Thank you big tractor power I’ve always been a huge fan of Case IH and just sing those big combines in action it makes me want to own one even more I really appreciate your case I H videos they’re amazing keep them going
In all your videos there are some great looking/yielding crops. It's always more fun to harvest a high yielding crop no matter the color of the combine!! Great video!! I ran International in my farming days.
Great vid CaseIH 9240, love how track combine turn at headland at speed. Steiger row track hook up Kinze is cool too. Around our area you can find few 8010 both black top n red top, last year I seen new 9240 with dual tyres.
Love it that you do videos with the sound of the machinery.I notice that in most us harvest videos where they use draper headers in the US they put the header on a seperate trailer. Hear in Canada all the mcdon/case headers have the built in transport kit so no trailer is needed and it does not have to be tied down on the trailer cause the wheel are attached to the header. Wondering why this is not the case in the US im thinking it would save time and money.
Thank you for watching. I think the sound of the engine and field work is music all all on its own. 😁. I have filmed a tow behind Macdon and a tow behind CNH head. It was neat seeing them lift the hitch off and set it in the grass and then attach the head and flip the transport wheels up. I am not sure why most farms here go with header wagons. Maybe because that’s the way it has always been done.
I have also seen the case ih has a auger the comes apart enough to fold across the back of the combine that's something else that just amazes me. With the size these combines are going they may have to build bigger roads to allow the farm machinery to move from field to field so traffic can get to were they need to go.
Excellent video. @ 8:10: It looks like they are running SF2 signal, based on how much overlap they are running at about a foot, so they are utilizing 39 feet of the 40 foot width of the header. @10:06: The monitor shows the momentary yield at 100 bushels/acre. Did you find out what the field or farm average looks like this year? - Also, were these soybeans double cropped after wheat?
These are full season beans. I am not sure what the field avg was as I only made a few passes in the cab. I would say it did well as the monitor was pretty consistent.
I would add to your comentary on the tracked combine at about 6:14 that the tracks help keep the head more level throughout the field and diminishing much of the vertical impacts of a wheel. Was there any tandem axle equipped combines ever tested/prototyped?
I love the 9240 in farming simulator 19 for Xbox one I actually plow fields to even more acres just so I can harvest a little more its a great video game that shows how important grain farming is and all types of farming they even have jd 4840s in the game
At about 3:01 you see a hare ? scamper to the right of the foreground combine. Also you can see a deer mouse (probably) also scampering toward the path travelled by the foreground combine
Wow, at about 7:30 , 16 row of processing ! Is this only possible on class 9 combines or there are lower classes that are capable of processing 16 rows of corn?
A class 8 can handle a 16 row. I filmed an 8240 on a 16 row this fall. I have filmed a class 7 combine on a 16 row. The class 8 and 7 combines have less powerful engines so they harvest at a slower speed than a class 9.
Not-a-Farmer-Here: TY for the response, so on the Class 8 or 7 combines there wouldn't be any issues with the frame strength handling very wide/large headers? What about the processing capacity of the 7 or 8 Class combines when having those large headers?
The adjustable spout is used to put the grain where you want it instead of having to guess with a stationary spout. The 9120 and the 9230 (this combines predecesors) had a fixed spout.
I know all the combines in the past have always had a fixed end spout I just didn't know if the reasoning behind the spout now was to keep any grain contained that may still be in the auger till next unloading. Thanks for the info
No the adjustable spout won't keep any grain in the auger. What grain is left in the auger is held in by the flighting of the auger. The adjustable spout is kinda like aiming while peeing lol.
@@nelsonoberg9747 It was specifically designed to keep the trickle of grain in once the auger was turned off. That's why it returns to horizontal automatically after the auger button is turned off.
Right from the Case website :Pivoting Auger Spout Pivoting Auger Spout An industry-exclusive pivoting spout allows easier grain cart fill. From the comfort of the cab, the operator can reposition the unloading grain stream with a single button. The unloading spout can be positioned where needed, instead of moving the entire combine. Available option on all Axial-Flow combine models.
