A great example of a lot of activities that take place during harvest. It’s quite a mixture of busyness, excitement, beauty, tiredness, stress, fun, satisfaction, accomplishment, and....reaping the rewards of the Lord’s harvest! Gotta love it! Blessings to you both!
It is nice to see all the equipment working together. Watching you use the Case reminded me of the last video with your father. He would be proud to see his equipment being used by you and not just setting there rusting away.
I think this ranks in the Top-5 of my favorite TTWT videos!! Even though I'm surrounded by farmers and farmland, I find this stuff so interesting and fun to watch. Great job, Tim and Christy!
Nice combine shots. My brother also runs a JD 9770 STS with a MacDon draper head and loves it. That draper will feed damp beans long after their other machine an old 9600 with the stock Deere head has to stop.
Always enjoy watching your time on the farm with family. Sure this years harvest brings great and loving memories of your Dad. Brings back memories for me also. Also always enjoy listening to Tom and Randal. Hope your family has a safe and great yields and safe harvest this year. 👍
I really enjoy your family farm videos! Hope you get to show us some corn harvest as well. Tom is a kind pf guy everyone likes to be around because of his positive state of mind always laughing and having fun. Wish them a happy and good harvest.
Grew up in an "ag" town ((population 610), joined the Navy and now retired from the Navy, I live in "the city" (20K plus population). It's great to see improvements and innovations (that '88 truck was still "new" when I went into the Navy). Always loved working in the field - crops or livestock. Farmer's are some of the hardest working people I know. Much respect for what they do.
Love the aerial footage. Watching the combine is somehow, hypnotic. LOL Thanks for the video and the info about what the beans are used for. God Bless!
This farm is several miles from where my family lives. It is a rental farm. They give a share of the crop to the landowner. This field is 70 acres. They farm well over 2000 acres.
Tom is a hoot. Love seeing you guys working together. Raymond is a workhorse too, seems to always be helpful in explaining things and doesn't seem to have a mean bone in his body. Pop Marks bred some good stock...
Great choice for header on that Deere. I can drive by any field and see that signature flash of how those reel fingers come across the top of the reel on a MacDon and it makes me happy as a MacDon employee.
I’m glad to see the harvest going we started yesterday and I was think if Tim’s family started and I said halls dad would be proud up there watching have a good day Tim!
Hey tim!! I use a newer version of that tractor everyday. Case 570nep it’s an awesome tractor with plenty of power and features. Love watching all of your videos!
Awesome video! Thank you for showing and explaining everything that goes on in such great detail! It just goes to show how much one may not know, and how much there is to learn!
Thanks for the kind words. What I share is still the tip of the iceberg. There is so much that I don’t know, or don’t think about sharing. Enormous amount of knowledge goes into running a farm.
Tim, there's a button on left side of your gear shifter lever. If you push it in, you can shift. There's no need to put your shuttle shift into neutral to shift gears.
Hello Tim and Christy, It can take alot of effort to get everything operating efficiently at planting and harvest time. All it takes is one breakdown and the entire day can be shot! Here's hoping your family doesn't see any of those breakdowns. We all want a safe and productive harvest.
I look forward each year to this video. The soybean dust is flying over here in Kentucky right now. My neighbor is working on his bean head now. It is the auger type. He has the cutter hanging with bailing wire while repairing the plates that help the head close to the ground. I watched him working on his corn head a couple of weeks ago. They are always behind this time of year making repairs. It takes so much work keeping these machines running. They use older equipment.
That 580m is nice we have the last one in the U.S that was new in 2005 that was fully mechanical and had a cab and an extendahoe .and we put only 1100 hours on it..
Nice video, always like to see the farm operations. I'm about 250 miles north of where your at and we had the same problem with rain. First to much then just right and then it turned off. The field next to me has 60 acres of beans that they haven't harvested yet. P.S. I miss seeing your Dad
You may try this method with front bucket use. Imagine the bucket is most effective with a 2" cut. On level guide bucket tilted to about two inches, then level by indicator, as bucket fills consistently pull back slightly on front boom till bucket becomes pushing rather than filling. Go dump. With a pile, start bucket about 2" above grade as to not dig into solid ground. As bucket fills, curl up, raise boom skimming side of pile till bucket fills.
