 row was awesome. Boy how far we've come in planting. Just amazing.
I don't plant much, but I do it with a 1240 4 row.
it's been a long time since you been in action man best work on the tube 🎉🎉🎥🎥ever been a big fan since Day One keep it going don't stop congratulations on where you begin it from 😎😎😎😎.....
Thank you for watching. I posted 152 new videos this year. I normally post each Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday at 6 am CT. I enjoy sharing specs and history. Today’s new video features a 1975 Sperry New Holland TR 70.
Bravo! Many hours and miles for this great compilation, thank you.
Will come you do a Case IH version as well?
The 9410R coming over the hill--Awesome!!!
Great video we use a John Deere 4440 on 12 row Kinze planter
Hi Jason ! When using narrow row, can you still make mecanikal weedcontrol ? And using your words, As Allways Thank You for intresting videos
Beatiful video 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻 I love John Deere machines 👍🏻 I start planting corn this weak. Hello from Czech republic from cabine of John Deere 9520R 👋🏻
Love me some 4630! Under appreciated tractor!
That 4055 on narrow duels 🤤
👍👍
You forgot my grandfathers Model A with a 4 row planter. Those were the days! especially when the wind was blowing in the same direction as the tractor.
That tree limb just going for a ride. Thanks again
To the fence row. The farmer stopped to pick it up and he placed it to carry it to the edge of the field.
I'd love to see that 54 row folding up into transport mode!
It's amazing how you get so much footage. Thank you.
That 830 😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍
That 4055 is sick 😢🤤🤤🤤🤤🤤
What was the 4055 planting? Sweet corn? Great video!
Wonderful as always, really like the big DB90 planters, does case have an comparable 90' planter in its line up?
I liked that JD 830 the best
It’s pretty cool.
That opening shot was my favorite
That was a rare filming opportunity.i never thought I would get to feature such a cool combination.
Johon deere power full 💪💪🚜🚜
Impressive video... thanks...
All the tractors up the 4960, make money. All ones after that, just make a loan payment.
Was that a tree limb or log laying on the back of the planter at 18:35 ? Great video!!!
Looks like an old half decayed log. Wonder how it got there
I don’t know how it got there but that’s what it looks like to me a tree limb or something
Thanks
Jason, how long do think it will be before tractor manufactors bring a 100 row corn planters
Love the sound of a 2 cylinder diesel Johnny poppers
As a non-farmer, what are those long arms for during seeding?
There are some big $$$$$$ and Big Green Rigs running in this Video. Great operation verification
Great video, as always. Where about were you filming around the 9:00 minute mark?
Right next to the Ohio River next to the Horse Park in Henderson. The part of Kentucky in Indiana by the 41 bridge.
@@bigtractorpower, that's what I thought! I only live about 15-20 miles north of there, less than a mile off 41.
That 830 is a brute!
That 4630 needs some row cleaners or the field needed to be run over again with a seed bed finisher. The gauge wheels were jumping all over the place, not ideal planting conditions
Do the fold down wheels on the planter mark the center of the tractor on the next pass? One of the shots has the wheel marking on the planted side.
I noticed that also. It looks like it is filmed on the old Chanute AFB. I think many who take part in that are tractor hobbiests, and not farmers.
The 830 is my all time favorite
When John Deere denotes a narrow planter does that mean that the planter is planting 20 inch rows?
Yes 20 or 22 inches.
At 6:20 that's a 4055,not a 4255.
Whoops. It was filmed last year and I forgot.
@@bigtractorpower No problem,it's still a great video.👍
Love this video .
Of course I enjoyed the video as I do them all.
Thank you.
Wow thats a bumpy dang seed bed
The Kinze looks like it’s set up for 30 or 32” rows....
I pulled a 1750 6r30" vacuum planter with a late model 4020 no-tilling corn in 6th gear at about 1400rpms for years, powershift so I could drop down to 4th on the ends, no cab but had a canopy and I knew what every chain, seed disk and squeak were supposed to sound like when it was operating properly, pulled a 750 drill in 6th gear wide open with same tractor, did just fine farming 960 acres with 2 4020's
Very cool.
How many acres does the tractor run on?
Pretty cool!
VERY NAYS! 😇 EXTREM TEHNOLOGII @ BYG TRACTOR 🙋 👌✌👍💖💖💖
Thank you for watching.
Tom there's still a lot of those corn planters around
any video of an 8530?
Have you ever watched One Lonely Farmer? He has an 8530 I think ? that he might be using to plant corn this year?
@@augustreil yep, watch him on the regular
Why did the 2nd guy put the marker down in what he just planted?
4620 sounds awsome the second jd id love to hear her bark with a plow
👍👍
I wonder why the planter being pulled by the 830 has the cover lids off on the planter?
I will have a full video on the 830. The reason the kids are open is the farmer is checking the boxes at the end of each pass. There are no monitors on the 830 like a modern tractor that will tell you how each row is doing.
On the last segment:
Was that the wind causing the camera to shake or was it the 9520RX putting 520 hp to the ground pulling 54 rows?
🤔 Not sure…🤔
Can anyone tell me the purpose of the arm on the back of the planter they extend? Is it some kind of guide?
The arm makes a groove in the field to guide the tractor on the return trip. He aims the center of the tractor on the line and goes straight. The process is repeated until the field is planted. This is a 100+ year old technology before gps guidance.
Hay like ur vids I see you do alot Midwest an central us but I've never seen one from Maine not the bottom but the top of maine Aroostook county Maine marshill north be nice to see one keep up good video
Great video :-)
Can't wait for field work to beginning on our 79 ackers, field work is the start of this year's rent🤑 happy green fields =$$
4620 sound 👍
Next they will have a 54 row combine!
Couldn’t help but notice the guy on the 4320 early in the video dropped the marker on what he had already planted
The 4320 was at the Half Century of Progress in 2015. That was the plowing demonstration field. It had been plowed up 20 times that day. They were just showing a Classic Kinze planter at the end of the day. It was just drawing lines in the dirt as this was at the end of August. Just for fun.
What are the folding ‘arms’ for on the planters?
Row markers. They give you a line to follow on the next pass so the rows are straight.
But GPS and autosteer are slowly making the markers obsolete... I sometimes like to use them in farming simulator (for the old school realism)... I grew up on a farm in the 80s... Never thought how big and cool tractors and equipment are getting.
Im not a JD fan but that 4960 looks like a wheel horse..
2:15 puts the wrong row marker down
It happens quite often. Not hard to grab the wrong lever.