Nice video; beautiful equipment too. With the advent of so much automation, do you sense that sometimes operators get bored, and if so, how do they combat boredom? Along the same lines, it seems possible (likely?) that at least some operators will be replaced by remotely controlled systems in the future. Any thoughts about that possibility? I'm 60, and worked on corporate farms in eastern Oregon and Washington in the 70s when I was in HS. Been on the east coast for the last 30 years, and can't believe how BIG and FAST everything is now. Powerful stuff! Thanks.
Thank you for watching. Fully Automated farm machines are here now but not quite ready for everyday field work. The operator may not steer but they have lots of functions to keep them busy watching for plugs, steering around obstacles, refilling seed etc...
Man what a beast of a machine, 500+ hp, that's something you can't ignore, we have a 9230 in fs17, as well as the quadtracks and magnum with/without tracks, but man what a video just a couple of questions, 1. What's the top speed on the highway for the combine, 2. What's the weight of the header?
Thank you for the reple, yeah the combine in the game goes 12 with tracks, and the header don't look that heavy, but if you look closely, the header bows, so its pretty heavy.
Yes the belts collect the crop rather than an auger. Farms here started making the switch to draper heads back in 2003. I see very few auger heads any more.
The cover crop grows over the winter. About a week before planting they will spray the rye and over the spring it will break down. It helps reduce weed growth and helps hold the soil over the summer between the rows of corn.
Are there other designs of head transport trailers because I find this one too flimsy and it carries the head to high: makes for a tippy load, especially when it appears that the track of the trailer is smaller than the pickup's track.
Just curious, does anyone in the western ky area just do wheat and double crop beans every year and no corn? Not the most ideal rotation but 2 crops a year is nice
One small farm I filmed at several years ago does. They had a White 2-85 tractor and a New Holland TR85 combine. They are wheat and double crop soybeans every year. I have not found any other farms like that.
They use 16 row planters. They used to run a 24 row but moved over to controlled traffic farming keeping each pass on a 40ft pass so they went to high speed 16 rows that cover more ground faster than the 24 row could.
Sure thing. I will do a full season review of this farm over the winter. I film at another that runs two 16 row Class combines. They harvest behind two 24 row planters.
@@bigtractorpower even with GPS, how do they do running 16 row heads behind the 24 row planters? I ask because even with GPS you still get planter drift here and there. Hey if it works that really makes life easier then!
The farm applies dry fertilizer by broadcasting after corn ahead of wheat planting. On corn to corn ground they apply dry fertilizer through the strip till bar like you see with the 620 Quadtrac. On all corn NH3 is side dressed on after the corn is up.
Wonderful video, love the drone footage. Keep up the good work! Love watching the footage you shoot! 👍 how about some Cat Lexion footage before harvest ends?
It appeared that when they were taking off the header for transport there was no disconnecting of drive belts, chains, hydraulic lines, etc. Was this done before the filming or what kind of magic is going on here?
Magic of editing. Only disconnect is an electrical connection, a single block hydraulic coupler and a drive shaft coupling. Also the main latch. Pretty simple, however occasionally the drive shaft coupling can get a little stubborn.
The video was already 20 minutes long. There was a bit of a hang up with a hydraulic line so it took 10 minutes before the header was ready to be put on the header wagon. The first combine took of for the next field and it was dark when the last combine was detaching so I decided the unhooking of the connections would not really add to the video this time. I filmed the line detach but decided not to use it.
Thanks for doing the breakdown video on classes of combines. I am curious as to see a breakdown or explanation of axial flow versus JD's or any one else's offerings and the drawbacks or benefits of each technology. Yet again, another awesome video BTP! Keep up the good work, and Merry Christmas
I am not sure I have not asked. Each combine on average is probably doing 1,300 acres of beans or more and 2,500 or more acres of corn from what I see on most area farms.
Zoom lense is help on the close ups. 😀 The narrow track tractor also plants crops and side dresses crops. The tracks allow the tractor to run between the crop rows.
Yes there is a 9250 for model year 2019. They are on demonstration this fall I believe but will be on the market for 2019. I expect to see 8250 and 9250s harvesting wheat in June 2019.
