We mix feed for the steers down and Travis's place! Subscribe to How Farms Work ► bit.ly/XYVvDd Facebook ► on. YpS8oH How Farms Work Store ► www.HowFarmsWork.com
You have to know that I'm not a farmer but someone who has been exposed to farming here in Georgia since I was young. I still have the opportunity to go to my Uncle's estate farm and watch ride and of course ask questions. So, that's why all of the questions. I know you are busy and can't answer them in this forum but maybe at some point you could include them in a video. The 4235r probably has an outside temp display.. Sometimes you'll have to show it to us when it's really cold outside. Man, I just love the 4020 because it still does work and looks good too. You will have to give us a demonstration on close range use of the radios too. When you clean out the big bins do you put insecticide in the bottom to keep the mice away? Steer stuffer? Thanks for all of the time and effort you take to bring the videos to all of us!
Still in the mid 70's where I live and Low 80's by the end of next week. So glad we do not have much cold weather where I am. It is only suppose to reach 60 on Sunday and that will feel very cold.
You can get replacement auger flighting from Shoup Parts or many other suppliers... All you need to know is the original height or diameter of the flighting, the diameter of the center shaft (easy to measure with a caliper), the pitch or distance between flights (distance traveled per turn), the thickness of the original flighting (easy to measure at the base next to the shaft or pipe), and the direction of turn (RH or LH flighting). It comes in five foot lengths that you butt-weld together onto the shaft. Torch or grind the existing welds holding the old flighting to the shaft, slide the old flighting off, grind down the rough spots with an angle grinder, slide the new flighting on, and weld it back on per the recommendations (1-2 inch long welds every turn to half turn usually). Easy peasy. Hardest part is taking the old auger out of the tube. For augers longer than five feet, you simply butt-weld the ends of the flighting together (or overlap it depending on recommendation) and then grind the weld smooth so the grain flows smoothly. Might be some work on a winter or rainy day or two, but it sure would save a lot of hassle dragging out that little electric auger... Later! OL J R :)
you can epxoy small plastic strips to your auger on the mill or I call them paddles and it will suck that corn or wheat right up that auger you will be amazed, I done this to ours about 25 yrs ago.
With the TH-cam compression can algorithm you can upscale a 1080p video to 4k when u export and it will look the same because of what bitrate TH-cam gives it according to LinusTechTips
I agree with Ryan it is a very beautiful sunset. I have just one quick question, why are you using that dirty four letter word(snow) lol. I’m in no way ready for that yet. Thanks for sharing
Hunters will love the ground cover, Farmers not so much. Dads been waiting for cold weather to start moving some wildlife right to his ground blind. No more climbing for safety. The ongoing country scenery is epic. Thank you for bringing us along. You guys work well together. Older brother outside younger inside. At least it's not a sweat box and dusty.
Just a question, so you use feed corn instead of silage and is there reason for you compared to other farms that do, so it cost or storage etc. Thanks, Mike NC
We have got a john deere 3350 and changing the cab airfilters sucks, they are placed on the inside which means that you always are going to fill the cab with dust
4K is a bit of a waste for most of your videos. if you are doing big scenics episodes by all means go for it. but for close up explaining of stuff, don't chew up your drive space. my internet barely handle you at 720. So you know. Keep up the great work. Learning a lot.
I wish they would update it and make a little more realistic when feeding cows. Like have a feed ring you can put bales in or heard the cows into the trailer instead of just selecting which ones you want.
Seeing you blow out the engine filter do y’all mess with the inner filter of those two? We had an engine blow up on our old 4960 as the inner one wasn’t put back in right and even though we’ve upgraded to a 8130 I don’t touch it but let our mechanic do the inner one to be safe
torre1976 Vs you shouldn't touch the air filter until that light comes on, and when it just put a new one in. We run new versatile fwa tractor and we go 600-1000 hrs on one filter
Should replace the air filters on motor cheaper than replacing the turbo, pit tubs and a in frame on the motor. Drove semis. for living seen many a air filter sucked through the turbo because of being blown out and not replaced
Not to be critical, but just wondering how much grief do you get by using a blowgun on your air filters like that? I know I don't have an issue with it but I've had different one cuss me on blowing out my air filter on my big truck (18 wheeler) with a blowgun. They claim that the air pressure will rip the element and allow dirt right into your engine. I've never ripped one yet but you never know till it happens.... Great video watching you and Travis working together...
