These guys ran a L2, L3, R52 and then recently upgraded to this! They feel the same way. It sure has some capacity. I enjoyed riding in it! And I knew it was a MF combine. I’ve never understood why gleaner engineers haven’t figured out a way to make the auger rotate forward just a bit so the view of the auger is as easy as these combines!
Yeah he bought it up in Michigan off auction time! Seems like a solid machine so far. I’ve never been around one of these machines before. You said it’s just your model painted grey right?
@@kahlerfamilyfarms yep. They came in 3 sizes, just like the Massey. I've heard you can typically get an A series a little cheaper because it's not a traditional Gleaner to the Allis guys and it doesn't match the paint for the Massey guys. The also made a Cat version of it if you want yellow paint.
@@ThatOliverGuyChris I was chatting with my buddy below and he was saying he didn’t think they made them long. If I remember correctly there was a A75 that predated the A76 wasn’t there? Isn’t the 7 the class and the 6 the series?
@@kahlerfamilyfarms i think the way it goes is A is axial, 7 is the series, and the last digit is the size. There were A66, then A76, and last was the A86. All the same basic size. I didn't follow that series as close as some as some of the older models, so you can take it with a grain of salt. They didn't make them as long as the R series transverse rotor machines, but they did make them for a few years.
@@ThatOliverGuyChris looking forward to seeing your harvest video with the new combine on corn! I’ll bet you’ll be able to go about as fast as you’re comfortable with that machine
Yeah I don’t know either didn’t they make a A75 then the A76? I know it was only for a few years. I feel like gleaner guys are gleaner guys for the gleaner design. Typically
Looks great 👍
Thanks!
An A76 is an MF 9795 painted grey. True Gleaners are transverse. I have a 9790 myself. I like both MF and Gleaner combines.
These guys ran a L2, L3, R52 and then recently upgraded to this! They feel the same way. It sure has some capacity. I enjoyed riding in it! And I knew it was a MF combine. I’ve never understood why gleaner engineers haven’t figured out a way to make the auger rotate forward just a bit so the view of the auger is as easy as these combines!
Interesting to see a Williams decal all the way down in Ohio. I didn't know they ever sold any of the A series.
Yeah he bought it up in Michigan off auction time! Seems like a solid machine so far. I’ve never been around one of these machines before. You said it’s just your model painted grey right?
@@kahlerfamilyfarms yep. They came in 3 sizes, just like the Massey. I've heard you can typically get an A series a little cheaper because it's not a traditional Gleaner to the Allis guys and it doesn't match the paint for the Massey guys. The also made a Cat version of it if you want yellow paint.
@@ThatOliverGuyChris I was chatting with my buddy below and he was saying he didn’t think they made them long. If I remember correctly there was a A75 that predated the A76 wasn’t there? Isn’t the 7 the class and the 6 the series?
@@kahlerfamilyfarms i think the way it goes is A is axial, 7 is the series, and the last digit is the size. There were A66, then A76, and last was the A86. All the same basic size. I didn't follow that series as close as some as some of the older models, so you can take it with a grain of salt. They didn't make them as long as the R series transverse rotor machines, but they did make them for a few years.
@@ThatOliverGuyChris looking forward to seeing your harvest video with the new combine on corn! I’ll bet you’ll be able to go about as fast as you’re comfortable with that machine
I don’t think they made those A gleaners real long
Yeah I don’t know either didn’t they make a A75 then the A76? I know it was only for a few years. I feel like gleaner guys are gleaner guys for the gleaner design. Typically
@@kahlerfamilyfarms yeah 75 and 76 and 85 and 86