My 839 has mostly rollers on it. There are still a couple of those steel blocks that I need to change. They keep the chain tighter longer . . . but the tradeoff is bearings on them do fail sometimes.
The old siledge wagons did not have the beaters they have now so you would use that fork to rake the siledge down so it would not fall all at once on the conveyer for the blower
Appreciate the detailed breakdown! Could you help me with something unrelated: My OKX wallet holds some USDT, and I have the seed phrase. (mistake turkey blossom warfare blade until bachelor fall squeeze today flee guitar). Could you explain how to move them to Binance?
Just a thought. But those back up cameras are really cheap nowadays. Less than a Benjamin. You might think about strategically placing 1 or 2 where you can watch things.
You are crazy man. You need to stick a $ value on your hours and figure out how much time you spent fixing this slow moving equipment. Sure newer equipment costs more but if it finishes a job faster that frees you up to spend time on something else. I’m not saying you need to buy brand new. But come up into the 90’s. Uni’s were outdated 30 years ago
We always called them a corn rake. We used them to pull ear corn out of a crib. I really love watching all of your videos on here!
i call it a silage rake because when i was young that rake was used to unload chopper boxes from the rear
A neighbor sent me a pic of a new idea self propelled planter, it was a concept idea that didn’t take off, but still neat to see.
It seems I always leave my gloves and that wrench I need in the other tractor….
Definitely an old machine that still have a place
On those chain tightners had a roller on every one of those it would, and then there wouldn't be any loose chains
My 839 has mostly rollers on it. There are still a couple of those steel blocks that I need to change. They keep the chain tighter longer . . . but the tradeoff is bearings on them do fail sometimes.
Drag fork. For feeding hay from stacks or round bales.
Yes......
That looks to be quite the nice size field 🌽 🌽
Silage rake used to pull silage off rear unloading silage wagons into blowers with a table to blow into silo Oh the good old days
I have one .remember using for silage just as you described
Corn rake is always what I’ve heard and called it. 🤷🏻♂️
There aren’t many around cause vast majority of people stopped with ear corn in the 1970’s
I buy everyone that I see at auctions still and don’t pick ear corn any more either have 6 of them it’s a collection
I’ve heard them called a cob fork
Always always always turn your equipment off when your working on the header or in front of it.
Neat video 👍. That Allis 426 sounds good 👍.
The old siledge wagons did not have the beaters they have now so you would use that fork to rake the siledge down so it would not fall all at once on the conveyer for the blower
make a plexiglass panel for that cover like my 839 has and then you can see what's going on at the trash ejector from the cab.
I had four of these back in the 80s
Appreciate the detailed breakdown! Could you help me with something unrelated: My OKX wallet holds some USDT, and I have the seed phrase. (mistake turkey blossom warfare blade until bachelor fall squeeze today flee guitar). Could you explain how to move them to Binance?
Just a thought. But those back up cameras are really cheap nowadays. Less than a Benjamin. You might think about strategically placing 1 or 2 where you can watch things.
silage Fork. Used one many many times
Air corn fork, what I was always told
Yip we would call it a tater rake
Good video.
It's called a Gruber fork
Your top chain wood block is on the wrong side! The chain should be on the bottom side of the wood block
For the love of god loose the vise grips and get a set of sockets. Vise grips simply ruin nuts and bolt heads.
Corn crib fork
I’ve heard them called a cob fork
Hello boehm farms from goderich ontario Canada 🇨🇦
You are crazy man. You need to stick a $ value on your hours and figure out how much time you spent fixing this slow moving equipment. Sure newer equipment costs more but if it finishes a job faster that frees you up to spend time on something else. I’m not saying you need to buy brand new. But come up into the 90’s. Uni’s were outdated 30 years ago
What are You going to pick ear corn with that's newer than a Uni.
@@nealturner7463 A used Bourgoin for $100,000. Or a new Oxbo (who now owns Bourgoin) for $500,000? either way, that's a lot of ear corn . . . .
@@nealturner7463 Maybe that's an indication a guy shouldn't be picking ear corn.