Yes to much pressure will ruin an air filter. Always blow from the inside out. It's better not to service an engine air filter than to service it wrong. The owners manual explains how to service your air filters.
From my understanding it's not that compressed air rips the filter open, but that the compressed air enlarges the holes in the filter media where the air flows through. The bigger holes then allow dirt to pass the filter. I've used compressed air on filters when I had to, but I turned my regulator down to around 20 PSI.
slow and keep the tongue straight, stop it before it starts turning to much kinda work the front of the tractor back and forth it small amounts. It helps when the wagon linkage is tight also, aworn out wagon will go everywhere
Ryan 15-20mph winds is absolutely nothing!! In north Scotland at the minute were getting gusts of 51 and wind average of 38!! And we're just calling it a small breeze!
They make "cone bottom" bins up on legs, usually for smaller amounts of grain. Having a sloped bottom would reduce the amount of grain a bin could hold considerably, and greatly complicates construction. In addition, many bins have an "air floor" where the floor is composed of slotted metal slats about 8-12 inches wide which lock together on top of supports that raise them up about a foot above the concrete foundation of the bin. This allows air to be blown in from a dryer fan located outside the edge of the bin, and the air then moves up through the tiny perforations in the floor, up through the grain, and therefore it dries the grain down to safe storage levels of moisture (particularly when the air is heated by a propane or natural gas dryer burner to heat the incoming air). This warm, moist air (carrying moisture removed from the grain) is then exhausted out the top of the bin through the curved vents and around the periphery of the roof/wall joint. Grain flows out the center unload auger intake in the center of the bin in the floor, out the discharge auger outside the bin, to a loading auger for moving the grain into a truck, gravity box, mixer, etc. When the bin is full, the grain flows from the center down into the auger inlet through a moveable door above the auger in the floor. As the grain gets lower, it sinks in on itself to form an inverted cone as the "critical angle" of the slope of the grain seeks it's natural slope for that particular grain and moisture/fines level. Then the grain continues to slide down to the center until the center of the inverted cone reaches the floor opening to the auger. Once it does, no more grain will "gravity flow" down the slope into the auger intake. At that point, someone must either enter the bin and shovel it out, OR install an electric bin sweep auger, which pivots in a circle around the center grain auger intake, which "sweeps" the grain from the outside wall toward the center auger intake, removing MOST of the grain from the bin. The sweep moves around the bin like the hands on a clock until most of the grain is removed, then someone comes in and shovels/sweeps the remaining grain out of the bin with a scoop and broom, until the bin is clean and empty. Yes it's work but most farm jobs are... :) OL J R :)
fun fact chrome only supports up to 720p (it looks better going from 720 to 1080p because of bitrate) the only browser that supports 4k is microsoft edge (i dont know how edge managed to be the only one) also the YT apps will also support full 4k. same for any videos too even netflix
The day may be long and the work may be difficult, but the golden hour occasionally makes it all worth it. Nice video, Ryan.
You have to know that I'm not a farmer but someone who has been exposed to farming here in Georgia since I was young. I still have the opportunity to go to my Uncle's estate farm and watch ride and of course ask questions. So, that's why all of the questions. I know you are busy and can't answer them in this forum but maybe at some point you could include them in a video.
The 4235r probably has an outside temp display.. Sometimes you'll have to show it to us when it's really cold outside. Man, I just love the 4020 because it still does work and looks good too. You will have to give us a demonstration on close range use of the radios too. When you clean out the big bins do you put insecticide in the bottom to keep the mice away? Steer stuffer?
Thanks for all of the time and effort you take to bring the videos to all of us!
Still in the mid 70's where I live and Low 80's by the end of next week. So glad we do not have much cold weather where I am. It is only suppose to reach 60 on Sunday and that will feel very cold.
