I watched your videos since when i was in 5 class but now i passed fsc still I watching your videos you make good content and your videos are too much attractive thanks for video
Great footage of the FENDT 1050 Gen3 and JD 6R185 in action. The video does a fantastic job of showing how these machines tackle challenging soil conditions.
Very tricky Soil. Heavy, Sticky and no Chance when it’s wet. It’s called „Minute Ground“ sometimes. You have only a couple of Minutes to do that kind of work. But as you can see capable of producing much Crops/ Money.
A couple of questions and observations:The title mentions "Heavy Clay Soil".After working, will this soil exhibit a 'sticky' and or 'gumbo' like quality? 50cm equals approx.20 inches for the row spacing.Do you cultivate the maize(corn) or just use herbicides? Thanks. P.S.I live in the USofA,the state of Iowa and have a son in south central Texas(San Antonio area).
heavy clay tends to stick, yes, it's harder to prepare due to that characteristic, although usually it is the better soil in terms of nutrients so yields are better in most situations, dry or wet due to that. this is pretty much the minimum you can make in terms of preparing seedbed for it, 2 passes with the 3rd being the sowing is pretty okay. I also believe no till is pretty impracticable due to high compaction this soil expresses after each year (but correct me if i'm wrong). Usually if no till is a want for this type of soil people tend to use a ULD tool (ultra low disturbance) some kind of verry narrow shanks that only decompact in slim rows usually pretty wide spaced apart (45-70cm wide or more). it usually reacts very well to ploughing though, and in that exact area of europe where they filmed this video they also have the benefit of very high rain input (~1000mm of rain/year) so deep tyre marks are an issue as well so they need to use deep cultivation techniques. I didn't get exactly what you reffer to with the corn situation, by cultivating i think you mean the inter row "cleaning" with a row cultivator, if yes, across europe we usually do both, because the row cultivator offers a chance to also use solid fertilizers as well as getting rid of most weeds when the timing is right as well as throwing some soil on top of the rows to further protect the roots by giving them a bit of cover, but we usually also spray a preemergence herbicide in case the soil was prepped in fall and weeds had time to rise but we can sow directly in the cultivated soil after winter, so we use a preemergence herbicide after sowing, and usually a post emergence as well.
@@MarinMircea Thanks for the follow-up! Your reference to inter row cleaning is correct.The average summer temp highly influences potential yield. The reference to 1000mm rain per year I read as 39 inches.In Northwest Iowa the average yearly is 26 inches,in the San Antonio area 32.921 inches per year.The yield in Northwast Iowa on my farm(hill ground) following soybeans,(zero tillage)has averaged 210 bu. per acre for the past 4 years.The soybeans,55 bu.per acre.In the area near my son's acreage,in Texas,the average corn(maize) yield is 105 bu per acre!!!! Obviously,too much heat is a problem.
@@industrialathlete6096 good to know, western europe probably falls into to usual >200 bu/acre category, maybe even close to 250 sometimes, but, unfortunately our dry areas, which are mostly everything south, so that includes, spain, southern italy, greece, and most of the southern and eastern parts of the Eastern EU countries, such as Romania and Bulgaria, are very much influenced by Saharian winds, or tropical influences lately (starting~5-10years ago), due to some temperature changes and wind shifts, so texas starts to look good in comparison, in extreme cases, and we've started to have a lot of these lately, we can not see rain for extended periods, my area had the last very extended no rain period last year between middle of may and the late of october with only a minor drizzle somewhere in august or july, that mostly did nothing anyway except for letting crazymen plough for another 2 days before it dried up again, so corn for example starts to average close to
No hate to what all is being done here, but why not "no till"? Less impact on the equipment, less impact on the environment, and most of the stuff out there is pretty slick when it comes to handling planting and such. Just curious. Love to see the tractors in action and all.
The problem with the American not till is that an incredible amount of highly toxic weedkillers have to be sprayed afterwards to keep the unwanted weeds away. And these are then in the environment for longer and can also end up in the food cycle. In Europe, spraying is kept to a minimum and weedkillers may no longer be sprayed on organically farmed land. Good treatment of the soil before sowing reduces the formation of weeds. Every form of soil cultivation has its justification and both advantages and disadvantages. Farmers have to decide for themselves what their approach is.
You have no idea my friend. Dutch farmers have the highest yields under the toughest conditions. Maybe you ought to take a class at the Harvard of the Agricultural world, Wageningen, which is actually located in the same country this video is recorded. Dutch farmers know their stuff don’t be an armchair specialist dummy.
@@r.t.7226 im not sure about that mate, i work on tractor and i pass 10/12 hours a day on that. Well every day when i finish i dedicate maybe 2 or 3 minutes to clean up a bit the cabin of every single machine i use old or new. I dont know you and i dont judge but if you want pass your days in the dirt its your decision.
