Hi Jason, great video I get the impression that conditions were nearly perfect, I noticed the big JD'S weren't field weighted and seemed to be pulling those subsoilers with ease without losing traction especially going down at that depth. We use to go the length of the field and width ways that was interesting the operator had the living day lights shook out of him plus the fillings in his teeth. Kevin Fox 🇬🇧
They do a good job. It had not rained in 8 weeks and they were pulling through drought baked ground as it was raining lightly making the surface of the field greasy.
It is a big section of land. It was a few different fields 20 years ago. They removed 20 acres of wood land and several hedge rows to combine it into one big field that was easier to raise crops in for faster planting and harvesting.
Now this is MY kin of video. Ripping and chiselling are my two favorite types to watch. BTP- is this the same farm where several years ago you have a video of three (IIRC) JD 600's on triples and a single Challenger on twin tracks ripping, and again, IIRC, the JD's were pulling 9 shank rippers and the Challenger was pulling an 11 shank ripper, and doing it much quicker than the JD's on tires?
The traction issue is two fold. It had not rained for eight weeks so the ground was very baked while the surface was greasy because of a light rain moving through. Ultimately it did not rain enough other than to make the 8R spin a bit.
I have a ride along video with Billy on the way. A big difference is fuel. The Fendt consumes 20 Gallons an hours and the 9RX is running 28 Gallons an hour.
Excellent video Jason my cousins Talmage and Tylor and I are fascinated with these tractors From John Deere to Case IH and New Holland and AGCO. They all fascination to me. Even Combines and haying equipment also fascinating to me.
Here they use one Xerion 5000 with a Maschio Gaspardo Dracula and a Kirovets k742 with a Vaderstad TopDown for the first pass followed by another Xerion 5000 and a Challenger MT 875C with Kometh Apache subsoilers and after that a 9620RX with a Horsch Joker
The sub soiling is more no till. It fractured the soil 18 inches deep to help enhance corn root growth next year. Chisel plowing runs 12 inches deep and turns all the soil. The sub soiling leaves the surface of the field undisturbed so it is like no till planting in the spring.
They run 18 inches deep. I have filmed at this farm for 20 years. It is always 18. I have a video on the way with the farmer in a Fendt 1167 running with these John Deere’s he talks about running 18 inches deep in the cab ride along.
That’s almost always the last thing to do for tillage before moving to the next field. Those last few minutes tend to be a little hectic so maybe that’s why
Real tractors are Farmall Red colored. Sorry, no farm of my own yet. I'm hoping to to start early spring with twenty broilers and see if I can keep them alive.
@@bigtractorpower how many acers per hour, I always look at it as how many gallons per acer for production cost,I use a Case IH 2500 5 shank ripper,about 1 gallon per acer or about $4.50 per acer.
@@billsauberlich7337 I have a ride along video with the farmer in this field. He was running a Fendt 1167 at 20 gallons an hour on a 9 shank 915. I think he was covering 15 acres an hour and around 230 acres in a day with a 670 Hp tractor.
🇧🇴 Fans n1 👀 bolivia presente aquí 💯 otro maravilloso video 📹😁📹saludos cordiales desde Sudamérica Santa Cruz bolivia 🇧🇴 👍 👍😍👍👍👀
Thanks Jason 👍🏻. Always enjoy watching Garnett Farms getting it done!!! Lots of new JD's out there.
It’s an efficient farm. They roll across these acres in about 10 days each season.
Hi Jason, great video I get the impression that conditions were nearly perfect, I noticed the big JD'S weren't field weighted and seemed to be pulling those subsoilers with ease without losing traction especially going down at that depth. We use to go the length of the field and width ways that was interesting the operator had the living day lights shook out of him plus the fillings in his teeth.
Kevin Fox
🇬🇧
The ripper is making the 8R 250 work.I got a 1/16th Ertl 9RX 640 yesterday.Local dealer had a 9R 440 over the summe.
Wow those 9RX are a definite beast. I never once faltered in pulling those rippers
They do a good job. It had not rained in 8 weeks and they were pulling through drought baked ground as it was raining lightly making the surface of the field greasy.
The 8R 250 - The little tractor that could. I think I can, I think I can. Thanks for the great videos.
🔴John deere🚜🚜🚜👍👍
Fantastic video Jason, crikey if that field was here in England it would have it's own postcode.