Another great video. Imagine it's a tougher this year with your dad not supervising. Did i see a treasure hunt in the weeds in the scene where the auger cart was unloading? Like to see what old iron you have stored in there
@@TractorTimewithTim yes you are right and that combine is not for everyone, geared more to the guys that will harvest starting in Texas and go north or the people that run 5 or 6 combines and want to cut down to 3 or 4. My son works in the plant that makes the combines and I work in another plant that makes the loaders, graders and a few other things
@@TractorTimewithTim Zach Johnson aka the actor that plays the millennial farmer is testing one right now on their farm and they farm about 2500 acres and he even said that the X9 is over kill for their operation and they have 3 semis and they can barely keep up with it when its really eating corn. He was saying that he was seeing upwards of 7k per hour harvesting corn. Oh and by the way Tim tell Tom I love his old anteater KW she's a beauty coming from a diehard KW Guy keep that old iron running.
@@TractorTimewithTim sorry but no tours until next year. I think you would get a kick out of see how stuff is made. The combine plant is in East Moline and the plant where I work is in Davenport Iowa, not too far away. If you are going to come for 1 you might as well get both of them when they open back up for tours.
Tim, I’m sure you are aware of this and you seem to be pretty sharp on the subject of farming, but there are a bunch of great farming TH-cam channels that you might want to check out. Some of my favorites include: Walker Farms, Larson Farms, and of course The Millennial Farmer.
Awesome video Tim also a recommendation if you get in hard clay use your rear hoe with the teeth to break it up be way easier to load loose material with your front loader.
Great video. Makes me wish I could take off from work during harvest and go help out. Do you think an auditor somewhere set the start and end of a fiscal year as October 1 so that they could get out of the work of harvest? Things to ponder.
Tim , I guess this was the first Harvest in your life time with out your Dad , I know in the last few years he was not doing as much of the work, But i bet at Harvest time , He was around watching what was going on , I am sure that crossed your mind a time or two today.
@@TractorTimewithTim So your Dad never really "retired" as most people do. I'll bet that if he had retired he would have had a much less interesting time in later life and might not have lived as long.
@Glen correct. Have you seen any of our earlier harvest videos? We have one of him harvesting corn when he was 85. He explained all of the monitoring equipment, etc. one of my favorites. Search “Ride along with Tim’s Dad’”
@@TractorTimewithTim I have watched some but missed the info about his age. When you think of the situation many 85 year olds live in and how little interest life holds for them...he was a lucky man.
One question Tim - do the big crows feast on Soy like they feast on corn ? I had an Uncle that shot Crows with a 30-06 as they were cautious around people. Wonder why.
I love your vedio, how many acres is this field y'all are working in,and how many acres is the farm in total if you don't mind me asking this, size of field ,and farm acre's fastinate (sorry for spelling) .
Tim, you should know, everything that goes wrong on the farm during harvest is the grain cart operator. Grain cart is at the wrong end of the field. Grain cart is full, even though there's no truck to offload to. The grain cart operator didn't bring enough fuel to run the entire day, his fault. The cart gets a flat tire, again his fault. Combine breaks down, Grain cart operators fault. Did I tell you it's all the grain cart operators fault?
as a cart operator i can confirm this, we were lucky enough to get a demo of a 2596 cart this season and its my fault the trucks cant keep up to me and 3 fendt ideal 9t combines with 45 foot heads, its always my fault lol
Tim, let me begin by saying i really enjoy your videos and wish you you all the success in the world. i just have a comment about your "drone" video portion of your videos. i havent heard you comment about you or Christie having your "drone pilots license".. If you dont you really need to get it... if the FAA sees your videos or some "busy body" reports you to the FAA, you can get in serious trouble. The FAA is very strict about the term "in furtherance of a business". Other youtubers have gotten serious fines for their footage of farming activities just like this video because it was a commercial farm even though the drone pilot was videoing for personal use. The FAA still considered it was promoting the farm, or john deere, or whatever... Just be careful... i want to continue seeing your videos... You all seem like great people....
The first backhoe I ever used was a four stick 580 super L, I think! If you can learn on a four stick, you can learn pilot controls easy. I’m sure you felt your dad in the cab with you.
hope yall are doing well as you know i am a big you tube person and i was looking at some really old harvesting videos one time and seen where back in the 30's or 40's they had some pull type combines that had draper like heads on them not really sure how they did it cause the heads on them was like a hay mower we use today (off to the side like a 3 point disk bine mower ) for lack of better words wish i could find the videos again but i seen them here on you tube if you are better at looking them up maybe you can find them i just go by what they think i would like and watch videos by what they think i would like
@@TractorTimewithTim i know it was rather neat to see they had the (draper) head back that long ago and then came back to it in the newer headers of today
Great drone footage Christie I never knew that you have to grow the seed to get a seed to get a crop I'd say I'm slightly confused lol have a day love from TEXAS
Ok. Sorry about that. Simplifying...we plant roughly 50lb per acre of seed, hoping for 50bu (3000lb) of final yield per acre. So, roughly 60x return. So, at least one of every 60 fields of soybeans you see will be grown for seed. Likely more, as sometimes seed fields get rejected for poor quality, low germination, weeds, etc.
