I'm not a farmer, and I'm not in any agriculture-related industry. I'm an accountant. But this found its way into my feed and it I found it absolutely fascinating! The logistics, the complexity, the operations in general - I am surprised at how much I was captivated by this video. Extremely well done! Thanks! Subbed!
We’ve trade combine every years and last years machine was known for those rear axle knuckle bolts coming loose. We checked ours everyday on all the machines.Another thing to look for this year is check your carter keys on the clean grain elevator chain. Four out of our six machines had atleast one broken key. We decided to check this after my chain had broke and noticed this. Good luck and happy harvest!!
@@jarrodwemhoff7270 21 s780’s and one s790. The 790 had the same issue as the 780’s. I would def check it out. They might not be broke on your machine but those keys they put in there from factory are tiny. Can see how they break. We have a tech that pretty much stays with us full time and he put a tad bit longer key in and curled them over on both ends instead of the single bend from the factory. Haven’t had any trouble since.
Dad was always saying a 12 wouldn’t work in some of our hills till he tried it and I’ll be darn it’s better. Lost 1/3 of the passes in less than ideal conditions. I wouldn’t be scared to try a 16 with a S series.
I keep waiting for the mud, if your filling the bin to top not half you got good conditions I don’t even see you going around wet spots until it freezes. Yes a little mud were you keep dumping but field looks great
Man those are some muddy conditions. Count yourself lucky you are dealing with what Larson farms went through this year. Did you see their video of picking corn in a foot of standing water? That would be so nerve racking!
This looks like it's good going. Should been on my farm in March of 2020 with corn to still combine in about 2 .5 ft of snow and ground wasn't frozen and wet ground to begin with from to much rain. I put on steal tracks on my old combine. Grain cart with wheels couldn't get out there with it empty. My neighbor came over with his quadtrack and grain cart with tracks on it. At least he could get around some with grain cart. He still only get 2 hoppers in the cart with a 1100 bushel cart. The last day we were out there it was 50 degrees and the grain cart person just about got stuck but he could back up and get out if hie hole. It was the last day to be out there.
@@aTrippyFarmer nope I'm Minnesota. We left in the field that year because it was 25% and low test weight than it was muddy too. We are north east of Fargo nd about 45 mins.
Did you guys already have those tracks sitting in the shed? Or did you have to scramble to find em when you realized it was going to be the only way to harvest? How do they compare to deere's tracks? Or are they deere's? I remember years ago a very large farmer (you probably have heard of him. Maybe?) Runs a lot of ground around Indianapolis airport and west of Indianapolis. Runs red equipment. He had someone custom build him a couple of corn heads. I can't remember for sure. I think they were custom folding 24row heads on 20in rows. And he had them on case combines when they first came out with tracks. Well when he tried to go down the Rd he almost burned both units up bc the bogey wheels would get so hot after just a few miles that the oil in them would start burning. Luckily it was caught in time. But I guess from then on he would just move them under 10mph if he was gonna road them. But fun fact a out him farming around the Indianapolis airport. Well when they did the renovations to the runways to be able to handle larger aircrafts. He had actual documented proof of a roughly 15bu an acre loss in every cornfield and 10bu loss in beans once the runways we're made operational. So he took his proof from years of yield data to the airport like wtf. And Purdue university did a study and found that it was from the unburnt fuel with the bigger aircraft taking off at full throttle. Good thing is that all that corn went to national starch In Downtown Indianapolis to be processed into corn syrup. Yummy jet fuel. (Probably why mt dew has such a kick!). But I assume that this was the reason a study was even done. Bc all of their acres are done under contract. So a loss of 15bu per acre really messed with what they were expecting for the year bc the guy had so many acres with them. It was a great contract bc if you could hold out till July you got a $.90 premium per bushel. So when corn was $2 or $3. That's when a lot of the small farmers in the 80s and 90s either got big or when the wheat mill in downtown Indianapolis took everyone's contracts and then filed bankruptcy in the 90s. Not paying anyone. The guys that were able to land contracts with national starch had that little boost and didn't have to file bankruptcy themselves. Well sorry for the ramble. Hopefully someone finds it interesting!
