A friend of mine bought one of these in 1989. He still has it and it still does the job. I've always liked the older equipment because it has less computers, monitors, sensors etc to fubar your day. Great video as always.
I love the Case IH Combines so much that if I had the opportunity I’d ride in one harvesting corn or soybeans( preferably corn) all day and never get sick of it
Yeah on the farm that I live on there’s a 2377 Case IH Combine that I “hunt for” or in other words look for as hard as I possibly can in the fall season so that I can take combine rides in it and so far not much luck but hopefully that changes this coming weekend and I can be blessed with a Case IH 2377 Combine ride :( I mean this is why I love the fall season because of farming and the beautiful landscapes and different colors in the trees and blue mountains💞🇺🇸☮️🚜❤️I wish I could get a ride in what I call the “family combine” this coming weekend :/
Still run a 1979 IH Axial Flow combine. Does a great job in wheat, millet and milo. So far, have been lucky in still finding parts to keep it running well.
Our 1660 combine with a IH 466 engine has been our main girl for over 20 years. It's great for our 400 acres a year of corn and with duals and a mudhog system it'll go just about anywhere in our area in WNY
Many years ago one of my customers got a new 1440 combine. He brought in his first load of spring wheat and when I got the scale ticket in my office I saw that my guys didn't take any dockage on the load. I asked them about it and they showed me the sample from the load. The sample was as clean as seed wheat. We were impressed.
Our red cab 1985 IH 1460 has the factory DT466 engine. You would be surprised at the numerous updates such as shaft size and bearing sizes on some parts. We have had everything off of ours except the cab, engine and one front final drive. Dad still used it this fall with no break downs.
There are plenty of International machines with original engines/radiators/etc that weren't factory spec. The assembly line didn't stop because a 414 wasn't available, while a 436 was.
G F Cooper Farms in Ohio. We've got the IH 1460 and 1480 combines that we are still using today to harvest corn and beans with. Love these older machines.
It amazes me to see how clean and straightforward the controls were on this 1985 Case IH 1460. When you think about just how complicated the electronics are on the harvesters of today, you almost need to be a rocket scientist to run them. 😉 Love seeing your videos my friend.
This was a great video on this older combine Jason. Enjoyed hearing the history and seeing how much things have become more sophisticated in the new combines. Thank you. Peter
Great video Jason. I love watching classic combines harvesting corn and beans. They may not be high powered or fancy but they still get the job done.😊😊😊
Memories from Indiana! The first combine I bought was a 1460 after my Dad sold his New Holland 985 which was a great machine, but after he drove the 1460 he thought he was in heaven! Soooooo much easier to work on, the 985 it always seemed like you'd have to take off 2 belts to get to the one that needed replacing. On my third 1660 (combine fires) now a 1990 model. Would have replaced it with a 2166 or 2366 by now but a rod went through the block on the Cummins motor and rebuilt it. But maybe next year. Really want to see if the newer cab's on the 2000 series are less dusty due to having covid lung and on oxygen. If anyone thinks they are an improvement please let me know. If not I'll keep on rolling in the Ole 1660. And nice video!
The first combine I learned to drive was a 1460 in 1997 when I was 15 in wheat. I choked it down every time I came across a thistle weed. What a long summer!
We run a pair of 1480’s on our farm in wheat and canola. Great old machines, easy to run, easy to work on, and they do a great job all these years later
Hi Jason. Thank you for your videos. The only combine I ever rode or drove was back in 1975 here in New Zealand. It had no cab, just a sun screen. Steering levers brake system to steer it. It had also been converted from a bagging system to bulk. Also a petrol engine, straight 4 cylinder. Harvested barley for feed in Hawkes Bay province. No photos and I cannot remember the model. You got very warm and itchy harvesting barley. We also baled the straw. Best regards, Silas.
Love the video. We have a beautiful well-kept well-maintained one at auction this week in Indiana. It has been an excellent piece of equipment in our farming business. Retired from farming so equipment no longer needed.