Thanks Ryan very good videos starting to get cold here Vermont
Enjoyed the vid, Reminded me of when i worked on the farm back in the day.
My favorite channel
Corn scoops will really put some arms on you in no time! Sounds like snow is coming? Wow! Good luck guys, getter done!
I love how he started the video, realized it was really cold, and then went back and put on a heavy jacket
your father should be very proud of you for what you did for the farm
They should grow well on that stuff Ryan, we did a herina operation in my new video if you want to check it out 😀
You can get replacement auger flighting from Shoup Parts or many other suppliers... All you need to know is the original height or diameter of the flighting, the diameter of the center shaft (easy to measure with a caliper), the pitch or distance between flights (distance traveled per turn), the thickness of the original flighting (easy to measure at the base next to the shaft or pipe), and the direction of turn (RH or LH flighting).
It comes in five foot lengths that you butt-weld together onto the shaft. Torch or grind the existing welds holding the old flighting to the shaft, slide the old flighting off, grind down the rough spots with an angle grinder, slide the new flighting on, and weld it back on per the recommendations (1-2 inch long welds every turn to half turn usually). Easy peasy. Hardest part is taking the old auger out of the tube. For augers longer than five feet, you simply butt-weld the ends of the flighting together (or overlap it depending on recommendation) and then grind the weld smooth so the grain flows smoothly.
Might be some work on a winter or rainy day or two, but it sure would save a lot of hassle dragging out that little electric auger...
Later! OL J R :)
I know this is an older video but I notice a big difference in quality
Thanks for another Great Video.
Love the videos keep it up!
Camera does have a great picture..cool video on grinding feed!
Please please keep up the 4k content. It looks so much better !! Thanks
we had snow today in minneapolis 27 oct about 1-2 inches and WINDY all day
15:53 "hey, I was hiding behind that bucket!"
I see what you did there....i heart you too. Thats how its done folks.
you can epxoy small plastic strips to your auger on the mill or I call them paddles and it will suck that corn or wheat right up that auger you will be amazed, I done this to ours about 25 yrs ago.
Hey great video
4:15 I thought you were putting soybeans in the silos with the corn at first! lol
North central Texas is having first freeze tommarow and I'm not ready
Nice vid
Hi I love your videos they are so cool and fun ;) .... GOOD JOB !!!!! #HowFarmsWork ;) and GOOD JOB with this videos you do for ue ;)
In our 8R there is a fresh air filter for the cab right above your head in the cab
Stay golden pony boy 😜, great video quality!
With the TH-cam compression can algorithm you can upscale a 1080p video to 4k when u export and it will look the same because of what bitrate TH-cam gives it according to LinusTechTips
I agree with Ryan it is a very beautiful sunset. I have just one quick question, why are you using that dirty four letter word(snow) lol. I’m in no way ready for that yet.
Thanks for sharing
Little over 2 inches of snow here in Bemidji, MN
mark allen Isi
I noticed that old barn in the background. Do you plan on fixing it up? The roof looks like it's about done.
Beautiful
cold aint it ryan down here in texas its around the fifties and wind makes it feel like 30° or 40°
oh yea rocket looking for mice, shoveling corn from the bin, grinding feed , I was doing that 40 years ago.
How is your pellet burner thing in the basement doing? It being cold reminded me.
Hunters will love the ground cover, Farmers not so much. Dads been waiting for cold weather to start moving some wildlife right to his ground blind. No more climbing for safety. The ongoing country scenery is epic. Thank you for bringing us along. You guys work well together. Older brother outside younger inside. At least it's not a sweat box and dusty.
Do you have any plans of fixing the old barn up?
Rocket was funny just hiding behind the buckets
Which wears out faster on your augers. The auger screw, bearings or the tube the auger is in?
hey Ryan do you guys still have the vertical tillage tool?
Just a question, so you use feed corn instead of silage and is there reason for you compared to other farms that do, so it cost or storage etc. Thanks, Mike NC
Its 15 and snowing were I live 😂😂
Do you grind the corn, or do you just use the mill for transporting it to the steer stuffer?