We bought them at the last minute! I wish I could give you a comparison to other brands, but it was our first experience with tracks. They handled the mud like it wasn't there, though they were rough going down the road. I appreciate your stories. There seems to be a lot of interesting happenings around the big city. Indianapolis is one of my favorite midwestern locations. Thanks for the comment!
wow. your going to need more than a field cultivator to get rid of those ruts. You know a while back in you videos when you say that brand new 2730 ripper and said you wanted to try it out. Here is your chance
Sitting with about 110 acres of nh3 to go where I'm at for us. Going to do a 11 and 25 tomorrow. Hoping I can do rest of a 86 I got 20 left and a 25 rest we just can't do water stands on it. 1500 now if not booked or paid for was told. Didn't need the rain Wednesday evening would have been done but what we can't dp
Rain at this point doesn't do much for us. There is a miniscule amount of winter crops around here, just corn and soybeans! I hate to hear about other areas receiving unfriendly weather...
I use a lighter to put an angle on lube straw, and spray the link plate junctions on the inside of roller chains, imagining that's where it needs hit and it centrifuges through instead of flinging off? Who knows. Nobody else does it.
Awesome looking baby! If he were mine he would never get any of the ☣️🪡‼️ We wish we had never had our sons shots! Our oldest got Autism! I am 55 and knowing what I know now… Hind sight is aways 20/20… Learn from other’s so you don’t make the same mistakes!
An economically minded landlord would probably be open to the idea of cost-sharing drain tile, or even installing it all themselves. The landlord for all of these fields is our farming operation, so we would have to pinch some pennies!
Do the combine's have some sort of GPS controlled auto-pilot because it is amazing how they seem to stay on track as they run through the corn rows? No deviation until you got to the end of the rows.
Yes there is one corn head snout with a set of mechanical feelers. It communicates the pressure of the feeler to the combine, which steers on its own based on that information!
Hey BUD , you need to party now, since you guessed just right, VERY HILARIOUS, keep up the Great/SAFE DAY, and also keep the dry comedy tour marching on, PEACE ✌️✌️😷🚜🚜🚜🚜😎😎🤑
It was a temporary addition. We bought the tracks, and they were removed after harvest. The tracks are just sitting at the local dealership, but we might sell them.
He is a wild thing. It’s easy to forget how much corn this combine picks. When you think you have a little more room left, you get overfilled pretty quickly!
Do those tracks put any additional strain on the combine hydro? Larson Farms used some aftermarket tracks and had a hydro go out. I do not remember who the manufacturer of the tracks was.
I wouldn't be surprised if it did, but this combine is already on its second hydro. I'd like to think that its got a few hours to go before any problems!
Drive slow especially when turning with tracks. Lots of aftermarket manufacturers say 15 mph road speed max, I believe the John Deere factory tracks are the same. you'll need rear wheel assist to be able to turn in that slop with tracks as well.
I believe these tracks were replaced by a different design. These were considered mud pushers, perhaps it was the weight of the head that created the problem? This design is very similar to military tanks, & they are not mud pushers. Just a thought . The evidence is in the performance, good or bad.
The 8 row has at least two advantages in muddy conditions. First its lighter than a 12 row (common sense) secondly he can combine faster thus staying ahead of the wave and on top of the mud. Once you sink into it, it takes even more power to pull thru.
Thankful we can ship direct to the Mississippi. Maybe 25 miles. 2,000,000 bushel Pull up by earths a farmers co-op. Other outfits around as well not to mention ethanol plants.
The design flaw with those aftermarket tracks is that they push the mud in front of them, which makes deeper ruts compared to the JD tracks which stay more on the top of the mud in many conditions, which also requires less power, and fuel. The Deere strike is over, and the new contract that was ratified Wednesday, runs for the next 6 years. "Nothing Runs Like A Deere" 🦌👍🇺🇸
what are you crying about we had a 1969 jd 45 with AC ( NO cab ) on it and 2 wheel drive to when we got it it was well wore out and had smooth tires all around when we got it it was different time back then then now
Yes it was so what are you crying about. My dad would tell me how much harder it was in the 80s then I would remind him were farming 10x the acers with less help.
You could leave it out, but we don't really want to leave 250 bushel corn out in the field with deteriorating stalk quality. I have seen winters where it doesn't firmly freeze but one or two weeks. It just feels better to have it out with ruts versus waiting on weather that isn't guaranteed.