Bit different without dad watching. Isnt it. Yeah earlier this year helping a nieghbor we had 4 people using 3 tractors doing storm cleanup. More hands make it a lot nicer
That machine will much more balanced when you run the loader end if you pull the extendahoe in and make sure the stick is tucked in all the way too. Not trying to be a wiseguy at all, just my experience.
A question about full size TLBs... I don't believe they have hydro transmissions like on a CUT, so what kind of "clutch" and transmission setup do they use? I'm assuming they get a whole lot of low speed back and forth use with the loader that would quickly wear out a standard clutch, like say, the clutch on Johny 5.
@@TractorTimewithTim Huh... I think I may have read/heard somewhere about a "torque converter" in full size TLBs. Sort of a cross between a geared manual and an automatic like in a car. Maybe...
I was a software engineer/developer for 30 yrs. quit last year to do landscape work for folks and produce these videos full-time. More about us on our website. tractortimewithtim.com Welcome to our channel!
A great example of a lot of activities that take place during harvest. It’s quite a mixture of busyness, excitement, beauty, tiredness, stress, fun, satisfaction, accomplishment, and....reaping the rewards of the Lord’s harvest! Gotta love it! Blessings to you both!
It is nice to see all the equipment working together. Watching you use the Case reminded me of the last video with your father. He would be proud to see his equipment being used by you and not just setting there rusting away.
I probably enjoy the videos of you farming with your family most of all.
My dad's a retired vocational ag teacher in Texas I'll pass this video onto him he will love the explanation on the yields on the combine. Great video
It was nice being able to see how that works. Your family are really hard workers.
💥 Harvest time, what a great time of the year for your family. Many memories being made and many never forgotten.
God bless
*Keep on tractoring!*
I think this ranks in the Top-5 of my favorite TTWT videos!! Even though I'm surrounded by farmers and farmland, I find this stuff so interesting and fun to watch. Great job, Tim and Christy!
This video makes me miss my teenage years working on the local farm lots of hard work and fun
Nice combine shots. My brother also runs a JD 9770 STS with a MacDon draper head and loves it. That draper will feed damp beans long after their other machine an old 9600 with the stock Deere head has to stop.
It was nice seeing you back out on the farm miss seeing your dad I know you are missing him also.
I can watch the machines at harvest time all day. Thanks for sharing Tim
What a great family! Your videos never fail to make me feel good.
You're really full of information. I've learned more from you now than I've learned from watching farmers for a cou[ple years. Thank you.
Always enjoy watching your time on the farm with family. Sure this years harvest brings great and loving memories of your Dad. Brings back memories for me also. Also always enjoy listening to Tom and Randal. Hope your family has a safe and great yields and safe harvest this year. 👍
I really enjoy your family farm videos! Hope you get to show us some corn harvest as well. Tom is a kind pf guy everyone likes to be around because of his positive state of mind always laughing and having fun. Wish them a happy and good harvest.
I always enjoy these videos with your family on the farm. Thanks!
Thoroughly enjoyable and informative!
More of this as part of your regular content would be great!
Grew up in an "ag" town ((population 610), joined the Navy and now retired from the Navy, I live in "the city" (20K plus population). It's great to see improvements and innovations (that '88 truck was still "new" when I went into the Navy). Always loved working in the field - crops or livestock. Farmer's are some of the hardest working people I know. Much respect for what they do.
Great video Tim & Christi. God Bless.
Nice to see your family all working together.
Truly amazing to see harvesting in action
Love the aerial footage. Watching the combine is somehow, hypnotic. LOL Thanks for the video and the info about what the beans are used for. God Bless!
Those drone shots really give a great perspective of how large your familys farm really is. Thanks for including them.
This farm is several miles from where my family lives. It is a rental farm. They give a share of the crop to the landowner.
This field is 70 acres. They farm well over 2000 acres.
Tom is a hoot. Love seeing you guys working together. Raymond is a workhorse too, seems to always be helpful in explaining things and doesn't seem to have a mean bone in his body. Pop Marks bred some good stock...
Love the family farm videos best. Miss your Dad in them.