What did you buy for a camera Ryan?
Dont no what day you filned this on but today in mauston it snowed a little didn't stick though.
4K is DA BOMB!!!! Looks so good....I will build you a new sweet ass computer ...it will have John Deere green spinning fans on the inside
Or maybe a Pumpkin PC??? th-cam.com/video/aHnlKOnFNkA/w-d-xo.html
JD Chrome spinners!
Were supposed to get snow tomorrow in north east ohio we started corn last week and have plenty to do still because it's rained all week
20 Minute Madness Gaming And More yep, good luck out there
Wow! The 7600 has wheel weights.
We have got a john deere 3350 and changing the cab airfilters sucks, they are placed on the inside which means that you always are going to fill the cab with dust
Did you use a GoPro to film this
Great vid Ryan Smile More Bless stay safe guys 👍
Whose grain goes in the feed bin? Does that get factored into the profits?
still 70s and 80s here in Mississippi. lol
Nice
Hi nice intro by the way
First
4K is a bit of a waste for most of your videos. if you are doing big scenics episodes by all means go for it. but for close up explaining of stuff, don't chew up your drive space. my internet barely handle you at 720. So you know. Keep up the great work. Learning a lot.
Can you do a video in the snow?
I bet mixing feed is much more fun in real life then in farming simulator..
I wish they would update it and make a little more realistic when feeding cows. Like have a feed ring you can put bales in or heard the cows into the trailer instead of just selecting which ones you want.
Saludos
Seeing you blow out the engine filter do y’all mess with the inner filter of those two? We had an engine blow up on our old 4960 as the inner one wasn’t put back in right and even though we’ve upgraded to a 8130 I don’t touch it but let our mechanic do the inner one to be safe
Hey Ryan I have no monitor or tv to use 4K I just have 1080i resolution
Can you please make available for Thomas is
i saw you at the toy show in dyersville
Did you put red in there
Do you feed the steers just grain
Camera veiw is gorgeous
Saying possible snow for us Saturday night and low 20s
Intro was funny
Okay
You probably won’t see this but you should really invest in a sweep auger. You won’t have to shovel as much. That’s what we use🙂
👍
Ryan, when did you put wheel weights on the 7600
Scott Sklerek couple weeks ago. They also added 4 front weights.
cool, thanks
Hi Ryan
Does John Deere admit to clean engine air filter blowing it? If there's an engine air filter restriction light in the dashboard, what is its function?
torre1976 Vs you shouldn't touch the air filter until that light comes on, and when it just put a new one in. We run new versatile fwa tractor and we go 600-1000 hrs on one filter
Tractor must've been cold 2:40
Quite the mess that silo makes?
Should replace the air filters on motor cheaper than replacing the turbo, pit tubs and a in frame on the motor. Drove semis. for living seen many a air filter sucked through the turbo because of being blown out and not replaced
Not to be critical, but just wondering how much grief do you get by using a blowgun on your air filters like that? I know I don't have an issue with it but I've had different one cuss me on blowing out my air filter on my big truck (18 wheeler) with a blowgun. They claim that the air pressure will rip the element and allow dirt right into your engine. I've never ripped one yet but you never know till it happens.... Great video watching you and Travis working together...
Yes to much pressure will ruin an air filter. Always blow from the inside out. It's better not to service an engine air filter than to service it wrong. The owners manual explains how to service your air filters.
From my understanding it's not that compressed air rips the filter open, but that the compressed air enlarges the holes in the filter media where the air flows through. The bigger holes then allow dirt to pass the filter. I've used compressed air on filters when I had to, but I turned my regulator down to around 20 PSI.
Is corn dust harmful to the lungs?
It's cold eh?
Hey Ryan,
Do a "How-To" video on backing up wagons. I'm terrible at it, and could use some pointers.
It's simple just go slow
slow and keep the tongue straight, stop it before it starts turning to much kinda work the front of the tractor back and forth it small amounts. It helps when the wagon linkage is tight also, aworn out wagon will go everywhere
its exactly backwards from what your use to doing with a regular trailer. Just do the opposite of what your first instinct is and its easy
Where's your dustmask dude!