Uh Welker’s already got an 8250. They did an awesome ride along video on it. In fact Case IH likes it so much they sent Welker a couple hundred dollars worth of books on Case IH history. The 240 combines are old news time to show the 250s or go home.
I am pretty sure that the Welkers’ got to try out a 250. I do not believe they bought one. I am pretty sure the 250s are being demonstrated this fall. I have no doubt several farms here in Western Kentucky have 8250 and 9250 combines on order already. They will be a top priority for me to film in June 2019 when they get out in the wheat field.
No just two most of the time. A few years ago when they two on 12 rows and one on a 16 in corn. Once they started running r surging on 40ft I have only seen two 16 rows in corn.
@@bigtractorpower were working on our popcorn 1st this yr . We cut some beans before all the rain and they was in the 60's In Indiana we will never see 90BPA . I hope all farmers have a great Harvest
They use straps to tie the headers down. I did not film that part as it does quick. I could not film the strap part and be back on the other side to show the truck pulling out.
@@bigtractorpower Thank you for your answer, you are doing a great job! It's a great pleasure for me to watch every video you make. I always learn something new!
I filmed it and not notice the ladder swing in. The combine was going slooow standing right by it I saw no issue in person. There was no risk of it going off the road.
I hope you have a small particles mask on when in the field. You might develop a condition after a few years and may not think about your time in the field at harvest time and filming.
Thank you for SHARING your VIDEO...
Thank you BTP. The strait down drone footage was nice.
Thanks for watching. My friend at Flight Dubs filmed that for me. I ask him to try to grab a shot like that each time. I think it’s a cool view.
Great CIH video. Tracks do make sense in not compacting the ground and improving the seed bed for next year's crop.
They do a nice job.
Thank you big tractor power I’ve always been a huge fan of Case IH and just sing those big combines in action it makes me want to own one even more I really appreciate your case I H videos they’re amazing keep them going
The 9240 is s grain eating machine. Can’t wait to see 9250s this harvest season.
Wow, beautiful big powerful combines ,the drone shots really show the capacity of these beasts.
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Love seeing the big stuff. The yield monitor was reading 94 bushels per acer. I could have nice things if I could make yields like that.
The warmer climate in Kentucky can really help the crops or it can be a detriment in a dry year and the crops burn up pretty good in the sun.
I like your big tractor power videos
Thank you for watching.
My first new combine was. 815 with V8 IHC gasoline motor. Allot of these were burnt to the ground !
Thanks for your always appreciated videos.
In all your videos there are some great looking/yielding crops. It's always more fun to harvest a high yielding crop no matter the color of the combine!! Great video!! I ran International in my farming days.
I am working on a yield report video. I think you will like it.
This is actually the first video I've seen this harvest of tracks being used on Combines..👍..
This farm likes the tracks allot and has run them on 9120s and 9230s in past years.
That’s not nice. Tracks are not used everywhere. They are an option.
c c “east St. Louis.” All you guys harvest over there are bodies,welfare checks, and weed.
@@Nico-bk4fw 😂
GATEKEEPERS 98 lots of people have been putting them on around here lately as well as LSW tires.
Great video big tractor it’s good to see your fieldwork getting done I’m enjoying this😃 thank you🇺🇸👍🏻
Thank you for watching. It was fun filming these big combines.
Great vid CaseIH 9240, love how track combine turn at headland at speed. Steiger row track hook up Kinze is cool too. Around our area you can find few 8010 both black top n red top, last year I seen new 9240 with dual tyres.
They are nice combines. I filmed AFX8010s on tape when they were new. I hope to catch one to film on digital.
These guys mean business this is another great video
They have an efficient operation.
Love it that you do videos with the sound of the machinery.I notice that in most us harvest videos where they use draper headers in the US they put the header on a seperate trailer. Hear in Canada all the mcdon/case headers have the built in transport kit so no trailer is needed and it does not have to be tied down on the trailer cause the wheel are attached to the header. Wondering why this is not the case in the US im thinking it would save time and money.