I love your videos from back on the farm. Harvest time is always like a Bee hive of activity. wonderful camera and drone work Christy.
Really nice video, both of you I really enjoyed watching. Stay safe
Always love the harvest videos!
Great video with all the action around the farm!
Great choice for header on that Deere. I can drive by any field and see that signature flash of how those reel fingers come across the top of the reel on a MacDon and it makes me happy as a MacDon employee.
My family likes their MacDon header! Thanks to you for making it!
Nice video Tim. I'm not a farmer but I've always been fascinated by the process, especially combines.
I’m glad to see the harvest going we started yesterday and I was think if Tim’s family started and I said halls dad would be proud up there watching have a good day Tim!
Tim Christi and Family so interesting no big farms near here so things harvest quickly thank you
God Bless All
PaK
Hey tim!! I use a newer version of that tractor everyday. Case 570nep it’s an awesome tractor with plenty of power and features. Love watching all of your videos!
Awesome video! Thank you for showing and explaining everything that goes on in such great detail! It just goes to show how much one may not know, and how much there is to learn!
Thanks for the kind words. What I share is still the tip of the iceberg. There is so much that I don’t know, or don’t think about sharing.
Enormous amount of knowledge goes into running a farm.
Still another great video. Could watch for hours!
My absolute favorite tractor - Oliver 1950-T good to see it still doing it's job.
Dad bought it new in 1969...it is a 1967 model. Hydra power drive. Not many made without the over-under.
@@TractorTimewithTim I had a 1969 model with over-under, bought it used, fairly cheap, did custom round baling with it for many years.
Always feel I learn a great deal frlm your channel. Thank you
Thanks for the kind words! And thanks for watching!
Love seeing the family farm in action!
Love the family videos Tim!
One of my favorite videos, a lot of information 👍🏻
I recently bought a Kubota M5660 and ordered the Kubota Shockless Ride Accumulator for the loader. Can't wait to try it out.
Tim, there's a button on left side of your gear shifter lever. If you push it in, you can shift. There's no need to put your shuttle shift into neutral to shift gears.
I’m Obviously not very experienced with the 580. Thanks!
@@TractorTimewithTim and if there's 1 or 2 buttons on the front side of the loader lever, the button on left will throw it into neutral as well
Great video glad you’ve started harvest keep on rollin
Great photo work Christie!,,
Beautiful video tim and kristie and nice materiel, the drone videos are really nice 👌👌👍
Great vlog Tim 🚜🇺🇲💯
Hey fantastic farming video loved it!! Many thanks for sharing :-)
Hi Tim and Christy nice video
Very informative to a non farmer!
Hello Tim and Christy,
It can take alot of effort to get everything operating efficiently at planting and harvest time. All it takes is one breakdown and the entire day can be shot! Here's hoping your family doesn't see any of those breakdowns. We all want a safe and productive harvest.
Excellent drone piloting. Do we have to call Cristy "Captain" now? Most don't realize that harvest is all about logistics.
Great video 👌
I look forward each year to this video. The soybean dust is flying over here in Kentucky right now. My neighbor is working on his bean head now. It is the auger type. He has the cutter hanging with bailing wire while repairing the plates that help the head close to the ground. I watched him working on his corn head a couple of weeks ago. They are always behind this time of year making repairs. It takes so much work keeping these machines running. They use older equipment.
Good video. Hope you and your family are doing well
That 580m is nice we have the last one in the U.S that was new in 2005 that was fully mechanical and had a cab and an extendahoe .and we put only 1100 hours on it..
Nice video, always like to see the farm operations. I'm about 250 miles north of where your at and we had the same problem with rain. First to much then just right and then it turned off. The field next to me has 60 acres of beans that they haven't harvested yet. P.S. I miss seeing your Dad
Great harvest video. The question though, How is your Mother doing?
You may try this method with front bucket use. Imagine the bucket is most effective with a 2" cut. On level guide bucket tilted to about two inches, then level by indicator, as bucket fills consistently pull back slightly on front boom till bucket becomes pushing rather than filling. Go dump. With a pile, start bucket about 2" above grade as to not dig into solid ground. As bucket fills, curl up, raise boom skimming side of pile till bucket fills.
I'd like to see some more of that old Oliver.
We have a playlist with all the videos showing it.
I saw you headed west the other day with Vinny and Johnny.
Just love the farming videos.... they are the best! God bless.
