Beautiful sound of the JD G. I like that young driver. Keep going my friend, farming is in your blood! I can see it in the way you are handling the tractor. Once I was young and did the same things. unfortuanly my parents were no farmers and had never the chance to have a farm but now I am collecting all agricultural machinery and love farming more than ever. I hope you will have the same dream and that it may come true. Good luck!!
That young man knows how to handle a tractor. Looks like he's had some practice. I love the sound and the originality of the G. Makes me want to get one.
Was 8 back n '65, & didn't think 2 capture a Kodak Moment of my Grandpa Plowing his Oklahoma Spread, like you've done. Those your kids shooting? Jus' sat there, under a hot Sun, & watched my favorite Hero go row after row after row. Figured any Man, with a driven discipline like that, could build a Tree House, carve a Bean Flip, or fix a Dcell Battery operated Alligator. Older now, & see there ain't too many folk like that around. Sure Glad 2 see a New Hero, on a JD w amazing work ethic! Thanks!
nice sound. i have 2 gm's ('42 & '43) and love the sound of them, especially under a load. that boy does a good job of handling the g, but i think he needs to open the throttle a little. sounds like it's laboring a bit.
@norfolkdash9 On thr drawbar means pulling a disk or plow (trailer plow not one with automatic load and depth control, that is easier) or anything hooked to the hitch. On the belt means the tractor is not moving and it used as stationary power with a long belt hooked up to the pulley wheel which on a John Deere G, A, B and D is on the right hand side of the tractor as you are sitting on it lookward foward to the exhaust pipe. The belt may be hooked to a big saw or an old thrashing machine.
@norfolkdash9 The G here is 415 cubic inches and two cylinders. But the old D John Deere was 501 cubic inches. But they claim it wouldn't out pull a G on the drawbar (talking stock tractors) but would do more than a G on the belt.
i think it may be an 8 foot disk i know my dads la can pull 2 8 foot disks (4 gangs) in clay and it is fun!!! only bad part was the dam seat was ruffer then then a rock but that was lose ground and it was in some deep clay this here is hilly and hes got a packer to i do love that G tho! sounds kinda like my jd m!
have a good VHS video of my uncle, when he was 80, bailing hay with his 1947 G with a power take off JD bailer with a wagon full of bails behind it. His son is pulling the bails out and stacking them on the wagon. He is in first gear but man is that G talking coming up a long hill while pulling and running that bailer. Wish I knew how to post that here. Can you do it from VHS? He bought the G new July 1947 and still uses it today 2009. Also has a 1944 A that he bought new. Both are 1 owners
Are you talking about horsepower? I think It's the difference between pulling power when tractor is stationary and only has to power an implement connected to the belt pulley, or PTO, as opposed to pulling power when tractor has to pull itself plus an implement...
The original steam engines drove a thrashing machine via long belt so horsepower was measure as belt horsepower at Nebraska. The later Power take off shafts were added out the back to the tractor but horsepower was still rated as belt horsepower for many years. Drawbar horsepower was rated as how much it would pull from the drawbar.
Big cubic engines turning very slow RPM's say 850 to 1000 RPM;s. If you would up the RPM's by 100 or 200 RPM's it would increase the Horsepower by 10 to 20%. On a 30 horsepowe that was HUGE.
412 cubic inches, big bore, long stroke and a flywheel that weighs like your mother in law. 38 hp but mountains of torque. Only 6 more hp than an A, but the torque difference has to be experienced to understand it. A John Deere D was 501 cubic inches.
@boblackey1 Wow, that is a big engine! I see now, thank you! Yes I would definitely rather listen to a G, but I would rather have a Farmall M just because I like the older farmalls over anything else, besides sound anyway haha.
@norfolkdash9 Well a G like this one is a bit over 400 cubic inches, so the two pistons are big and there is lots of bottom end torque. Stock they will out pull an M Farmall, well they do in my area, but an M Farmall will outpull a John Deere A. TheFarmall is stong on the belt too but so is the G. The main reason I like the G over a M Farmall is the sound. I would much rather listen to this song over a M Farmall or a Case or a Oliver six or a MM U anyday of the week if I'm in the field long.
Thanks for not playing funky music with this-great.
I was just a little younger that this guy when in the field but NEVER regretted it.
The nice part was that when you took driver's training you already knew how to drive.
I know I loved every minute I spent with my Dad when I was his age, and then running the tractor alone. I hope he still runs the tractor.
Listen to that poppin Johnny that is music to my ears always has been
Beautiful sound of the JD G.
I like that young driver. Keep going my friend, farming is in your blood! I can see it in the way you are handling the tractor. Once I was young and did the same things. unfortuanly my parents were no farmers and had never the chance to have a farm but now I am collecting all agricultural machinery and love farming more than ever. I hope you will have the same dream and that it may come true. Good luck!!
there is nothing like farming to the rythm of a johnny popper song
Nothing beats the sound of a old John deer 👍👍👍👍
Great job young man.loved to see you working.
That young man knows how to handle a tractor. Looks like he's had some practice. I love the sound and the originality of the G. Makes me want to get one.