How come your not teaching Jamie to run all of the equipment?
theres a filter above your head too
You don't really need 4K videos. 1080 is pretty darn good.
Ryan 15-20mph winds is absolutely nothing!! In north Scotland at the minute were getting gusts of 51 and wind average of 38!! And we're just calling it a small breeze!
Snoot? - Snout?, what's in a name. HaHaHaHa. KIT d
Are you talking about the tv show called the ranch it’s on Netflix
Same but I can’t think of a podcast called the ranch so I of thought the tv show
Okay. It just seems like a lot of work to shovel or broom the grain or corn. I was just wondering why
Replace that plug before someone gets electrocuted.
jay west totally!
I was thinking the same thing. I was like damn dude I’m surprised that nobody has been electrocuted yet.
I was flinching when you were fiddling with the plug.
K J. Electrons dont know that
yatb69 Yep, this is a fsrm, just tape that loose cover in place.
Why are the floors of the grain bin not slopped so it flows into the Auger
Aaron Jarvenpa the plank design makes them very strong and i dont know how a sweep would work on an angle floor
They make "cone bottom" bins up on legs, usually for smaller amounts of grain. Having a sloped bottom would reduce the amount of grain a bin could hold considerably, and greatly complicates construction. In addition, many bins have an "air floor" where the floor is composed of slotted metal slats about 8-12 inches wide which lock together on top of supports that raise them up about a foot above the concrete foundation of the bin. This allows air to be blown in from a dryer fan located outside the edge of the bin, and the air then moves up through the tiny perforations in the floor, up through the grain, and therefore it dries the grain down to safe storage levels of moisture (particularly when the air is heated by a propane or natural gas dryer burner to heat the incoming air). This warm, moist air (carrying moisture removed from the grain) is then exhausted out the top of the bin through the curved vents and around the periphery of the roof/wall joint.
Grain flows out the center unload auger intake in the center of the bin in the floor, out the discharge auger outside the bin, to a loading auger for moving the grain into a truck, gravity box, mixer, etc. When the bin is full, the grain flows from the center down into the auger inlet through a moveable door above the auger in the floor. As the grain gets lower, it sinks in on itself to form an inverted cone as the "critical angle" of the slope of the grain seeks it's natural slope for that particular grain and moisture/fines level. Then the grain continues to slide down to the center until the center of the inverted cone reaches the floor opening to the auger. Once it does, no more grain will "gravity flow" down the slope into the auger intake. At that point, someone must either enter the bin and shovel it out, OR install an electric bin sweep auger, which pivots in a circle around the center grain auger intake, which "sweeps" the grain from the outside wall toward the center auger intake, removing MOST of the grain from the bin. The sweep moves around the bin like the hands on a clock until most of the grain is removed, then someone comes in and shovels/sweeps the remaining grain out of the bin with a scoop and broom, until the bin is clean and empty.
Yes it's work but most farm jobs are... :) OL J R :)
1:00 am I the only one who thought their device had rotated the screen and tried to correct it but it was Ryan's camera upside down
rocket wants to go for a ride guys
What about that filter above your head in the cab.
The only filters in the cab are the ones under the seat
How Farms Work our 8295 and out 8370 have one in roof above head. That panel comes off and there's a circle filter in there
Honestly, I don't see a difference from 720 to 4K when watching on my PC.
White Farms So get a better PC ;-) It looks better on my tablet.
fun fact chrome only supports up to 720p (it looks better going from 720 to 1080p because of bitrate) the only browser that supports 4k is microsoft edge (i dont know how edge managed to be the only one) also the YT apps will also support full 4k. same for any videos too even netflix
4k sounds great but not worth it for some stuff for most people i feal. but i have no screen that can show 4k so i dont realy know.
Hiii
beard has grown to Sasquatchstyle
Why don’t you guys get a straight truck or a semi for grain instead of gravity wagons
You guys should tear down that corn crib and build a nice garage/ small machine shed there. Another great video Ryan!