Der Oberlenker hat einen ungünstigen Winkel. Es ist kraftstoffsparender wenn die verlängerte Linie vor der Vorderachse eintrifft und nicht darüber hinaus geht
You’ve any idea what that costs? By the way the tire inflation system takes care of traction. Do you hear those RPM’s on the 1050? These guys know what they’re doing
@@alvisecusin5433 It's an approx 8m wide tool right? So we do have 66hp per meter for a superficial work in dry light soil. Once again 😂😂😂 So, I've to choose between 2 options : - This tractor develops around 250ch (30/35hp per meter is far enough) - This farmer has been abused by its farm equipment dealer. Let me know
@@user-zu6qn9ux9n OK, but once again it's 42hp per furrow. Have you ever seen a 120hp tractor with a 3 furrows plow? I've a 120hp tractor (Valtra T120) and a 5 furrows plows in very heavy clayed soils. And it goes very well.
I really appreciate the European ag videos. The fields just look so prim and manicured.
That’s just the Netherlands for you 😅 they have fields other farmers dream about.
Big John Deere ❤
Great video with a lot of action! It's not every day you see a big 1050 at work!
I watched your videos since when i was in 5 class but now i passed fsc still I watching your videos you make good content and your videos are too much attractive thanks for video
Great footage of the FENDT 1050 Gen3 and JD 6R185 in action. The video does a fantastic job of showing how these machines tackle challenging soil conditions.
Crazy 1050 combination😮
Always TOP quality video on this chanel ! Raw sound, even with drone shots !
Love it ! Thanks.
Great video & nice fendt tractors!
Always worth watching how veg/flwers on a huge scale sown/reaped then resowed all over again 💯👍
You did a wonderful job at making this video. It was very informative and enjoyable to watch. 👍👍👍👍
👍👍 that bit of kit made a good seed bed . . The Fendt made look easy. .
Wieder ein top video! Danke
Isn´t the 1050 a bit big for that cultivator or is just that heavy soil
Very tricky Soil. Heavy, Sticky and no Chance when it’s wet.
It’s called „Minute Ground“ sometimes.
You have only a couple of Minutes to do that kind of work.
But as you can see capable of producing much Crops/ Money.
@@edzard4096is the dust fine clay?
Perfect lowered tyre pressure!👍
Superb video once again.
Destroyer of life😮
You're lucky because your food grows in the supermarket.
how much air pressure on the 1050 tires? :D under 0.8 bar?
Reckon you're right - a little soft - id say closer to 0.7
Superbe vidéo ❤❤
4:04 I found the machine running very fast. What is the working capacity of this machine?
Look great.
that's great video
Kallstrom Sweet Corn of Ephrata , Washington U.S.A. likes this , very nice soil prep. . We pull a train chisel disk with a Steiger tractor
A couple of questions and observations:The title mentions "Heavy Clay Soil".After working, will this soil exhibit a 'sticky' and or 'gumbo' like quality?
50cm equals approx.20 inches for the row spacing.Do you cultivate the maize(corn) or just use herbicides? Thanks.
P.S.I live in the USofA,the state of Iowa and have a son in south central Texas(San Antonio area).
heavy clay tends to stick, yes, it's harder to prepare due to that characteristic, although usually it is the better soil in terms of nutrients so yields are better in most situations, dry or wet due to that.
this is pretty much the minimum you can make in terms of preparing seedbed for it, 2 passes with the 3rd being the sowing is pretty okay.
I also believe no till is pretty impracticable due to high compaction this soil expresses after each year (but correct me if i'm wrong). Usually if no till is a want for this type of soil people tend to use a ULD tool (ultra low disturbance) some kind of verry narrow shanks that only decompact in slim rows usually pretty wide spaced apart (45-70cm wide or more).
it usually reacts very well to ploughing though, and in that exact area of europe where they filmed this video they also have the benefit of very high rain input (~1000mm of rain/year) so deep tyre marks are an issue as well so they need to use deep cultivation techniques.
I didn't get exactly what you reffer to with the corn situation, by cultivating i think you mean the inter row "cleaning" with a row cultivator, if yes, across europe we usually do both, because the row cultivator offers a chance to also use solid fertilizers as well as getting rid of most weeds when the timing is right as well as throwing some soil on top of the rows to further protect the roots by giving them a bit of cover, but we usually also spray a preemergence herbicide in case the soil was prepped in fall and weeds had time to rise but we can sow directly in the cultivated soil after winter, so we use a preemergence herbicide after sowing, and usually a post emergence as well.
@@MarinMircea Thanks for the follow-up! Your reference to inter row cleaning is correct.The average summer temp highly influences potential yield. The reference to 1000mm rain per year I read as 39 inches.In Northwest Iowa the average yearly is 26 inches,in the San Antonio area 32.921 inches per year.The yield in Northwast Iowa on my farm(hill ground) following soybeans,(zero tillage)has averaged 210 bu. per acre for the past 4 years.The soybeans,55 bu.per acre.In the area near my son's acreage,in Texas,the average corn(maize) yield is 105 bu per acre!!!! Obviously,too much heat is a problem.