I owned a 1460 for several years, but I believe it was manufactured before the sale to J I Case. Had a 4wd added to it after a wet fall that saw me pulled backwards out of sand hills numerous times. Great combine for the time! Traded on a 1660 that I ran for over ten years.
My boss's brother has two CaseIH 1680s with 6-row headers for grain corn here in northern Germany. Both machines harvest between 250-600 hectares of corn every year. He also has a partially restored International 1480, but unfortunately the machine is not running yet.
Wow that really brings back memories I grew up in one of them things learned how to drive and operate a combine I think we had close to 10,000 hours on ours before we ever got rid of it probably one of the best combines ever built The new ones are junk at 5000 hours I have one I know
$86,700 in 1985. Wow. We had a 1480. It was a very good machine. The 466 would run on full out day after day. The hardest duty cycle application known to man. I ran our 1480 quite a bit, often late into the night. We wore out the transition cone on it. Not easy to replace. Our 1480 replaced a TR75 and a 914 and did just about as much as both together. The 1480 got replaced with more TR - 95, 97 and 99. Those were good combines except the stone traps weren't the best.
Hi our family has been going down on the wheat run and we do alot of custom work in the fall here in southern minnesota but anyways my dad and uncle would trade combines every fall and in in 85 I remember we were supposed to get 4 iH 1480s but two of them and up showed up as caseih 1480 I can remember alot of our customers thought we repainted them but my uncle would always say that's the way the dam things showed up needless to say he was never happy about that merger so in 1990 when massey came out with the 8570 we traded and started running massey until 2019 in 2020 we went back to caseih now we have 4 8250s.
Last combine our family bought was international 1460 in 1979. When started on 2500 acres rice farm in south east Texas. In 1962 had massy 90 2 international 151 & 2 international 403 In 64 got j d 105 Then massy 510 eventually 3 of those then massy 750 and international 915 when got 1460. It😂was unbelievable. Cut 200000 lbs in one day in 160 bushel corn. 160-180 k rice with 18 ft header. For time nothing else was close
I will have to do a look over next time I see one of these model years. I assummed the owners upgraded the paint to look like a newer model. thanks for posting
I have the same combine, 2nd great machine. 3200 hours on it. Was a late serial number machine. Some of the parts on it are the same as the 1660. Run a 22 ft straight cut header on it for wheat and barley. Love the straight pipe on it sounds great.
I live in Nebraska out by North Platte there's still a few of them around. Yeah good combines you don't have the electronic screwing up your day when they go bad.
My old boss well my first farm boss if I remember correctly ran a 1660 or a 1680 case international combine with ether a 4 row or a 6 row head I can't remember off hand but i'm 26 years old and I love these older combines and machines
I had a 1440 ih same size rotor but build a little lighter. I was told the 1440 was put on the old ih 815 frames and the 1460 on the 915 frames with the turbo on the 436 engine. I liked mine
Good machine I remember somebody in S Ontario had one late 70s. With a grain cart could combine 60 acres of corn a day unloading on the go. The rotor was touchy in damp conditions they said. We had a Turbo 700 Deere great machine too
This video is a little hard on me today. Seen a combine like that harvest alot of corn. Great combine, I knew it was a 1985 model before you indicated that it was that year model. John T.
Being the trucker that I am I would be interested just what the load weighed in at. Usually if you are loading to the bows like that you are beyond running overweight.
I ran an international 1420 on a farm I worked for for many acres. Then we upgraded to a 1666. That was like a caddy compared to the 1420. The 1666 is still going. Just seen it cutting soybeans yesterday.
I see he has the rear tires facing forwards, so is that one a HRWA model or is that just how he had them at the time? I enjoy seeing classic/vintage machine still in good shape out there getting things done just fine. BTP- did you ever notice that the refrigerator on the TV show friends was an International Harvester?