Was 8 back n '65, & didn't think 2 capture a Kodak Moment of my Grandpa Plowing his Oklahoma Spread, like you've done. Those your kids shooting? Jus' sat there, under a hot Sun, & watched my favorite Hero go row after row after row. Figured any Man, with a driven discipline like that, could build a Tree House, carve a Bean Flip, or fix a Dcell Battery operated Alligator. Older now, & see there ain't too many folk like that around. Sure Glad 2 see a New Hero, on a JD w amazing work ethic! Thanks!
What a beautiful video! Thank you
wow that is nice soft dirt. the G sounds good too
nice sound. i have 2 gm's ('42 & '43) and love the sound of them, especially under a load. that boy does a good job of handling the g, but i think he needs to open the throttle a little. sounds like it's laboring a bit.
LOOOOVE THAT SOUND!!! i want one!!
MrAanenson i got 2 of them and want more
Great video, nice little putter!
Damn... those things pull like there is nothing behind them!
"Purring Like A Kitten!"
Thank you
@norfolkdash9 On thr drawbar means pulling a disk or plow (trailer plow not one with automatic load and depth control, that is easier) or anything hooked to the hitch. On the belt means the tractor is not moving and it used as stationary power with a long belt hooked up to the pulley wheel which on a John Deere G, A, B and D is on the right hand side of the tractor as you are sitting on it lookward foward to the exhaust pipe. The belt may be hooked to a big saw or an old thrashing machine.
Una joya
The G is my favorite of the A,B,C,GP,D,MT,L,LA,R
@norfolkdash9 The G here is 415 cubic inches and two cylinders. But the old D John Deere was 501 cubic inches. But they claim it wouldn't out pull a G on the drawbar (talking stock tractors) but would do more than a G on the belt.
i think it may be an 8 foot disk
i know my dads la can pull 2 8 foot disks (4 gangs) in clay and it is fun!!! only bad part was the dam seat was ruffer then then a rock
but that was lose ground and it was in some deep clay
this here is hilly and hes got a packer to
i do love that G tho! sounds kinda like my jd m!
have a good VHS video of my uncle, when he was 80, bailing hay with his 1947 G with a power take off JD bailer with a wagon full of bails behind it. His son is pulling the bails out and stacking them on the wagon. He is in first gear but man is that G talking coming up a long hill while pulling and running that bailer. Wish I knew how to post that here. Can you do it from VHS?
He bought the G new July 1947 and still uses it today 2009. Also has a 1944 A that he bought new. Both are 1 owners
if you take a big size coffee can thats about the size of the piston
What make/model disk is that and do you think a JD "H" would pull it?
JD H would not pull it, I used a JD H when I was on the farm
@@allanhunter2328 Farmall H maybe. John Deere H was about 12 hp of I remember correctly. I doubt it could pull the disk.
@boblackey1
So what do they mean when they say "on the belt" and "on the drawbar"?
Are you talking about horsepower? I think It's the difference between pulling power when tractor is stationary and only has to power an implement connected to the belt pulley, or PTO, as opposed to pulling power when tractor has to pull itself plus an implement...
The original steam engines drove a thrashing machine via long belt so horsepower was measure as belt horsepower at Nebraska. The later Power take off shafts were added out the back to the tractor but horsepower was still rated as belt horsepower for many years. Drawbar horsepower was rated as how much it would pull from the drawbar.
what year is this tractor
What makes these tractors so strong?
Big cubic engines turning very slow RPM's say 850 to 1000 RPM;s. If you would up the RPM's by 100 or 200 RPM's it would increase the Horsepower by 10 to 20%. On a 30 horsepowe that was HUGE.
412 cubic inches, big bore, long stroke and a flywheel that weighs like your mother in law. 38 hp but mountains of torque. Only 6 more hp than an A, but the torque difference has to be experienced to understand it. A John Deere D was 501 cubic inches.
My G slips out of 2nd gear can anyone help
Same happened on my Dad’s A when plowing & doing other heavy pulling. He jammed a wrench handle into the gear slot so it could not slip out of gear.
i had a chance to buy a G john deere, but passed it up and bought a MMUTU instead, THE BIGGEST MISTAKE I EVER DID
@boblackey1
Wow, that is a big engine! I see now, thank you! Yes I would definitely rather listen to a G, but I would rather have a Farmall M just because I like the older farmalls over anything else, besides sound anyway haha.
@surfdude177 wanna trade straight across?
wish i had good insurane on my MMU, it would "accidently" burn up one day
@norfolkdash9 Well a G like this one is a bit over 400 cubic inches, so the two pistons are big and there is lots of bottom end torque. Stock they will out pull an M Farmall, well they do in my area, but an M Farmall will outpull a John Deere A. TheFarmall is stong on the belt too but so is the G. The main reason I like the G over a M Farmall is the sound. I would much rather listen to this song over a M Farmall or a Case or a Oliver six or a MM U anyday of the week if I'm in the field long.
guess not, don't blame you,wouldn't degrade my self either
wanna trade your G john deere even up for my minnieapolis moline?
Yawn.