Cab beans at 9:50🤣
Another great video. Imagine it's a tougher this year with your dad not supervising. Did i see a treasure hunt in the weeds in the scene where the auger cart was unloading? Like to see what old iron you have stored in there
That is not our property. So, not sure what is stored there. It is owned by the landowner we rent from.
Just a note that the new X9 John Deere combine now has as 50 foot bean head and a 16 row folding corn head.
And costs $1 million when configured that way.
I still believe my statement that 40’ is the ‘standard’ right now is correct.
@@TractorTimewithTim yes you are right and that combine is not for everyone, geared more to the guys that will harvest starting in Texas and go north or the people that run 5 or 6 combines and want to cut down to 3 or 4. My son works in the plant that makes the combines and I work in another plant that makes the loaders, graders and a few other things
Oh, the X9 will be a big hit. No question.
Sounds like a fun place to work.
Maybe we can take a tour there sometime.
@@TractorTimewithTim Zach Johnson aka the actor that plays the millennial farmer is testing one right now on their farm and they farm about 2500 acres and he even said that the X9 is over kill for their operation and they have 3 semis and they can barely keep up with it when its really eating corn. He was saying that he was seeing upwards of 7k per hour harvesting corn. Oh and by the way Tim tell Tom I love his old anteater KW she's a beauty coming from a diehard KW Guy keep that old iron running.
@@TractorTimewithTim sorry but no tours until next year. I think you would get a kick out of see how stuff is made. The combine plant is in East Moline and the plant where I work is in Davenport Iowa, not too far away. If you are going to come for 1 you might as well get both of them when they open back up for tours.
Tim, I’m sure you are aware of this and you seem to be pretty sharp on the subject of farming, but there are a bunch of great farming TH-cam channels that you might want to check out. Some of my favorites include: Walker Farms, Larson Farms, and of course The Millennial Farmer.
Awesome video Tim also a recommendation if you get in hard clay use your rear hoe with the teeth to break it up be way easier to load loose material with your front loader.
Best channel on TH-cam! I loved the Bible verse at the end!
Great video! Tim, has your family always used John Deere equipment? Back in the 70's a lot of my family used IH equipment.
No. Switched to John Deere starting in 90’s. Even then, used IH combines until around 2000 or so probably.
Great video. Makes me wish I could take off from work during harvest and go help out. Do you think an auditor somewhere set the start and end of a fiscal year as October 1 so that they could get out of the work of harvest? Things to ponder.
Hmm. I think you can start a conspiracy theory!!
Hi Tim Ray here from West Virginia like your show I traded my 25r for a 2038r haven't had much time on it due to health problems
Sorry to heat about your health issues. Johnny 2 will wait patiently :-)
Tim, Is that a rabbit running away from the tractor at 3:53?
Tim , I guess this was the first Harvest in your life time with out your Dad , I know in the last few years he was not doing as much
of the work, But i bet at Harvest time , He was around watching what was going on , I am sure that crossed your mind
a time or two today.
He always ran the combine in harvest. And he planted a lot of the crop being harvested now.
It is an emotional time for the family for sure!
@@TractorTimewithTim
So your Dad never really "retired" as most people do.
I'll bet that if he had retired he would have had a much less interesting time in later life and might not have lived as long.
@Glen correct. Have you seen any of our earlier harvest videos? We have one of him harvesting corn when he was 85. He explained all of the monitoring equipment, etc. one of my favorites. Search “Ride along with Tim’s Dad’”
@@TractorTimewithTim
I have watched some but missed the info about his age. When you think of the situation many 85 year olds
live in and how little interest life holds for them...he was a lucky man.
Christy needs a camera with a cab!
How many acres of beans can be planted with 1 acre of harvested seed beans?
Roughly 60. Yields vary, seed size varies, etc.
yes another harvest video great!:) How many acres do your family farm?
Not sure...2200-2500 or so.
Here in the uk we call ride control soft ride or boom suspention
Very informative. Thanks. Farming Time with Tim?
What kind of bean yield are you guys getting? Here in central pa the yields aren’t very good for us
What drone do you use?
One question Tim - do the big crows feast on Soy like they feast on corn ? I had an Uncle that shot Crows with a 30-06 as they were cautious around people. Wonder why.
I love your vedio, how many acres is this field y'all are working in,and how many acres is the farm in total if you don't mind me asking this, size of field ,and farm acre's fastinate (sorry for spelling) .
Is that cab beans I see? Lol
Tim, you should know, everything that goes wrong on the farm during harvest is the grain cart operator.
Grain cart is at the wrong end of the field.
Grain cart is full, even though there's no truck to offload to.