International Harvester Axial Flow, Massey Ferguson and Allis Chalmers Gleaner are my favorite purely because they lead and have a amazing history. Massey I think were the first to create a self propelled combine harvester.
You are right they are all very historic. I enjoy filming the classics. Gleaner built the first self propelled combine in 1923. Allis-Chalmers bought Gleaner in 1955. AGCO has special S9 Gleaners with 100 years of Gleaner graphics for 2023.
@@bigtractorpower My apologies. I stated that as many years ago I remember reading something at the Massey Ferguson dealership I worked at after high school regarding Massey being the first self propelled. Anyways regarding the Internationals and the Gleaners I mentioned, I say that because they both oozes there brands identity thru engineering, styling and colors very strongly. All the brands in recent 20 yrs or so they have very similar lines.... This to me is what keeps the memories and dreams of the brands alive for the owners. Here's a quote as follows. Introduced in 1938, the MH-20 pioneered a harvesting revolution, for the first time separating the tractor from the trailed reaper machines, providing large area farmers with huge gains in productivity and performance. The machine not only made a massive leap forward in farm mechanisation, but also introduced the term ‘combine harvester’ and laid the foundations for further harvesting innovations.
We had a 1482 with a 6788 pulling it and then later on a 1480 with upgraded axles from a 1680 and upgraded feeder housing hydraulics from a 1680 to lift larger and heavier tables.
Your narrative is historically accurate. However, you just didn't mention the fact that the 1985 Case-IH models are simply transitional. Another interesting fact that you can add, is that starting in 1986, which is the first full year of the Case-IH combines, is that the radiator and rotary screen were reconfigured, to the back of the engine compartment. Also, another unique feature, was the really big numbers emblazoned on the separators, above the stripe that bore the corporate name. Those lasted until 1993. Then Case-IH return to the smaller font, and included it in the stripe, just like before.
I’m super curious, where do you get all your specs for the equipment?? You do an amazing job with your history and specs!! As a farm boy I memorized tractor specs growing up. Now I’m an engineer, but still help grow a few crops on the old dairy (retired) farm.
I have collected sales literature at tractor dealers since I was 5 years old. I have a fairly complete collection of all brands. Original sales literature is helpful for specs and details for a production run.
Exactly like the last one I sold in late 88, early 89 when I was sales rep. I think the sale price with flex head was around $125k. Price seemed insane.
@@bigtractorpower 1460 for sure but it may have been a few years after the one in the video actually. I watched this first without sound. It had a Mud Hog axle added to it so that bumped it up some. It's been a long time.
A friend of mine bought one of these in 1989. He still has it and it still does the job. I've always liked the older equipment because it has less computers, monitors, sensors etc to fubar your day. Great video as always.
I agree with you Frank Ward.
How old are those Case IH Combines?
I love the Case IH Combines so much that if I had the opportunity I’d ride in one harvesting corn or soybeans( preferably corn) all day and never get sick of it
I had a 1460 ih. Was a good combine. Ran pretty much trouble free. I harvested corn, beans and wheat with it. Did a great job.
Very nice. Thank you for sharing.
Yeah on the farm that I live on there’s a 2377 Case IH Combine that I “hunt for” or in other words look for as hard as I possibly can in the fall season so that I can take combine rides in it and so far not much luck but hopefully that changes this coming weekend and I can be blessed with a Case IH 2377 Combine ride :( I mean this is why I love the fall season because of farming and the beautiful landscapes and different colors in the trees and blue mountains💞🇺🇸☮️🚜❤️I wish I could get a ride in what I call the “family combine” this coming weekend :/
Still run a 1979 IH Axial Flow combine. Does a great job in wheat, millet and milo. So far, have been lucky in still finding parts to keep it running well.
badass
That’s a well cared for combine. The Case IH paint scheme on the old 14 series body makes for a sharp machine.