It is a big section of land. It was a few different fields 20 years ago. They removed 20 acres of wood land and several hedge rows to combine it into one big field that was easier to raise crops in for faster planting and harvesting.
That’s a little deeper than my Farmall 140 . Lol Enjoyed thanks for sharing.
That would put a 140 to work.
great power of tractors
Great video thanks for sharing your story and watching the big tractors 🚜 working
It is fun filming these big tractor.
Love you videos
Thank you for watching.
Video molto bello e gran belle macchine in campo.
👍👍👍🖐️
Thank you for watching. 😁👍
That 9RX is a beast and it looks like one. I’m more surprised by how much the 8Rs can handle
Yep, new 8r weight a lot more than older 8000 series
It was raining while I was filming. The 8R 250 was holding its own. They had two 8R 230s and two 7R 210s ripping on another farm a few miles away.
WOW Very good
Thank you for watching.
No visit with Matt 😢 all ways looking forward to a visit with Matt 😊 great video
Matt was spraying wheat. I have a video with Billy in this field running Fendt.
Now this is MY kin of video. Ripping and chiselling are my two favorite types to watch. BTP- is this the same farm where several years ago you have a video of three (IIRC) JD 600's on triples and a single Challenger on twin tracks ripping, and again, IIRC, the JD's were pulling 9 shank rippers and the Challenger was pulling an 11 shank ripper, and doing it much quicker than the JD's on tires?
Fine 💎🍾
My 3 y/o approved this video :)
Very cool 😁👍
th-cam.com/video/DH9EdzlaK8I/w-d-xo.html
Gotta ask. This farm uses late model equipment. Do they purchase or lease?
Wrong Douglas. They own 80% of their land and have been farming over 150 years. It’s not to show off it’s to get a big job done.
They purchase. Tractors are typically run 1,000 hours per year and traded out each June.
Keep them while they are under warranty.
@@bigtractorpower there always has to be that one guy and usually it’s a European talking about American ego
That's a good ripping team😉👍 it is impressive that a ripper can work the ground that deep😁💪
It greatly helps improve the root zone for nexts year corn while setting up no till conditions for spring planting.
Is this where such a beautiful technique works ?
Yes
👋 hey 👋 from Dexter,Missouri
Super awesome video. Be safe.
Thank you James.
Those 915 rippers do a good job. I have a 3 shank for my little tractor.
They sure do. What tractor do you run on yours ?
Great video Jason! Cool seeing the big horses at work.
Seeing all of those tractors in one field reminds me of the days when harvest was done an moldboard plowing got started
It is neat seeing tillage with allot of tractors. Back in the plowing days this farm ran a fleet of Allis Chalmers mono frame plows.
Those are some great green machines!
They cover a bunch of acres each year.
@@bigtractorpower That’s awesome!
How many 9RX640's did the Garnett's end up getting?
The farm has four 9RX 640s, five 9R 440s and an 1167 MT Vario.
Man that 640 is a beast!
Solid running tractor.
Great video. I like John Deere 🚜.🙋🏻♂️👉🇹🇭
Thank you for watching. John Deere builds hood tractors.
Nice video. It takes quite a bit of HP to pull rippers and chisel plows. That one tractor was having some trouble with traction, needed more weight😁.
The traction issue is two fold. It had not rained for eight weeks so the ground was very baked while the surface was greasy because of a light rain moving through. Ultimately it did not rain enough other than to make the 8R spin a bit.
Awesome Video Buddy!
Big new John Deere tractors 😁👍
Working to that depth must be hard in the points at the bottom of the subsoiler legs!
They re fit the legs and points every winter.
That’s a lot of acres no wonder they have a big fleet so when we going to see you and your tractor Jason
Each of these tractors will put on 1,000 hours in a years worth of work on the farm.
Great video BTP. I wander how the rx 640 compares to Billy's fendt 1167 pulling the ripper?
I have a ride along video with Billy on the way. A big difference is fuel. The Fendt consumes 20 Gallons an hours and the 9RX is running 28 Gallons an hour.
Interesting they are using different width equipment on the same field. I would figure that might mess up lines, but they probably know more than me.
Excellent video Jason my cousins Talmage and Tylor and I are fascinated with these tractors From John Deere to Case IH and New Holland and AGCO. They all fascination to me. Even Combines and haying equipment also fascinating to me.
All good brands. I enjoy filming all the brands in each season.
What type of soil?