Hunter Morris I have been on a farm most of my life They can come back when the fields are more ready But I would make sure the fields are repaired and never rent to them again
@@barnyardaerials they all belong to the 6uild 6ack 6better crew/one world order. The same group that wants us to eat bugs and live in pods while claiming you will own nothing and be happy. Also the same group creating supply line issues on purpose and forcing unconstitutional mandates that benefits noone except big pharma. I'm sure you have figured out that they artificially create a problem then use that problem to give us an unwanted solution that benefits only the elites. I could keep going but if that isn't enough I dont know what to tell you.
@@danlowery3235 yes, we can blame him for inflation. The price of corn went up but so has fertilizer, land/rent, equipment, fuel, taxes. Just because you see the diamond in the rough doesn't mean everything else hasn't gone to shit.
Drone shots were awesome today! Thank you
Awesome drone video and music
I am glad that you enjoyed!
Nice nice load of corn it Is so full
It was pretty full!
When is your new video
You guys scored when you found those aftermarket tracks
They have been killing it in the mud. It was a good grab!
Awesome Video and Much Love as Always!!!
Thanks for watching, Marshall!
Great video of our "hot mess"
Mess is an understatement... 🤮
Great video, we are dealing with very wet weather here in Michigan also.
Thanks for watching. I hope it dries up for you!
I'm not a farmer, and I'm not in any agriculture-related industry. I'm an accountant. But this found its way into my feed and it I found it absolutely fascinating! The logistics, the complexity, the operations in general - I am surprised at how much I was captivated by this video. Extremely well done! Thanks! Subbed!
Great video and machines. Greets from Germany
Thanks for watching!
Hello from Moosomin,Saskatchewan, Canada
Hello again!
We’ve trade combine every years and last years machine was known for those rear axle knuckle bolts coming loose. We checked ours everyday on all the machines.Another thing to look for this year is check your carter keys on the clean grain elevator chain. Four out of our six machines had atleast one broken key. We decided to check this after my chain had broke and noticed this. Good luck and happy harvest!!
What year and model? I believe we have a ‘21 770 but I’m not sure since it was built in September of 20
@@jarrodwemhoff7270 21 s780’s and one s790. The 790 had the same issue as the 780’s. I would def check it out. They might not be broke on your machine but those keys they put in there from factory are tiny. Can see how they break. We have a tech that pretty much stays with us full time and he put a tad bit longer key in and curled them over on both ends instead of the single bend from the factory. Haven’t had any trouble since.
Thanks for the feedback. We will check it out!
Crickey the ground looks soft were is this place.
That’s crazy. Be lucky to get a crop in the dugout bottoms up here
The soil sure does change quite about across the continent!
Halloween costumes were always fun to pick out! Hello Lenny and Ali
👋👋👋
Good video. I think you are doing well with the condition you are harvesting in
Dad was always saying a 12 wouldn’t work in some of our hills till he tried it and I’ll be darn it’s better. Lost 1/3 of the passes in less than ideal conditions. I wouldn’t be scared to try a 16 with a S series.
I keep waiting for the mud, if your filling the bin to top not half you got good conditions I don’t even see you going around wet spots until it freezes. Yes a little mud were you keep dumping but field looks great
It was muddy enough that the grain cart never went into one of the fields. We did partial loads in the other. It was muddy by our standards!
Man those are some muddy conditions. Count yourself lucky you are dealing with what Larson farms went through this year. Did you see their video of picking corn in a foot of standing water? That would be so nerve racking!
Loved the shark. Those tracks were a wise investment. You almost need a small plastic shovel/trowel to remove the mud.
Desperate times = Desperate measures
Great video editing 👍
This looks like it's good going. Should been on my farm in March of 2020 with corn to still combine in about 2 .5 ft of snow and ground wasn't frozen and wet ground to begin with from to much rain. I put on steal tracks on my old combine. Grain cart with wheels couldn't get out there with it empty. My neighbor came over with his quadtrack and grain cart with tracks on it. At least he could get around some with grain cart. He still only get 2 hoppers in the cart with a 1100 bushel cart. The last day we were out there it was 50 degrees and the grain cart person just about got stuck but he could back up and get out if hie hole. It was the last day to be out there.
In the Dakotas, I presume?