Our 1660 combine with a IH 466 engine has been our main girl for over 20 years. It's great for our 400 acres a year of corn and with duals and a mudhog system it'll go just about anywhere in our area in WNY
Many years ago one of my customers got a new 1440 combine. He brought in his first load of spring wheat and when I got the scale ticket in my office I saw that my guys didn't take any dockage on the load. I asked them about it and they showed me the sample from the load. The sample was as clean as seed wheat. We were impressed.
Our red cab 1985 IH 1460 has the factory DT466 engine. You would be surprised at the numerous updates such as shaft size and bearing sizes on some parts. We have had everything off of ours except the cab, engine and one front final drive. Dad still used it this fall with no break downs.
There are plenty of International machines with original engines/radiators/etc that weren't factory spec. The assembly line didn't stop because a 414 wasn't available, while a 436 was.
G F Cooper Farms in Ohio. We've got the IH 1460 and 1480 combines that we are still using today to harvest corn and beans with. Love these older machines.
It amazes me to see how clean and straightforward the controls were on this 1985 Case IH 1460. When you think about just how complicated the electronics are on the harvesters of today, you almost need to be a rocket scientist to run them. 😉 Love seeing your videos my friend.
Thank you for watching. These older combines are very straight forward and we’re built to last.
This was a great video on this older combine Jason. Enjoyed hearing the history and seeing how much things have become more sophisticated in the new combines. Thank you. Peter
My family's operation has one of these IRL, picked it up for 2k right before harvest this year, runs pretty good along side the 815 and 2588
Great video Jason. I love watching classic combines harvesting corn and beans. They may not be high powered or fancy but they still get the job done.😊😊😊
We had a 1460 a 1660 then a 2166 and now a 2577. They were very reliable and simple combines, they work good !!
good to see an older combine getting the job done. not messing with expensive sensors and computers
Memories from Indiana! The first combine I bought was a 1460 after my Dad sold his New Holland 985 which was a great machine, but after he drove the 1460 he thought he was in heaven! Soooooo much easier to work on, the 985 it always seemed like you'd have to take off 2 belts to get to the one that needed replacing. On my third 1660 (combine fires) now a 1990 model. Would have replaced it with a 2166 or 2366 by now but a rod went through the block on the Cummins motor and rebuilt it. But maybe next year. Really want to see if the newer cab's on the 2000 series are less dusty due to having covid lung and on oxygen. If anyone thinks they are an improvement please let me know. If not I'll keep on rolling in the Ole 1660. And nice video!
First combine I drove in the 80’s. I’m running a 8120 now and am amazed how far we’ve come. She was so simple in hindsight.
Very nice. I had a chance to video a 1480 this fall. The 8120 sure grew the size of the Axial-Flows ability.
Nice old school combine. Looks like a well cared for machine.
I enjoy finding classics like this one.
It's truly awesome to see the older machinery still working.👊😎
The first combine I learned to drive was a 1460 in 1997 when I was 15 in wheat. I choked it down every time I came across a thistle weed. What a long summer!
We run a pair of 1480’s on our farm in wheat and canola. Great old machines, easy to run, easy to work on, and they do a great job all these years later
Very nice. 1480s are harder to find these days. I see 1440s and 1460s around but the 1480 is hard to locate. Great harvesters.
Hi Jason. Thank you for your videos. The only combine I ever rode or drove was back in 1975 here in New Zealand. It had no cab, just a sun screen. Steering levers brake system to steer it. It had also been converted from a bagging system to bulk. Also a petrol engine, straight 4 cylinder. Harvested barley for feed in Hawkes Bay province. No photos and I cannot remember the model. You got very warm and itchy harvesting barley. We also baled the straw. Best regards, Silas.
Love the video. We have a beautiful well-kept well-maintained one at auction this week in Indiana. It has been an excellent piece of equipment in our farming business. Retired from farming so equipment no longer needed.