The grain cart operator didn't bring enough fuel to run the entire day, his fault.
The cart gets a flat tire, again his fault.
Combine breaks down, Grain cart operators fault.
Did I tell you it's all the grain cart operators fault?
as a cart operator i can confirm this, we were lucky enough to get a demo of a 2596 cart this season and its my fault the trucks cant keep up to me and 3 fendt ideal 9t combines with 45 foot heads, its always my fault lol
And thats why you shouldnt run grain carts like on my farm
Thanks. It’s an interesting view for me.I don’t get to see what goes into harvesting.Its always fascinating
Hey tim you guys ever use yieldpro to compile yield data after the end of harvest
Randall will have to answer.
Tim, let me begin by saying i really enjoy your videos and wish you you all the success in the world. i just have a comment about your "drone" video portion of your videos. i havent heard you comment about you or Christie having your "drone pilots license".. If you dont you really need to get it... if the FAA sees your videos or some "busy body" reports you to the FAA, you can get in serious trouble. The FAA is very strict about the term "in furtherance of a business". Other youtubers have gotten serious fines for their footage of farming activities just like this video because it was a commercial farm even though the drone pilot was videoing for personal use. The FAA still considered it was promoting the farm, or john deere, or whatever... Just be careful... i want to continue seeing your videos... You all seem like great people....
We have been in contact with the FAA. All is well. Thanks for your concern.
The first backhoe I ever used was a four stick 580 super L, I think! If you can learn on a four stick, you can learn pilot controls easy. I’m sure you felt your dad in the cab with you.
hope yall are doing well as you know i am a big you tube person and i was looking at some really old harvesting videos one time and seen where back in the 30's or 40's they had some pull type combines that had draper like heads on them not really sure how they did it cause the heads on them was like a hay mower we use today (off to the side like a 3 point disk bine mower ) for lack of better words wish i could find the videos again but i seen them here on you tube if you are better at looking them up maybe you can find them i just go by what they think i would like and watch videos by what they think i would like
These were Allis Chalmers 60 combines.
My dad started with them. Pull type, offset from tractor. Yes, Draper to raise crop up to the threshing unit.
@@TractorTimewithTim i know it was rather neat to see they had the (draper) head back that long ago and then came back to it in the newer headers of today
Back then, it was canvas. One of the least reliable parts of those old combines!
@@TractorTimewithTim but the idea of the draper came from the canvas days i think
Great drone footage Christie I never knew that you have to grow the seed to get a seed to get a crop I'd say I'm slightly confused lol have a day love from TEXAS
Ok. Sorry about that. Simplifying...we plant roughly 50lb per acre of seed, hoping for 50bu (3000lb) of final yield per acre. So, roughly 60x return.
So, at least one of every 60 fields of soybeans you see will be grown for seed. Likely more, as sometimes seed fields get rejected for poor quality, low germination, weeds, etc.
Had a case 580 hoe at work 26,000 hours on it still worked great everyday they sold it at auction for $16,500
Bit different without dad watching. Isnt it. Yeah earlier this year helping a nieghbor we had 4 people using 3 tractors doing storm cleanup. More hands make it a lot nicer
He probably was riding along and was wishing he could be running the combine, or driving the Gator.
That machine will much more balanced when you run the loader end if you pull the extendahoe in and make sure the stick is tucked in all the way too. Not trying to be a wiseguy at all, just my experience.
Different without your dad.
What drone do you use?
Mavic pro 2
A question about full size TLBs... I don't believe they have hydro transmissions like on a CUT, so what kind of "clutch" and transmission setup do they use? I'm assuming they get a whole lot of low speed back and forth use with the loader that would quickly wear out a standard clutch, like say, the clutch on Johny 5.
I’m not sure. It feels sort of like a hydro. No clutch. Shuttle shift. Doesn’t move at idle...press accelerator to go.
@@TractorTimewithTim Huh... I think I may have read/heard somewhere about a "torque converter" in full size TLBs. Sort of a cross between a geared manual and an automatic like in a car. Maybe...
I suspect you are right. It didn’t feel like hydro, but not a fully geared transmission either.
Some may say you are spoiled with all the tractors, but you have to spend money to make money.
What was that animal at 3:53? Mink?
Rabbit.
Good camera work christy!
I dont how you do it with tim talking so much🙃
I see cab beans
What does Tim do for a living?
I was a software engineer/developer for 30 yrs. quit last year to do landscape work for folks and produce these videos full-time. More about us on our website. tractortimewithtim.com
Welcome to our channel!