I worked for a custom hauler in Ontario and we used 2 12,000 gal and 2 15,000 gal nuhn quad trains on John Deere 8R tractors. We estimate the weight to be about 220,000 lbs. we also used a tire inflation/deflation system to help with compaction
Farming, Fixing and Fabricating operator Andy, was just talking about their manure tankers in his recent video on 4-25. He said they had a lot of trouble with their Janeway tanker axles (starts talking about it around the 33 minute mark) and that they have had good luck with their NUHN spreaders. They use frack tanks to help keep the spreaders full rather than relying on each semi getting to the field in a timely manner. Seems like a good idea to me.
Hello, my name is Will and I work for the farm shown in this video. Your comment about the Jamesway spreader axles is pretty accurate. In my opinion the real weak points with this spreader are the wheel hubs. This spreader usually snaps at least one hub off every year. Not to mention the non stop leaking of oil out of the wheel hubs. We also currently have an order in for a Nuhn 9000 gallon spreader for next year. As far as frack tanks go, we can’t properly utilize them because of our field sizes. This farm only has an average field size of just over 10 acres per field. With this small size, we would spend more money and man power moving frack tanks from field to field every couple of hours, then to have a little time lost with the idling spreader.
@@williambarrett96 Great info. Thanks for the reply. I believe Andy over at FFF said they kept snapping off hubs as well. They had the same model IIRC that you do. I know that so far he is very pleased with his Nuhn spreaders.
Nice video Jason. It seems to be that time of year for tankers and spreaders. This year the manure will be important with cost and availability of fertilizer will hurt a lot of farms!
It is a great in house fertilizer source. This application is used to raise organic corn so it is the one and only fertilizer source for this operation.
🇧🇴 Fans n1 👀 👍 saludos cordiales desde Sudamérica Santa Cruz bolivia 🇧🇴 👍 excelente estamos de buelta amigos 👍 me encanta ver este tipo de videos 👏 👍 👍 👍
On our farm in Eastern Germany we use 2 Claas Xerion 4200 with Kaweco 30000 liter Saddle tanks .They transfer the full load from the semis in less than 3 minutes.2 or 3 semis depending on the distance to the field running constantly back and forth.So we made between 100 and 120 hectares a day.
That is really cool to see. I'm amazed at the weight of the tank when full. You'd need that 620hp for sure. On a side note I bet the farmer is thankful for an enclosed cab😂. GO BTP 💪
Those injectors take a ton of horsepower. We have a 7300 gallon tank with a chisel type injector on a Magnum 275 turned up to around 330. On flat ground it takes close to 100% power to go about 5 mph. For those hills in NY you’d want a big horse on a tank like that. Thanks for filming this.
Wow, what a monster!! With my tanker i have to go 4,5 times to bring out the same amount of manure!! Great to see such machines. And compliments for the good quality. Greetings from South Tyrol, the northest part of italy!!
Jason how is the yield on the corn on that organic farm? I am south of Rochester helping my college friend and without fertilizer and spraying the yield would be terrible. Thanks for all your videos! Always good to see different equipment working.
I am not sure. If you email me at toytractortimes@gmail.com I can try to find out. I hope to follow more of this farms organic process. Here in Western Kentucky an organic farm I follow that used chicken litter as a fertilizer source for corn has 120 bu. Corn by plowing, applying chicken litter, traditional tillage and row crop cultivating after the plants started growing. Weeds and grass seemed to be the biggest drain on yield here in Kentucky.
@@sharpshooter7127 I know of guys putting on 16xxx per acre with drag lines never heard of a legal limit but the most I've heard of being put down was 18xxx per acre and that's got to be almost making the ground soupy at that point
Guess the equipment got a little bigger. I grew up using a 35 bushel John Deere manure spreader behind a Cockshut 30. Nice operation to have trucks delivering the manure.
These viseos are great! I would love it if you came to wisconsin and saw how they do it around here! Braun Inc, RWA INC and Phils Pumping are the companies I see around northeast Wi. They run dragline, fed from a "shitbox" as I call it, in the ditch, fed from tanker semis dumping into the shitbox.
On our farm we spread manure with a 14000 gallon Nuhn Quad tank, it’s pulled by a JD 9520R. We also have a Jamesway 7400 gallon tanker that is pulled by either a JD 8760 or a 7R230.
Someday I know Lamb farms well. Their chopping team is the most watched Big Tractor Power video of all time with 7 million views posted at th-cam.com/video/Yuz-kqVyUaw/w-d-xo.html
@@bigtractorpower I’m a farm boy from Niagara County, I did recognize the equipment and farm location with that haylage video. Living in KS now after my Air Force career. Still enjoy vacations back home to visit farm friends. Keep up the great video work, I really enjoy watching.