I owned a 1460 for several years, but I believe it was manufactured before the sale to J I Case. Had a 4wd added to it after a wet fall that saw me pulled backwards out of sand hills numerous times. Great combine for the time! Traded on a 1660 that I ran for over ten years.
Very cool. The 1460 and 1660 are solid machines.
My boss's brother has two CaseIH 1680s with 6-row headers for grain corn here in northern Germany. Both machines harvest between 250-600 hectares of corn every year. He also has a partially restored International 1480, but unfortunately the machine is not running yet.
It’s always fantastic to me to see it all combined doing what it was made to do and this one looked like it was working extremely well
I love my 1460. Few updates I have in it. Kile flitting, concaves, vanes, monitor and rood on bin.
A very cool find Jason. That auger just clears that trailer. It's still doing a good job.
Brilliant video sir ! They had one at my uncles farm here in the UK 🇬🇧 great days in the early 80s. ..the whine of the machine was brilliant!
Thanks Jason, it was a great machine! Great history lesson has well.
I love seeing the 1970s-1990s farm equipment
Me too 😁👍
Wow that really brings back memories I grew up in one of them things learned how to drive and operate a combine
I think we had close to 10,000 hours on ours before we ever got rid of it probably one of the best combines ever built
The new ones are junk at 5000 hours I have one I know
The one in the video had 7,400 hours. Solid built harvesters.
Great video! The 1460's were great combines.
They were and are.
This Ole boy does know how to grow corn; looking fine!!
my neighbor still runs an 85 1440. Beautiful combines.
Very cool. Nice combine to have.
$86,700 in 1985. Wow. We had a 1480. It was a very good machine. The 466 would run on full out day after day. The hardest duty cycle application known to man. I ran our 1480 quite a bit, often late into the night. We wore out the transition cone on it. Not easy to replace.
Our 1480 replaced a TR75 and a 914 and did just about as much as both together. The 1480 got replaced with more TR - 95, 97 and 99. Those were good combines except the stone traps weren't the best.
Hi our family has been going down on the wheat run and we do alot of custom work in the fall here in southern minnesota but anyways my dad and uncle would trade combines every fall and in in 85 I remember we were supposed to get 4 iH 1480s but two of them and up showed up as caseih 1480 I can remember alot of our customers thought we repainted them but my uncle would always say that's the way the dam things showed up needless to say he was never happy about that merger so in 1990 when massey came out with the 8570 we traded and started running massey until 2019 in 2020 we went back to caseih now we have 4 8250s.
Congratulations on your induction, great article in Toy Farmer magazine.
My brother has a 1460 and still runs it, doing beans today with a 15 ft. header. Corn is next with a 6 row head.
Very cool. Thank you for sharing.
I was mistaken, he has a 20 ft. grain head on it and has a lead on getting a 25.
@@kenhill3135 👍👍
Last combine our family bought was international 1460 in 1979. When started on 2500 acres rice farm in south east Texas. In 1962 had massy 90 2 international 151 & 2 international 403 In 64 got j d 105 Then massy 510 eventually 3 of those then massy 750 and international 915 when got 1460. It😂was unbelievable. Cut 200000 lbs in one day in 160 bushel corn. 160-180 k rice with 18 ft header. For time nothing else was close
I will have to do a look over next time I see one of these model years. I assummed the owners upgraded the paint to look like a newer model. thanks for posting
They appeared in the 1985 Case IH Buyers Guide as air brushed updated photos used in IH brochure. I first saw one in person in 2000.
I run the exact same machine but 2wd, about as reliable as it gets. Can't beat that straight pipe whistle on a cold night!
Very nice. The one in the video has 7,400 hours.
That turbo sounds Amazing 😲😲😲😲
We use a 1986 1660 combine and harvest wheat, barley, and canola with it. It does a great job.
Very nice. Good combine.