Thank you for watching. I think the sound of the engine and field work is music all all on its own. 😁. I have filmed a tow behind Macdon and a tow behind CNH head. It was neat seeing them lift the hitch off and set it in the grass and then attach the head and flip the transport wheels up. I am not sure why most farms here go with header wagons. Maybe because that’s the way it has always been done.
The Americans make it look so easy , powerful machines , powerful video
Great job BTP! Your videos are informative and very interesting.
Yet another great Bigtractor Video, Thank You.
👍👍👍👍
I have also seen the case ih has a auger the comes apart enough to fold across the back of the combine that's something else that just amazes me. With the size these combines are going they may have to build bigger roads to allow the farm machinery to move from field to field so traffic can get to were they need to go.
That is more of a European thing, because they have limited space in some areas. so the auger folds to reduce the overall length of the machine.
Another top-notch video B.T.P.👍
The shorts from above looks like a precision scale model farm, precise and perfect, great video
The top view is a neat view. Thank you for watching.
This 10x the bean head we had on our IH 303 when I was 16 yr old in the early 60's. B John Deere and 12ft Flare box for a grain cart.
Very cool classic harvesting team.
The overhead shot of the two combines harvesting the corn was amazing!
Glad you liked it. Great view to show the swath they cut.
i like how the guy at the end gets out of the combine to fold the ladder in while the machine is still moving
Your page is the best!!
Excellent video. @ 8:10: It looks like they are running SF2 signal, based on how much overlap they are running at about a foot, so they are utilizing 39 feet of the 40 foot width of the header. @10:06: The monitor shows the momentary yield at 100 bushels/acre. Did you find out what the field or farm average looks like this year? - Also, were these soybeans double cropped after wheat?
These are full season beans. I am not sure what the field avg was as I only made a few passes in the cab. I would say it did well as the monitor was pretty consistent.
All about that compaction !
I would add to your comentary on the tracked combine at about 6:14 that the tracks help keep the head more level throughout the field and diminishing much of the vertical impacts of a wheel. Was there any tandem axle equipped combines ever tested/prototyped?
The only tandem axle Harvester I have filmed is an OXBO 6165 pea Harvester. The 6165s have started moving to tracks as well.
Much thanks for pointing me to that special model, went watched the videos about it
Methinks that the Ploeger EPD 540 is a more efficient and less maintenance prone machine
A really great harvesting video. Enjoyed seeing the Case IH Class 9 Combines at work.
Thank you for watching.
I love the 9240 in farming simulator 19 for Xbox one I actually plow fields to even more acres just so I can harvest a little more its a great video game that shows how important grain farming is and all types of farming they even have jd 4840s in the game
I have it for PS, what a cool, relaxing game. Love how realistic it is. (Except the traffic, I turned that off). I just sold soybeans for $1800/L!!!
At about 3:01 you see a hare ? scamper to the right of the foreground combine. Also you can see a deer mouse (probably) also scampering toward the path travelled by the foreground combine
I see allot of rabbits through out the year along with Deer out in the field.
Case!!! Great Video
Wow! Did he leave the seat to flip the latter as he started down the road at the end? Thought he was going in the ditch and take out the mailbox!
Having tracks must be the thing to have on farming equipment of today. It looks to be a more sturdier ride along with ground contact.
Tracks have allot of advantages on tractors and combines.
Wow, at about 7:30 , 16 row of processing ! Is this only possible on class 9 combines or there are lower classes that are capable of processing 16 rows of corn?
A class 8 can handle a 16 row. I filmed an 8240 on a 16 row this fall. I have filmed a class 7 combine on a 16 row. The class 8 and 7 combines have less powerful engines so they harvest at a slower speed than a class 9.
Not-a-Farmer-Here: TY for the response, so on the Class 8 or 7 combines there wouldn't be any issues with the frame strength handling very wide/large headers? What about the processing capacity of the 7 or 8 Class combines when having those large headers?
Very cool, I live in Winnipeg MB CANADA where the MacDon plant is that makes the headers.
I have noticed the auger has a directional tip as hes unloading can he shoot the grain out the end if necessary
The adjustable spout is used to put the grain where you want it instead of having to guess with a stationary spout. The 9120 and the 9230 (this combines predecesors) had a fixed spout.