Greetings from North Tipperary , Birr, Ireland. I use a 3,600 Gallon abbey tanker with dribble Bar, pulled by a Fendt 828. Driven by Joe O Brien and friends.
Very nice spreading team. Fendt makes very nice tractors. The dribble bar is a feature that has not made it to the United States. The wide bar with the tubes looks like a good way to reduce compaction and increase application area.
The problem with them big quad axel tanks is to much weight you'll be able to see waves when the corn is tall enough tankers in general but especially the big ones
I like watching the large boom spreaders in the UK on TH-cam with the tubes that apply the material on the surface of the field. So far that type off application has not been used in the US. Direct injection and surface spreading are the main applications here.
Very rough back of the envelope says they run the spreader around 60 days out of the year. That's a lot of miles with a lot of load over the field. Four axles and big tires do only so much to revent compaction.
It’s allot of one way application and travel back to cover the field. Injecting is only taking a 15ft swath. It’s not a high speed wide running operation.
That was the filming time from time it started filing to the time it pulled away. I clipped out the filing in this video because a stationary view for 5 minutes is boring.
I would kill for that setup, big farm I work for has me running a jd 8310 on a 7300 gallon tank way under powered and under weighted for what I'm pulling!
In Ny some farms use frac tanks to unload in and refill from. This field was close enough to the farm to have a steady supply of trucks to refill on the side of the road.
Great to see some different farming equipment on the channel. Keep up the great work. Greetings from Ireland...
I worked for a custom hauler in Ontario and we used 2 12,000 gal and 2 15,000 gal nuhn quad trains on John Deere 8R tractors. We estimate the weight to be about 220,000 lbs. we also used a tire inflation/deflation system to help with compaction
Wow that's an epic spreading operation. Excellent video big T 👍👍👍
I love seeing these NY dairy farms being featured. Makes me really appreciate the farms I see when driving through the countryside
WNY is a great farming area. Their are more 4wd tractors in this region than any other part of the world.
@@bigtractorpower No way! the more you know. Love the channel sir
Farming, Fixing and Fabricating operator Andy, was just talking about their manure tankers in his recent video on 4-25. He said they had a lot of trouble with their Janeway tanker axles (starts talking about it around the 33 minute mark) and that they have had good luck with their NUHN spreaders. They use frack tanks to help keep the spreaders full rather than relying on each semi getting to the field in a timely manner. Seems like a good idea to me.
Hello, my name is Will and I work for the farm shown in this video. Your comment about the Jamesway spreader axles is pretty accurate. In my opinion the real weak points with this spreader are the wheel hubs. This spreader usually snaps at least one hub off every year. Not to mention the non stop leaking of oil out of the wheel hubs. We also currently have an order in for a Nuhn 9000 gallon spreader for next year. As far as frack tanks go, we can’t properly utilize them because of our field sizes. This farm only has an average field size of just over 10 acres per field. With this small size, we would spend more money and man power moving frack tanks from field to field every couple of hours, then to have a little time lost with the idling spreader.
@@williambarrett96 Great info. Thanks for the reply. I believe Andy over at FFF said they kept snapping off hubs as well. They had the same model IIRC that you do. I know that so far he is very pleased with his Nuhn spreaders.
Nice video Jason. It seems to be that time of year for tankers and spreaders. This year the manure will be important with cost and availability of fertilizer will hurt a lot of farms!
It is a great in house fertilizer source. This application is used to raise organic corn so it is the one and only fertilizer source for this operation.
@@bigtractorpower organic you say? Does this farm employ crop flaming too for weed control?
🇧🇴 Fans n1 👀 👍 saludos cordiales desde Sudamérica Santa Cruz bolivia 🇧🇴 👍 excelente estamos de buelta amigos 👍 me encanta ver este tipo de videos 👏 👍 👍 👍
Any video with a Steiger in it gets an automatic thumbs up!
😁👍👍
That is a big rig! Very interesting. Thanks Jason.
Thank you for watching.
That’s my boy Zack in the spreader!
😁👍
On our farm in Eastern Germany we use 2 Claas Xerion 4200 with Kaweco 30000 liter Saddle tanks .They transfer the full load from the semis in less than 3 minutes.2 or 3 semis depending on the distance to the field running constantly back and forth.So we made between 100 and 120 hectares a day.
Impressive spreading operation. 👍👍
What a setup. Another great video as always. Thank you for the solid content.
Thank you for watching.