I have the same combine, 2nd great machine. 3200 hours on it. Was a late serial number machine. Some of the parts on it are the same as the 1660. Run a 22 ft straight cut header on it for wheat and barley. Love the straight pipe on it sounds great.
Very cool. Thank you for sharing. This one has 7,400 hours.
Love the video and always love watching the classic stuff getting it done
Cool to see a 1460 still going strong💪😁
I like filming these classics.
My Australian family farm had one of these during the 80s and 90s we cut wheat and sorghum during that time we snapped the rear axel twice.
I live in Nebraska out by North Platte there's still a few of them around. Yeah good combines you don't have the electronic screwing up your day when they go bad.
My old boss well my first farm boss if I remember correctly ran a 1660 or a 1680 case international combine with ether a 4 row or a 6 row head I can't remember off hand but i'm 26 years old and I love these older combines and machines
I had a 1440 ih same size rotor but build a little lighter. I was told the 1440 was put on the old ih 815 frames and the 1460 on the 915 frames with the turbo on the 436 engine. I liked mine
Great Combines!!!
Axial-Flow has made a strong name for itself over the past 46 years.
The combine I learned on when I was young
One of a kind for sure, that's a rice spec'd combine....
Very interesting history and machine. Thanks as always.
Good machine I remember somebody in S Ontario had one late 70s. With a grain cart could combine 60 acres of corn a day unloading on the go. The rotor was touchy in damp conditions they said. We had a Turbo 700 Deere great machine too
Out of curiosity what is the prize?
Great video Love them old school combines
I enjoy finding the classics.
That is a great lookin combine
It is a neat variation.
👋 hey 👋 from Dexter,Missouri my friend.
Super awesome video.
Hi. Thank you for watching James.
This video is a little hard on me today. Seen a combine like that harvest alot of corn. Great combine, I knew it was a 1985 model before you indicated that it was that year model. John T.
Good video.
A good machine we had a 1660 never had a problem with it
👍👍
A good machine we had a 1660 never had a problem with it.
Axial-Flow built good reputation over the past 45 years.
@@bigtractorpower the best I believe
Great vídeo Jason.
Took me a couple seconds to put it all together. Very rare combine. I updated from a 1990 1660 to 97 2188. So far so good
Both good combines. I see ally of 2188s going strong. Nice machine.
37 years young, looking good for it too...
Neat variation.
Very nice Jason, it moves through the field
It eats up the acres.
Good video. Love hearing the history and specs. Why would they eliminate a muffler? Case figure farmers are already 1/2 deaf so it didn’t matter?
@big tractor power do you do many vids on gleaner combines?
Hello! Classic oldie.
I enjoy finding the classics.
@@bigtractorpower 👌
We have a neighbor in Ohio here who has one of those combines its pretty cool.
Being the trucker that I am I would be interested just what the load weighed in at. Usually if you are loading to the bows like that you are beyond running overweight.
I ran an international 1420 on a farm I worked for for many acres. Then we upgraded to a 1666. That was like a caddy compared to the 1420. The 1666 is still going. Just seen it cutting soybeans yesterday.
I got to film a 1420 Rice model a few years ago. It was a neat combine to see. I hope to get a chance a 1644, 1666 and 1688 some day.
I see he has the rear tires facing forwards, so is that one a HRWA model or is that just how he had them at the time? I enjoy seeing classic/vintage machine still in good shape out there getting things done just fine. BTP- did you ever notice that the refrigerator on the TV show friends was an International Harvester?
Very very nice jason
Thank you for watching.
International Harvester Axial Flow, Massey Ferguson and Allis Chalmers Gleaner are my favorite purely because they lead and have a amazing history. Massey I think were the first to create a self propelled combine harvester.
You are right they are all very historic. I enjoy filming the classics. Gleaner built the first self propelled combine in 1923. Allis-Chalmers bought Gleaner in 1955. AGCO has special S9 Gleaners with 100 years of Gleaner graphics for 2023.