I know all the combines in the past have always had a fixed end spout I just didn't know if the reasoning behind the spout now was to keep any grain contained that may still be in the auger till next unloading. Thanks for the info
No the adjustable spout won't keep any grain in the auger. What grain is left in the auger is held in by the flighting of the auger. The adjustable spout is kinda like aiming while peeing lol.
@@nelsonoberg9747 It was specifically designed to keep the trickle of grain in once the auger was turned off. That's why it returns to horizontal automatically after the auger button is turned off.
Right from the Case website :Pivoting Auger Spout
Pivoting Auger Spout
An industry-exclusive pivoting spout allows easier grain
cart fill. From the comfort of the cab, the operator can
reposition the unloading grain stream with a single button.
The unloading spout can be positioned where needed,
instead of moving the entire combine. Available option on all
Axial-Flow combine models.
Loved it 👏
Awesome stuff!
Thank you for watching.
Wonderful thanks again 👍👍👍
Thank you for watching.
Nice video; beautiful equipment too. With the advent of so much automation, do you sense that sometimes operators get bored, and if so, how do they combat boredom? Along the same lines, it seems possible (likely?) that at least some operators will be replaced by remotely controlled systems in the future. Any thoughts about that possibility? I'm 60, and worked on corporate farms in eastern Oregon and Washington in the 70s when I was in HS. Been on the east coast for the last 30 years, and can't believe how BIG and FAST everything is now. Powerful stuff! Thanks.
Thank you for watching. Fully Automated farm machines are here now but not quite ready for everyday field work. The operator may not steer but they have lots of functions to keep them busy watching for plugs, steering around obstacles, refilling seed etc...
Man what a beast of a machine, 500+ hp, that's something you can't ignore, we have a 9230 in fs17, as well as the quadtracks and magnum with/without tracks, but man what a video just a couple of questions, 1. What's the top speed on the highway for the combine, 2. What's the weight of the header?
Top speed on tracks on the road is 19 mph. The 40ft 2162 is 7,475 lbs.
Thank you for the reple, yeah the combine in the game goes 12 with tracks, and the header don't look that heavy, but if you look closely, the header bows, so its pretty heavy.
Case makes a great combine. I've always been a John Deere man. But Case combines are hard to beat.
All the brands make good machines. Each one stands out for certain features. The 9240 really shines in corn. It is an acre eating machine.
@@bigtractorpower that is very true.
Between a case IH and a dere which one is better?
Wow 40 ft ! Stand it on end that’s 4 stories tall. Nice.
It takes a good swath.
Nice video !
Gotta appreciate the last minute ladder thought.....
👍
Nice farm land. When i think of soybeans, it reminds me of soy sauce in chinese foods. Enjoy BTP videos, new uploads weekly.
Nice machines !
9240s are impressive. I can’t wait to see the 9250.
Look like some nice beans there
They are doing well this year.
So a draper head is the belts versus an auger to gather the crop to the feeder house?
Yea pretty much, they are an excellent alternative, but damn are they expensive compared to a normal platform.
Yes the belts collect the crop rather than an auger. Farms here started making the switch to draper heads back in 2003. I see very few auger heads any more.
im a jd s670 guy,but i would love to run one these cih combines.
These 9240s are acre eating machines. They really shine in corn.
Awesome video...thanks!!!!!!
Thank you for watching.
Will the farm harvest that cover crop of rye or will it be tilled into the soil?
It will die and then the corn will be planted in the strips the tillage tool made.
The cover crop grows over the winter. About a week before planting they will spray the rye and over the spring it will break down. It helps reduce weed growth and helps hold the soil over the summer between the rows of corn.
Would love to see you find a Tribine T-1000 and film it in the wild.
I would like to see a Tri-Bine. My friend Mike Less got to film one at the Farm Progress field demo this year.
Are there other designs of head transport trailers because I find this one too flimsy and it carries the head to high: makes for a tippy load, especially when it appears that the track of the trailer is smaller than the pickup's track.
Pretty much every header trailer I have filmed in this area is set up this way. Some will have a dolly wheel the hitch is attached too.