@@aTrippyFarmer nope I'm Minnesota. We left in the field that year because it was 25% and low test weight than it was muddy too. We are north east of Fargo nd about 45 mins.
Once again a fantastic video and your drone footage and music are awesome 👌 👏 what a crappy late harvest year
Thanks for watching. I am glad that you enjoyed!
I look forward to one day hearing you on the millennial farmers podcast 👍🏻 keep up the good content
Maybe one day... Glad you enjoyed!
Great video Andy maybe Deere will make some pontoons for tractors and combines for next year
Great videography
Farming simulator graphics are getting wild.
It's like 8K!
Did you guys already have those tracks sitting in the shed? Or did you have to scramble to find em when you realized it was going to be the only way to harvest? How do they compare to deere's tracks? Or are they deere's? I remember years ago a very large farmer (you probably have heard of him. Maybe?) Runs a lot of ground around Indianapolis airport and west of Indianapolis. Runs red equipment. He had someone custom build him a couple of corn heads. I can't remember for sure. I think they were custom folding 24row heads on 20in rows. And he had them on case combines when they first came out with tracks. Well when he tried to go down the Rd he almost burned both units up bc the bogey wheels would get so hot after just a few miles that the oil in them would start burning. Luckily it was caught in time. But I guess from then on he would just move them under 10mph if he was gonna road them. But fun fact a out him farming around the Indianapolis airport. Well when they did the renovations to the runways to be able to handle larger aircrafts. He had actual documented proof of a roughly 15bu an acre loss in every cornfield and 10bu loss in beans once the runways we're made operational. So he took his proof from years of yield data to the airport like wtf. And Purdue university did a study and found that it was from the unburnt fuel with the bigger aircraft taking off at full throttle. Good thing is that all that corn went to national starch In Downtown Indianapolis to be processed into corn syrup. Yummy jet fuel. (Probably why mt dew has such a kick!). But I assume that this was the reason a study was even done. Bc all of their acres are done under contract. So a loss of 15bu per acre really messed with what they were expecting for the year bc the guy had so many acres with them. It was a great contract bc if you could hold out till July you got a $.90 premium per bushel. So when corn was $2 or $3. That's when a lot of the small farmers in the 80s and 90s either got big or when the wheat mill in downtown Indianapolis took everyone's contracts and then filed bankruptcy in the 90s. Not paying anyone. The guys that were able to land contracts with national starch had that little boost and didn't have to file bankruptcy themselves. Well sorry for the ramble. Hopefully someone finds it interesting!
We bought them at the last minute! I wish I could give you a comparison to other brands, but it was our first experience with tracks. They handled the mud like it wasn't there, though they were rough going down the road. I appreciate your stories. There seems to be a lot of interesting happenings around the big city. Indianapolis is one of my favorite midwestern locations. Thanks for the comment!
wow. your going to need more than a field cultivator to get rid of those ruts. You know a while back in you videos when you say that brand new 2730 ripper and said you wanted to try it out. Here is your chance
We may not even get to work any of the ground if it stays wet...
Sitting with about 110 acres of nh3 to go where I'm at for us. Going to do a 11 and 25 tomorrow. Hoping I can do rest of a 86 I got 20 left and a 25 rest we just can't do water stands on it. 1500 now if not booked or paid for was told. Didn't need the rain Wednesday evening would have been done but what we can't dp
I heard cost right now on NH3 is 1350, so it would probably be close to 1500 out the door. That is 2x what we paid 🤒
I hate mud too, but you at least are getting rain. Most of the Canadian prairie are in a severe drought.
Rain at this point doesn't do much for us. There is a miniscule amount of winter crops around here, just corn and soybeans! I hate to hear about other areas receiving unfriendly weather...
Nice soil structure from all that deep tillage and cultivating
I'm in no till Virginia but where they're at you have to till to get moisture out of the ground
It will never dry otherwise
@@codygrubbs8246 that’s a myth I farm similar soils
Thanks we work really hard on it!
Nice Jet trailer
We have ran these trailers for a long time now. They are a little heavy, but they are stout. I would like to get something bigger one of these days!
I use a lighter to put an angle on lube straw, and spray the link plate junctions on the inside of roller chains, imagining that's where it needs hit and it centrifuges through instead of flinging off? Who knows. Nobody else does it.