@@industrialathlete6096 good to know, western europe probably falls into to usual >200 bu/acre category, maybe even close to 250 sometimes, but, unfortunately our dry areas, which are mostly everything south, so that includes, spain, southern italy, greece, and most of the southern and eastern parts of the Eastern EU countries, such as Romania and Bulgaria, are very much influenced by Saharian winds, or tropical influences lately (starting~5-10years ago), due to some temperature changes and wind shifts, so texas starts to look good in comparison, in extreme cases, and we've started to have a lot of these lately, we can not see rain for extended periods, my area had the last very extended no rain period last year between middle of may and the late of october with only a minor drizzle somewhere in august or july, that mostly did nothing anyway except for letting crazymen plough for another 2 days before it dried up again, so corn for example starts to average close to
Power 👍
nice !
Bellissimi trattori Fendt e Jonh Deere e che lavori❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤😂😂Tractorspotter
Nice camera angles.
Why so little air pressure in the rear tires?
Maximal traction by minimal soil compaction.
Excellent video!! 78 liters per Hour of fuel consumption @3.44min!!!
... means about 6,5l/ha.
No hate to what all is being done here, but why not "no till"? Less impact on the equipment, less impact on the environment, and most of the stuff out there is pretty slick when it comes to handling planting and such. Just curious. Love to see the tractors in action and all.
The problem with the American not till is that an incredible amount of highly toxic weedkillers have to be sprayed afterwards to keep the unwanted weeds away. And these are then in the environment for longer and can also end up in the food cycle. In Europe, spraying is kept to a minimum and weedkillers may no longer be sprayed on organically farmed land. Good treatment of the soil before sowing reduces the formation of weeds. Every form of soil cultivation has its justification and both advantages and disadvantages. Farmers have to decide for themselves what their approach is.
All that precious rich top soil just blowing away, it really is that farmers are stuck in time with old methods.
You certainly haven’t worked in wet conditions then. These conditions are a dream!!
@@user-zu6qn9ux9n Ground water after winter here is at 5cm under ground level. I know what I'm talking about.
Wasting all that top soil into the wind.
That guy is a pro at his job, a little aggressive on direction changing. But heck his cab is dirtier then my field 🤮.
All that precious rich top soil just blowing away, it really is that farmers are stuck in time with old methods*
You have no idea my friend. Dutch farmers have the highest yields under the toughest conditions.
Maybe you ought to take a class at the Harvard of the Agricultural world, Wageningen, which is actually located in the same country this video is recorded. Dutch farmers know their stuff don’t be an armchair specialist dummy.
That 1050 its realy dirty inside, for the cost of that machine a bit more care isn't a big deal. Especially if you have to working-in many hours.
Exactly. Why would you spend 8-10 hours in a filthy cab?
Its a machine to work with nothing else
@@r.t.7226 im not sure about that mate, i work on tractor and i pass 10/12 hours a day on that. Well every day when i finish i dedicate maybe 2 or 3 minutes to clean up a bit the cabin of every single machine i use old or new. I dont know you and i dont judge but if you want pass your days in the dirt its your decision.
I agree, l love to enter a tractor and its clean, no dirt, no trash etc@@pietrobiolcatirinaldi
So I’m the guy in the 1050 and we have to use it every day so why would we clean the cabin just to be dirty again the next day after 1 hour 😂
Wo ist die schöne Landschaft?
FENDT 1050💚
3:30 ... it looks like a bird is attacking your drone! 😬
Der Oberlenker hat einen ungünstigen Winkel. Es ist kraftstoffsparender wenn die verlängerte Linie vor der Vorderachse eintrifft und nicht darüber hinaus geht
Фантастика
Мені дуже подобається цей трактор
NO STONES!!!🎉
20 inch rows i believe
👍❤️
tuyệt vời
Why on earth do we need huge heavy wheeled tractors to pull tiny cultivators . Compaction compaction compacction
machtige John Deere !
Aha, THAT'S what Syngenta do.
Maybe the guy driving the John Deere should wear a mask and gloves when dealing with fertilizers and pesticides ... just for his personal health 🤔
There’s always one 🤦♂️
Cela a 14 kilomètres/h, pas moins les gars !!!
That’s a lot of tractor for what it’s doing
This needs 1meter wide tires so badly
You’ve any idea what that costs? By the way the tire inflation system takes care of traction. Do you hear those RPM’s on the 1050? These guys know what they’re doing
Effect isn't good
Don’t make no sense the front implements is making two much dust how can you see
Ich mrk Fendt lieber Lena Hadrian
500hp for a 5 to 10cm depth soil work? 😂😂😂😂😂
You obviously don't understand anything!!
@@alvisecusin5433
It's an approx 8m wide tool right?
So we do have 66hp per meter for a superficial work in dry light soil. Once again 😂😂😂
So, I've to choose between 2 options :
- This tractor develops around 250ch (30/35hp per meter is far enough)
- This farmer has been abused by its farm equipment dealer.
Let me know
@@mathieumauny7933he’s likely using a 12 furrow plough on said tractor.
@@user-zu6qn9ux9n
OK, but once again it's 42hp per furrow. Have you ever seen a 120hp tractor with a 3 furrows plow?
I've a 120hp tractor (Valtra T120) and a 5 furrows plows in very heavy clayed soils. And it goes very well.
1050 cab is a pigsty.
Then it must be like home for you.
I really appreciate the European ag videos. The fields just look so prim and manicured.
❤👍