How many acres a day can each machine get in beans. And how fast do they run
He said at the end of the video where they take the header off they are going 4.5 mph.
First international combine i ever ran was a 403, 1460, 1680, 2188, 8230!
Great combine history.
Just curious, does anyone in the western ky area just do wheat and double crop beans every year and no corn? Not the most ideal rotation but 2 crops a year is nice
One small farm I filmed at several years ago does. They had a White 2-85 tractor and a New Holland TR85 combine. They are wheat and double crop soybeans every year. I have not found any other farms like that.
Wow outstanding
Thank you for watching.
May I ask, since they run 16 row 30 inch corn heads, do they use 16 row planters? Or 48? Havent seen many 32 row planters ever actually. Thanks!
They use 16 row planters. They used to run a 24 row but moved over to controlled traffic farming keeping each pass on a 40ft pass so they went to high speed 16 rows that cover more ground faster than the 24 row could.
@@bigtractorpower Thank you for the reply! That makes sense!
Sure thing. I will do a full season review of this farm over the winter. I film at another that runs two 16 row Class combines. They harvest behind two 24 row planters.
@@bigtractorpower even with GPS, how do they do running 16 row heads behind the 24 row planters? I ask because even with GPS you still get planter drift here and there. Hey if it works that really makes life easier then!
Gigantic is all I have to say !!
Great vid.How many ILBS in a bushel beans wheat and yellow corn 🌽 please
John Douglas Dawson soybeans 60lbs wheat 60lbs corn 56 lbs oats 32lbs earcorn72lbs all per bushel
100/bu acre double crop ! I wonder what sort of fertility program they implement.I do not think I read the monitor wrong.It is a high grossing farm!
The farm applies dry fertilizer by broadcasting after corn ahead of wheat planting. On corn to corn ground they apply dry fertilizer through the strip till bar like you see with the 620 Quadtrac. On all corn NH3 is side dressed on after the corn is up.
Very cool machines. Is the case IH track tractors in this video, are they what used to be called a stiger?
Case IH bought Steiger in 1986 and these new machines are still called Steiger.
Wonderful video, love the drone footage. Keep up the good work! Love watching the footage you shoot! 👍 how about some Cat Lexion footage before harvest ends?
No worries. I filmed a bunch of Lexions this year from a 670 to a 780TT.
bigtractorpower nice one, I’ll look forward to seeing those in action.
Otimo video amigo 👏👍🚜
Thank you for watching. 👍
That's heck of a soybean crop at 100 bushels. Full season beans I'm assuming.
They are full season.
It appeared that when they were taking off the header for transport there was no disconnecting of drive belts, chains, hydraulic lines, etc. Was this done before the filming or what kind of magic is going on here?
Lol big plot flaw.
Magic of editing. Only disconnect is an electrical connection, a single block hydraulic coupler and a drive shaft coupling. Also the main latch. Pretty simple, however occasionally the drive shaft coupling can get a little stubborn.
The video was already 20 minutes long. There was a bit of a hang up with a hydraulic line so it took 10 minutes before the header was ready to be put on the header wagon. The first combine took of for the next field and it was dark when the last combine was detaching so I decided the unhooking of the connections would not really add to the video this time. I filmed the line detach but decided not to use it.
Plot flaw? Just an editing choice so the video would not get longer than it is.
Magic of editing is correct. 😀👍
Thanks for doing the breakdown video on classes of combines. I am curious as to see a breakdown or explanation of axial flow versus JD's or any one else's offerings and the drawbacks or benefits of each technology.
Yet again, another awesome video BTP! Keep up the good work, and Merry Christmas
Merry Christmas. I will see what I can do on a combine comparison.
How many acres does this family farm? Quite the setup
I am not sure I have not asked. Each combine on average is probably doing 1,300 acres of beans or more and 2,500 or more acres of corn from what I see on most area farms.
desde argentina los saludamos.
Where are these combines made???
Elis Helmersson at the cnh factory in grand island Nebraska.
They are built in Grand Island, Nebraska along with New Holland combines.
Another awesome vid!! Love the close up shots where you almost get run over😀😀 Alsojust curious as to why the tracks on the tractor are so narrow?