Gotta blow through the straw immediately so it doesn't collapse. Like a 70 degree bend 3/4" from the end.
Put some milestar patagonia mt’s on your truck.
Never heard of that brand... I think some mt's would definitely help!
Awesome looking baby! If he were mine he would never get any of the ☣️🪡‼️ We wish we had never had our sons shots! Our oldest got Autism! I am 55 and knowing what I know now… Hind sight is aways 20/20… Learn from other’s so you don’t make the same mistakes!
I like the tracks
If I were the landlord owner, I would not be happy either!!
Yeah he’s in the red. Been grumpy all fall!
How do you convince a landlord to install drain tile & is it a landlord expense or would renter pay part or all of it?
An economically minded landlord would probably be open to the idea of cost-sharing drain tile, or even installing it all themselves. The landlord for all of these fields is our farming operation, so we would have to pinch some pennies!
Just consider it as Rippen Wet Style
Ain’t that the truth…
DOT Special nice
🤣👍🏻
Do the combine's have some sort of GPS controlled auto-pilot because it is amazing how they seem to stay on track as they run through the corn rows? No deviation until you got to the end of the rows.
Yes there is one corn head snout with a set of mechanical feelers. It communicates the pressure of the feeler to the combine, which steers on its own based on that information!
You should have about a million subscribers like that guy up north has. Your videos are better and more informative! 👊
I appreciate that. Everyone is where they are for good reason, and I hope to be up there some day. For now, I just keep putting the videos out!
Hey BUD , you need to party now, since you guessed just right, VERY HILARIOUS, keep up the Great/SAFE DAY, and also keep the dry comedy tour marching on, PEACE ✌️✌️😷🚜🚜🚜🚜😎😎🤑
Thanks for watching!
Are the tracks that ya'll put on the S-780 a permanent thing or just for this harvest and are they something that you will keep or were they loaners?
It was a temporary addition. We bought the tracks, and they were removed after harvest. The tracks are just sitting at the local dealership, but we might sell them.
Video's are great. Does putting the tracks on void warranty or is Deere standing behind it?
That’s a great question. I am sure a case could be made either way, but our dealership would have our back.
Good videos! But you ain't seen mud, come to West TN , it gets plum rotten, no bottom to it, those are just wet spots!!!
We usually have a bottom. I can only imagine getting in so deep that you need a trackhoe!
That's what it like in northeast AR on our rice farm. We have fields that if you get stuck it takes 3 or 4 4x4 tractors to get them out.
ol Dad is lettin the corn picker hammer down🌽🌽🌽🌽🌽🌽🚜🚜🚜🚜🚜🚽🚽🚽🚽🚽
Wonder how many pounds of mud would fall off all the equipment if you let it dry then drove “hot laps” in a parking lot?
I think its the first time ive seen so much corn on the back, is it because your dad drives like he stole it? 👀
He is a wild thing. It’s easy to forget how much corn this combine picks. When you think you have a little more room left, you get overfilled pretty quickly!
Why do you band the endrows so many times planting?
That is 2 24 row passes, which is needed to turn. That is a small field, so it takes up a lot of the field.
Do those tracks put any additional strain on the combine hydro? Larson Farms used some aftermarket tracks and had a hydro go out. I do not remember who the manufacturer of the tracks was.
I wouldn't be surprised if it did, but this combine is already on its second hydro. I'd like to think that its got a few hours to go before any problems!
They are hard on final drives
Drive slow especially when turning with tracks. Lots of aftermarket manufacturers say 15 mph road speed max, I believe the John Deere factory tracks are the same. you'll need rear wheel assist to be able to turn in that slop with tracks as well.
Great video! Where are you located?
Central Illinois.
Wheres the track cart?
On the way for next season…
@@aTrippyFarmer they make world of difference
Need to get mud tires not those Street slicks/bad AT tire. I run mud/aggressive AT tires and never have this problem.
You trade off road efficiency for off road prowess, but you are right!
fun fact when u see a puddle of water it has no mud but that is normal
The areas with water are usually more firm than the places next to it!
@@aTrippyFarmer exactly
I’m surprised that combine can take 250 BU corn at 8MPH!
whats up with the 8 rows?
I believe these tracks were replaced by a different design. These were considered mud pushers, perhaps it was the weight of the head that created the problem? This design is very similar to military tanks, & they are not mud pushers. Just a thought . The evidence is in the performance, good or bad.