That is really cool to see. I'm amazed at the weight of the tank when full. You'd need that 620hp for sure. On a side note I bet the farmer is thankful for an enclosed cab😂. GO BTP 💪
In hills you will indeed need about 600 hp, we can pull a manure tanker exactly half the size with a 200 hp tractor on flat ground 😁
We pull 9500 gallon houle tankers fully loaded with john deere 8285r’s without any problems up hills and all.
Those injectors take a ton of horsepower. We have a 7300 gallon tank with a chisel type injector on a Magnum 275 turned up to around 330. On flat ground it takes close to 100% power to go about 5 mph. For those hills in NY you’d want a big horse on a tank like that. Thanks for filming this.
Thank you for sharing about your 275 and 7300. It never hurts to have power and weight up front on a heavy hard pulling implement.
Wow, what a monster!! With my tanker i have to go 4,5 times to bring out the same amount of manure!! Great to see such machines. And compliments for the good quality.
Greetings from South Tyrol, the northest part of italy!!
Thank you for watching.
Jason how is the yield on the corn on that organic farm? I am south of Rochester helping my college friend and without fertilizer and spraying the yield would be terrible. Thanks for all your videos! Always good to see different equipment working.
I am not sure. If you email me at toytractortimes@gmail.com I can try to find out. I hope to follow more of this farms organic process. Here in Western Kentucky an organic farm I follow that used chicken litter as a fertilizer source for corn has 120 bu. Corn by plowing, applying chicken litter, traditional tillage and row crop cultivating after the plants started growing. Weeds and grass seemed to be the biggest drain on yield here in Kentucky.
That liquid manure spreader is massive😉👍 the quadtrac is a great match to it👍😁
They are moving allot of fertilizer.
That is putting a lot of manure in the ground. Over 9000 gallons per acre that's mind blowing
Maybe a lot of water in manure? Isn't there a limit on how much manure you can use on average per acre in the USA?
We put on 13xxx gal per acre with a drag line
@@stiegerstx500 good gracious
@@sharpshooter7127 I know of guys putting on 16xxx per acre with drag lines never heard of a legal limit but the most I've heard of being put down was 18xxx per acre and that's got to be almost making the ground soupy at that point
@@stiegerstx500 we don't see that down here in georgia only thing used here is chicken litter or commercial fertilizer
We use a Fendt 930 at a Hoover Ag spread and dribble bar, dragline. because of the hills in east central pa are too much for a tanker.
Nice spreading team. Fendt tractotrs are good machines.
Unreal machinery and a class video
Great vídeo Jason.
Guess the equipment got a little bigger. I grew up using a 35 bushel John Deere manure spreader behind a Cockshut 30. Nice operation to have trucks delivering the manure.
Neat spreading team. I wish I could go back and time and film classics like those hard at work.
That thing is absolutely awesome!
Thank you for watching.
Great work 👌 🙏
Thank you for watching.
What’s max gross weight on that spreader? That thing is huge! Got it 107,000 pounds. Wow!
These viseos are great! I would love it if you came to wisconsin and saw how they do it around here! Braun Inc, RWA INC and Phils Pumping are the companies I see around northeast Wi. They run dragline, fed from a "shitbox" as I call it, in the ditch, fed from tanker semis dumping into the shitbox.
On our farm we spread manure with a 14000 gallon Nuhn Quad tank, it’s pulled by a JD 9520R. We also have a Jamesway 7400 gallon tanker that is pulled by either a JD 8760 or a 7R230.
Nice spreading team. Which do you like better on the Jamesway the 8760 or the 7230R?
@@bigtractorpower I actually like the 8760 better
Great video, never seen a liquid manure rig operate
Thank you for watching.
Awesome Manure Setup.... 😯😯😯👍
It is an impressive spreading team.
Now that is a big old rig. 😎
Good video.
Thank you for watching.
After their done, what cleaner/rinse do they use for that tank ?
I do not know. I assume like any piece of farm equipment they power wash it with soap.
We appreciate the sights and sounds… how was the smell
When they are injecting the smell is not very prevalent or even noticeable. If they top spread it then it gets pretty powerful.
You should come to New York and spend some time with the crew that does dragline manure application
Lamb Farm near Oakfield. Big operation, 3 dairy farms, Oakfield, Wilson, and In Ohio, plus heifer farms.
Someday I know Lamb farms well. Their chopping team is the most watched Big Tractor Power video of all time with 7 million views posted at th-cam.com/video/Yuz-kqVyUaw/w-d-xo.html
Stephen I grew up in WNY. It would be neat to feature a drag line application crew sometime.
@@bigtractorpower I’m a farm boy from Niagara County, I did recognize the equipment and farm location with that haylage video. Living in KS now after my Air Force career. Still enjoy vacations back home to visit farm friends. Keep up the great video work, I really enjoy watching.