Zoom lense is help on the close ups. 😀 The narrow track tractor also plants crops and side dresses crops. The tracks allow the tractor to run between the crop rows.
Cool!! Thanks!!
Sure. Here is a video I filmed of a RowTrac working in growing corn. m.th-cam.com/video/KWPvpPIt6kc/w-d-xo.html
A long way from the old 101 and 303.
Thats fantastic, always love these big tractor power videos #harvest18
Thank you for watching.
Xcelent video
Thank you for watching.
Didn't Case IH release a new model for combines? I'm eager to see those in action.
Yes there is a 9250 for model year 2019. They are on demonstration this fall I believe but will be on the market for 2019. I expect to see 8250 and 9250s harvesting wheat in June 2019.
Uh Welker’s already got an 8250. They did an awesome ride along video on it. In fact Case IH likes it so much they sent Welker a couple hundred dollars worth of books on Case IH history. The 240 combines are old news time to show the 250s or go home.
I am pretty sure that the Welkers’ got to try out a 250. I do not believe they bought one. I am pretty sure the 250s are being demonstrated this fall. I have no doubt several farms here in Western Kentucky have 8250 and 9250 combines on order already. They will be a top priority for me to film in June 2019 when they get out in the wheat field.
Where was this video shot?
Near Oak Grove, Kentucky.
Tecnologia avançada mundo inteiro
Can you find any Allis Chalmers maybe? I like orange all day all the way!
Maybe if timing allows. I did have a few orange videos recently with the Gleaner A86, 4W-305 and 8070 videos.
Was you in Hopkinsville ky for this video
Just down the road in Oak Grove.
@@bigtractorpower I live about 20 minutes form oak grove
Do run all 3 in corn too
No just two most of the time. A few years ago when they two on 12 rows and one on a 16 in corn. Once they started running r surging on 40ft I have only seen two 16 rows in corn.
Wow his yeild monitor said over 90BPA
The beans did well this year.
@@bigtractorpower were working on our popcorn 1st this yr . We cut some beans before all the rain and they was in the 60's In Indiana we will never see 90BPA . I hope all farmers have a great Harvest
Muinta bonita axial flwor
THE BEST
Nice
Thank you for watching.
Like a poetry!
where are the ideal combines
I am working on filming one. They are not fully on the market yet. They are being demonstrated this fall. It is top on my wish list to see.
Will be a very interesting video when it comes.
Do the tracks on the grain cart provide any drive connected to the PTO or are they just for compaction purposes
Only compaction
Every grain cart I've heard of with tracks is un-powered and all of the Kinzie carts are the same. PTO powers the auger nothing else.
Ok thanks.
Yes the pto runs the unloading cart. The tracks just pull along like tires.
Great video! Can someone please explain how those headers are fixed to the transport cart? Are they steady during transport?
They use straps to tie the headers down. I did not film that part as it does quick. I could not film the strap part and be back on the other side to show the truck pulling out.
@@bigtractorpower Thank you for your answer, you are doing a great job! It's a great pleasure for me to watch every video you make. I always learn something new!
Two words......BADDDDDD ASSSSSSS!!!...
Nice video, as usual!
The only problem I have is that I can't convert your american measures as fast as you talk...
20:32 almost put the combine in the ditch for the ladder.
I filmed it and not notice the ladder swing in. The combine was going slooow standing right by it I saw no issue in person. There was no risk of it going off the road.
@@bigtractorpower yeah he had lots of time to react
Jeremy quiring, Didn't see it ?
@@2511jeremy
Yea that was dangerous
Grandes máquinas
Os americanos envés ter alto nas
Teqnologia agrecultura
cool
👍
I never like running the reel that deep in the crop, usually just tip it in
PIPER DOUG Yep ,we used to cut just under the head ,lot less straw going in.
BTP, its Axial flow not Axle flow.
who is going to buy these soybeans?
I hope you have a small particles mask on when in the field. You might develop a condition after a few years and may not think about your time in the field at harvest time and filming.
Anyone else see the rabbit run out of the Field at 3:00