Red clay
The deep frost in winter does the sub soiling for us in Wisconsin.
No frost zone in Kentucky. This ripping helps loosen the soil for next years corn crop well.
wow real banget kk
Thank you for watching.
@@bigtractorpower sama-sama kk
Greetings from burley Idaho
Thank you Carlos. I hope to visit Idaho to film some day.
Hello everyone good vidéo big tractor power john deere 💪💪💪
Thank you for watching.
I'm guessing they have a fuel tanker on speed dial to keep this fleet running.
Hi from Spain!!
Very cool to have the video reach Spain. Thank you for watching.
My boy Phillip
👍👍
Hi Jason,
The Pictures are looking great, do used a new camera?
Best Regards
Siegfried
I use a Sony 4k camera primarily. The opening three clips were filmed with my iPhone 12.
nice video liked watching that.
Thank you for watching. It is fun filming these tractors.
Can a 1500 pickup plow that for cheaper?
no fall tillage here ~ hasn't been for over 40 years
I do fall tillage nothing to fancy headlands, low spots and weed patches. 835 versatile pulling a 35 foot 1610 John Deere cultivator.
Nice tillage team.
I'd be keen to know what that ripping pencils out to $ per acre
It’s definitely an investment but it helps the corn root zone tremendously. The farm only rips half its ground per year. The other half is disked.
Here they use one Xerion 5000 with a Maschio Gaspardo Dracula and a Kirovets k742 with a Vaderstad TopDown for the first pass followed by another Xerion 5000 and a Challenger MT 875C with Kometh Apache subsoilers and after that a 9620RX with a Horsch Joker
Very nice line up. I hope to film a Xerion 5000 on a Nuhn spreader soon.
👍 👍
Thank you for watching.
Wish they would have pulled into some pasture land that hasn't been farmed in years and see how much they can tear up the ground
Here is an IH 1466 I filmed working up sod in a pasture th-cam.com/video/oMgb4SiFV6k/w-d-xo.html
That 8r looked like she was having a hard time getting traction..........
It was raining and the field was slick. Running 5 shanks 8 inches deep was putting it to work.
🚜🚜😎
Thank you for watching.
👏👏👍👍🚜🚜👌👌🇧🇷
Thank you for watching.
Jason this sounds dumb but why not just chisel plow?? 2 tractors instead of 5 or 6!!
The sub soiling is more no till. It fractured the soil 18 inches deep to help enhance corn root growth next year. Chisel plowing runs 12 inches deep and turns all the soil. The sub soiling leaves the surface of the field undisturbed so it is like no till planting in the spring.
@@bigtractorpower ok sir thank you for clearing that up for me!!!
Im sure those rippers pull hard, but those tractors sure dont show it.
No diesel fuel shortage there. Lol
None 👍👍
I don't think them tunes are going in 18 inches maybe 12
They run 18 inches deep. I have filmed at this farm for 20 years. It is always 18. I have a video on the way with the farmer in a Fendt 1167 running with these John Deere’s he talks about running 18 inches deep in the cab ride along.
I never seen any farm video where they tilted the headlands.
That’s almost always the last thing to do for tillage before moving to the next field. Those last few minutes tend to be a little hectic so maybe that’s why
I understand why. Just would like to see it a few times.
Real tractors are Farmall Red colored. Sorry, no farm of my own yet. I'm hoping to to start early spring with twenty broilers and see if I can keep them alive.
With the price of diesel fuel nowdays I'd hate to think what one days fuel bill is.
The 9RX 640 with a good load on it would be over 30 gal/hr
It was running 28 gal an hour.
@@bigtractorpower how many acers per hour, I always look at it as how many gallons per acer for production cost,I use a Case IH 2500 5 shank ripper,about 1 gallon per acer or about $4.50 per acer.
@@billsauberlich7337 I have a ride along video with the farmer in this field. He was running a Fendt 1167 at 20 gallons an hour on a 9 shank 915. I think he was covering 15 acres an hour and around 230 acres in a day with a 670 Hp tractor.
@@bigtractorpower I was close, they dont smoke anymore to tell how hard they're working,lol
I'm first to watch & give the first thumbs up! What number are you?
Thank you for your enthusiasm to watch early.
I would like to see an electric vehicle pull that
Not happening at this point in time. It would eat up the charge just trying to pull away from the head land.
Number3
Thank you for your enthusiasm to watch early.