Whereabouts in Western NY?
So how much does that setup weigh fully loaded? 80 odd tons I'm guessing
I mention in the video it is just over 107,000 pounds loaded.
@@bigtractorpower oops dunno how I missed that
Greetings from North Tipperary , Birr, Ireland. I use a 3,600 Gallon abbey tanker with dribble Bar, pulled by a Fendt 828. Driven by Joe O Brien and friends.
Very nice spreading team. Fendt makes very nice tractors. The dribble bar is a feature that has not made it to the United States. The wide bar with the tubes looks like a good way to reduce compaction and increase application area.
The problem with them big quad axel tanks is to much weight you'll be able to see waves when the corn is tall enough tankers in general but especially the big ones
beings organic and the conditions of the field, i would reckon they still have to plow
Cool to see a big liquid manure spreader, be interesting to see how much more manure they could spread with a transfer tank station and or frac tank
Pplpo
Some rig, In UK the rear aplicators are double width of this, hydraulic folding for highway travel
I like watching the large boom spreaders in the UK on TH-cam with the tubes that apply the material on the surface of the field. So far that type off application has not been used in the US. Direct injection and surface spreading are the main applications here.
Very rough back of the envelope says they run the spreader around 60 days out of the year. That's a lot of miles with a lot of load over the field. Four axles and big tires do only so much to revent compaction.
Hopefully I can show you the tillage operation that follows this. It’s impressive.
20 to 50 acres a day, is it really worth the fuel?
What is the liquid manure from???
Dairy cows.
Great video BTP. Good to see you were in WNY. I’m not too far from there. I’m from Syracuse NY. Gave you gotten any videos from near here?
I grew up in Rochester. Stay tuned for tractors working along I-90 over to Syracuse and on I-81 up to Watertown.
Sights and sounds but not the smells!! Thank God!
The smell is really not bad because it’s all being injected into the soil. It’s when they’re top spreading that it gets pretty powerful in the air.
@@bigtractorpower Stirring the lagoon was not for the faint of heart!
Hello! Awesome Red Team!
Red Power all the way.
@@bigtractorpower 👌
Are there Olson European style injector in the us?
I have not heard of that type of injector before I will have to look it up and see if I have come across one.
Hi BTP great video my spreader is 2600 gallon only 👌🇵🇹🇵🇹
My uncle had hogs, we used a 105 White and a Badger liquid manure spreader.
Great spreading team. The 2-105 is one of my favorite tractors.
I have a CaseIH 190 Magnum with a Jamesway Ultratrack 5700 with VTI 8 row 30'' Injector works well on our Dairy operation.
Very nice spreading team.
I thought I think we do some more acres than what you said that’s putting down a lot of manure
It’s allot of one way application and travel back to cover the field. Injecting is only taking a 15ft swath. It’s not a high speed wide running operation.
Is it GPS driven?
Yes they gps.
@@bigtractorpower Thanks!
Quite a setup they have.
,Muy bueno
By my math, it would take a pretty beefy pump with a flow rate of around 1900 GPM or so to load this 9600 gallon beast in 5 minutes
That was the filming time from time it started filing to the time it pulled away. I clipped out the filing in this video because a stationary view for 5 minutes is boring.
I would kill for that setup, big farm I work for has me running a jd 8310 on a 7300 gallon tank way under powered and under weighted for what I'm pulling!
Thousands of gallons of liquid can give a tractor a work. I got to film an 8310 chisel plowing. They are nice tractors.
@@bigtractorpower 100% agree its a great tractor, only on tank with injectors because big articulate is down. My favorite John deere behind the 4020.
Big Red gittin' er' done
Thank you for watching.
hope you got to stop by the Hourigan farm from the Farming Fixing and Fabricating channel 👍
Stay tuned for chopping at Andy’s this fall. FF&F is one of my favorite TH-cam channels to watch.
Total Weight = 76 tonnes ( or 83.75 ton US ) !
The 107,000 lbs figure comes from the Jamesway sales brochure.
Suprised they don't use a intermediate transfer trailer to buffer between semi's unless that's more a European style thing.
In Ny some farms use frac tanks to unload in and refill from. This field was close enough to the farm to have a steady supply of trucks to refill on the side of the road.
That weighs a bit
Yes it does.
Over 2000 videos Jason that is a lot of editing
It has been. This video was 2,098. I have enjoyed sharing all these farm machines at work.
✌️✌️✌️
👏👏👏👍👍🚜🚜🚜👌👌🇧🇷
Well Andrew usesj John Deere need isay more
That's a whole lot of politics getting spread at once
That’s a really funny comment. Hilarious.
Wow that's a lot of sh*t!