@@bigtractorpower My apologies.
I stated that as many years ago I remember reading something at the Massey Ferguson dealership I worked at after high school regarding Massey being the first self propelled. Anyways regarding the Internationals and the Gleaners I mentioned, I say that because they both oozes there brands identity thru engineering, styling and colors very strongly. All the brands in recent 20 yrs or so they have very similar lines.... This to me is what keeps the memories and dreams of the brands alive for the owners.
Here's a quote as follows.
Introduced in 1938, the MH-20 pioneered a harvesting revolution, for the first time separating the tractor from the trailed reaper machines, providing large area farmers with huge gains in productivity and performance. The machine not only made a massive leap forward in farm mechanisation, but also introduced the term ‘combine harvester’ and laid the foundations for further harvesting innovations.
That 1460 has a cleaner bin sample then the new machines 😮and no auto steer beep
Looks great 👍
So much for the buddy seat on this combine
Good vedeo 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
We had a 1482 with a 6788 pulling it and then later on a 1480 with upgraded axles from a 1680 and upgraded feeder housing hydraulics from a 1680 to lift larger and heavier tables.
What an awesome combo with a 6788 and a 1482. That is a dream team.
@@bigtractorpower Here's an old video seeding with it. My how time flies! th-cam.com/video/UKrCTujpgyY/w-d-xo.html
Awesome video, few around here of that paint scheme.
Very cool.
Have a 1460 case international. It's hard to get parts for and noting but trouble. Our 1440 was great however
It’s unfortunate the 1400 series are becoming harder and harder to find. Parts availability makes a big difference.
Your narrative is historically accurate. However, you just didn't mention the fact that the 1985 Case-IH models are simply transitional.
Another interesting fact that you can add, is that starting in 1986, which is the first full year of the Case-IH combines, is that the radiator and rotary screen were reconfigured, to the back of the engine compartment.
Also, another unique feature, was the really big numbers emblazoned on the separators, above the stripe that bore the corporate name. Those lasted until 1993. Then Case-IH return to the smaller font, and included it in the stripe, just like before.
War wahrscheinlich der beste Mähdrescher der Welt
I have a red cab '85 ' 1480. Nice machine
Very cool. I am a big fan of the 1480.
1680 w/Cummins 4x4 30’ 1020 and 863 corn head. Harvest wheat, soybeans and corn. 1990 model with 5,400 hrs.
Very nice.
Have a couple of these combines in our area, don’t see them very often
Neat.
Great Video
Thank you you for watching.
My dad still has a 2188 to cut corn, but use to have a 1440.
The 2188 has become a modern day classic. Very popular combine.
nice 😍😍
Bella macchina. 💪👍👍👍
I’m super curious, where do you get all your specs for the equipment?? You do an amazing job with your history and specs!! As a farm boy I memorized tractor specs growing up. Now I’m an engineer, but still help grow a few crops on the old dairy (retired) farm.
I have collected sales literature at tractor dealers since I was 5 years old. I have a fairly complete collection of all brands. Original sales literature is helpful for specs and details for a production run.
Hey big tractor power can you make a video of case afx8010?
9120 and 9230 We harvest around 3000 acre of Rice with these machines in southwest Louisiana
Very nice. I hope to get a chance to film and feature rice harvest some day.
Great video! Butler County Farm
Thank you for the great connection
We use a 1660 and harvest wheat, corn and beans with it.
Exactly like the last one I sold in late 88, early 89 when I was sales rep. I think the sale price with flex head was around $125k. Price seemed insane.
Was the 125K model a 1480?
@@bigtractorpower 1460 for sure but it may have been a few years after the one in the video actually. I watched this first without sound. It had a Mud Hog axle added to it so that bumped it up some. It's been a long time.
Those hydraulic systems just cried out to U
Greetings
I want to purchase one of this which website can I find it in??
Only know of 1 in my area an don’t know if it’s still in use