The 8 row has at least two advantages in muddy conditions. First its lighter than a 12 row (common sense) secondly he can combine faster thus staying ahead of the wave and on top of the mud. Once you sink into it, it takes even more power to pull thru.
maybe the landlords will find someone who can get the crop out without rutting their fields up
Yeah hopefully they take it easy on us!
You obviously aren't a farmer
It appears by the responses that few realize the long term damage they have done to this farm
What state is the family farming in ?
Illinois
Illinois, like Dan said.
LOOKS LIKE LOGGING! HEE HEE!
Farmer: Osha? What's that
Different set of rules for a farm... not always a good thing!
Thankful we can ship direct to the Mississippi. Maybe 25 miles. 2,000,000 bushel Pull up by earths a farmers co-op. Other outfits around as well not to mention ethanol plants.
Have you heard of mud flaps
No what are those?
We’re are you from in Illinois?
Mattoon. South of Champaign about 45 miles.
I live 45 minutes away from you so it’s nice to see a farmer in my area that has a TH-cam channel. I love your videos
The design flaw with those aftermarket tracks is that they push the mud in front of them, which makes deeper ruts compared to the JD tracks which stay more on the top of the mud in many conditions, which also requires less power, and fuel.
The Deere strike is over, and the new contract that was ratified Wednesday, runs for the next 6 years.
"Nothing Runs Like A Deere" 🦌👍🇺🇸
comment
You better trip or I’m out
I keep my laces tied!
👍
Yes lots of water this year. How many acres do y'all farm total if you can answer that.
A couple thousand!
Please help now
what are you crying about we had a 1969 jd 45 with AC ( NO cab ) on it and 2 wheel drive to when we got it it was well wore out and had smooth tires all around when we got it it was different time back then then now
Yes it was so what are you crying about. My dad would tell me how much harder it was in the 80s then I would remind him were farming 10x the acers with less help.
Life is relative. My family built this farm with equipment that would make your JD45 look like a Rolls Royce, so what are you complaining about?
I would love to help you out in the form dope videos./>?
why dont u just go buy a grain cart with track on it and a 8 RX to go with it
Because that's costs money. Lol.
That sounds expensive! We could trade our 8310r and 8285r for a 8rx and still owe money 😂
Why not wait for freeze up???
High potential for corn to go down. May not get a lasting freeze in Illinois till late December, not a good situation either way!
You could leave it out, but we don't really want to leave 250 bushel corn out in the field with deteriorating stalk quality. I have seen winters where it doesn't firmly freeze but one or two weeks. It just feels better to have it out with ruts versus waiting on weather that isn't guaranteed.
Snow is coming
How about video u going to elevator unloading.
🌽🌽👍
👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
It must take you hours to edit these videos as much as it jumps around.
It just depends on the content. Some take 4-5 hours and others are done in 1 hour. I have gotten much faster as I continue to edit videos.
First
You are quick 👍
Wear a mask please and wash before going near that beautiful baby?
I am not wearing a mask around my own child 🤣
I'd make you leave the fields id I was the landowner
Good luck!
You know nothing about farming you couldn't make him leave until after next year's crop
Hunter Morris I have been on a farm most of my life
They can come back when the fields are more ready
But I would make sure the fields are repaired and never rent to them again
A lot of Complaining. Stop your whining!
Complaint filed!
yea NH# was 400 a ton now its 1200 a ton
"THANKS JOE BIDEN"
And price gauging capitalism...
whos to blame for the price increase in Canada ?
Should we blame Biden for the price of corn too?
@@barnyardaerials they all belong to the 6uild 6ack 6better crew/one world order. The same group that wants us to eat bugs and live in pods while claiming you will own nothing and be happy. Also the same group creating supply line issues on purpose and forcing unconstitutional mandates that benefits noone except big pharma. I'm sure you have figured out that they artificially create a problem then use that problem to give us an unwanted solution that benefits only the elites. I could keep going but if that isn't enough I dont know what to tell you.
@@danlowery3235 yes, we can blame him for inflation. The price of corn went up but so has fertilizer, land/rent, equipment, fuel, taxes. Just because you see the diamond in the rough doesn't mean everything else hasn't gone to shit.
👍