soyman350
soyman350
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Відео

John Deere 720 and 2 row JD cultivator
Переглядів 12 тис.6 років тому
Cultivating Soybeans with a John Deere 720 and a John Deere 2 row cultivator in Northeast Indiana, August 2017
Planting corn with a John Deere 720 and a John Deere 290 planter
Переглядів 7 тис.7 років тому
Planting corn with a John Deere 720 and a John Deere 290 planter
Spreading compost with a Massey Ferguson 1135 and an H & S Manure Spreader
Переглядів 5037 років тому
Spreading compost with a Massey Ferguson 1135 and an H & S Manure Spreader
Field Cultivating with Massey Ferguson 1135
Переглядів 5287 років тому
Field Cultivating with a 1974 Massey Ferguson 1135 and an Allis Chalmers field cultivator in northeast Indiana, May 2017.
Allis Chalmers All Crop 72 with Allis Chalmers 190XT harvesting soybeans
Переглядів 6 тис.7 років тому
Harvesting black soybean seed with an Allis Chalmers 190XT and an All Crop 72 combine in Northeast Indiana 2016.
Picking Corn with D17 Allis Chalmers and New Idea 1 row corn picker
Переглядів 3,1 тис.7 років тому
Picking open pollenated corn with a D17 Allis Chalmers and a 1 row New Idea corn picker in northeast Indiana, November 2016. The open pollenated corn attracted so many deer that you could literally stand at any spot in the field and walk to any other spot in the field stepping on deer tracks. There were so many deer tracks that it was common to see multiple tracks in or on the first print. This...
New Holland 469 Haybine and Alls Chalmers 190XT
Переглядів 6 тис.7 років тому
Cutting hay with New Holland 469 Haybine and Allis Chalmers 190XT
John Deere 720 and 24T baler
Переглядів 67 тис.7 років тому
Baling 3rd cutting hay with our 2 cylinder John Deere 720 and 24T baler.
Hay Tedding with D17 and Grimm Tedder
Переглядів 2,1 тис.7 років тому
Bought an old hay tedder at an auction. Turns out to be a G.H.Grimm Hay Tedder-Aereator manufactured in Rutland Vermont. Took a little while to figure out how to get it adjusted properly, but it seems to work pretty good. Not too bad for a $350 auction piece.
AC All Crop 72 and D17 Combining Oats
Переглядів 7307 років тому
Allis Chalmers All Crop 72 with AC D17 Combining Oats
IH #46 Baler and Farmall 656 Tractor baling hay
Переглядів 32 тис.10 років тому
IH model 46 baler with Farmall 656 tractor baling hay in northeast Indiana June 2013. We are baling a new seeding of oats, spelt, wheat, field peas, alfalfa, and grass mix. Made really nice hay. The baler is one that I bought last winter at an auction for $250 and it runs like a sewing machine. Rarely misses a tie and ties nice tight bales. Nobody at the auction wanted it because it was the "wr...
Raking Hay 2013 With Allis Chalmers D17 and Case Steel Wheel Rake
Переглядів 2 тис.10 років тому
Raking first cutting hay in northeast Indiana 2013
Mowing Hay with Farmall M June 2013
Переглядів 7 тис.10 років тому
This is the first cutting hay of fall planted wheat and spelt and spring seeded alfalfa and grass mix. The tractor is a 1950 Farmall M that has been on our farm since 1959 and the mower is one that my grandfather bought just prior to WWII. Still works like a sewing machine.
Spreading Organic Compost with Farmall 656 and New idea Manure Spreader
Переглядів 2 тис.10 років тому
We spread about 170 tons of wet compost on 3 acres. That may sound like a lot, but it really wasn't. The Farmall 656 has been on our farm since it was new and the spreader is my neighbor's.The spreader would hold about 3 1/2 to 4 tons per load. It took most of 2 days to complete.
Planting Corn with Allis Chalmers D17 and 2 row JD planter
Переглядів 4 тис.10 років тому
Planting Corn with Allis Chalmers D17 and 2 row JD planter

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @aaronfarr4753
    @aaronfarr4753 10 днів тому

    I had a 1957 720 diesel and ran a mow con and then 214T baler with it in the 80’s. Put up a lot of hay with that rig. Did most of my raking with a 1950 B.

  • @thomasfranklin4307
    @thomasfranklin4307 7 місяців тому

    Awesome video! Thanks

  • @carrollmccoun110
    @carrollmccoun110 Рік тому

    Yep. That was my first round of cultivating. 2 rows at a time with a 40 J.D.

  • @davidwhisnant3230
    @davidwhisnant3230 Рік тому

    That the good old days around here all notill

  • @danvanhoose6783
    @danvanhoose6783 Рік тому

    Don't see that much anymore.

  • @RJ1999x
    @RJ1999x Рік тому

    My uncle had a 72 , but his had a scour kleen

  • @cheerjim
    @cheerjim 2 роки тому

    Back in the 1970's and 80's, I used to sell these Grimm tedders, mainly ground driven, by the truck loads at Greenbrier Tractor Sales in Lewisburg, WV. And with each load delivered, Grimm would give you a can of maple syrup. And most tedders sold were pulled by Allis-Chalmers tractors that I sold. Good days!

  • @dwightl5863
    @dwightl5863 2 роки тому

    I didn't realize the 720 had a gasoline model.

  • @stevelangland3924
    @stevelangland3924 2 роки тому

    I'm always curious as to why everyone leaves their hood up for the straw discharge. I also shut down the combine while emptying the hopper.

  • @fightingbear8537
    @fightingbear8537 2 роки тому

    Thanks for the video !

  • @wadeemery2
    @wadeemery2 3 роки тому

    Algorithm

  • @lelandrentz755
    @lelandrentz755 3 роки тому

    amazing video ! talented farmer soybeans look healthy and weed free. Love the tractor

  • @b.l.barfield2420
    @b.l.barfield2420 3 роки тому

    Should have doubled the windrows. The man raking the hay should know how to make good full bales

  • @davidprutzman8660
    @davidprutzman8660 3 роки тому

    I grew up on a dairy farm in PA I spent lots of time riding and stacking hay and straw on a flat wagon behind a 730 diesel and 14t. It's a little different loading a flat wagon on Pennsylvania's hills

  • @Deandeere4020
    @Deandeere4020 3 роки тому

    We used the 24t for years. Now have a 336 and a 14t that work pretty good!

  • @thomashogan7272
    @thomashogan7272 3 роки тому

    Nice video. We had a 190xt on the Vermeer round bailer. I ran a NH479 with a D19. I would just turn left at the end of the row. With practice it would cut a square corner. You are getting a little bit nicer results taking the long way around the corner.

  • @steveblucker854
    @steveblucker854 3 роки тому

    Great video, dad always wanted a AC 72, he had AC 60, AC 66, and an AC 90

  • @duaneperry7064
    @duaneperry7064 4 роки тому

    Awesome video!!! Great shot underneath tractor!! Wow!!!

  • @michaelvrooman5681
    @michaelvrooman5681 4 роки тому

    There is no sound that screams " Summertime" like a "Johnny popper" with a hay baler hammering away behind it. Those sounds carry a mile on a quiet , hot summer day .

  • @janequalm6948
    @janequalm6948 4 роки тому

    I’ve never seen spelt nor do I know anything about it. I’ve heard that it’s a good horse grain. Is it’s feed quality and weight similar to oats. Just watching the video it looks more like a wheat head but with no beard?

  • @sportster88
    @sportster88 4 роки тому

    I have a Grimm C 7657 and sure would like to find some replacement teeth / tines for it!

    • @sportster88
      @sportster88 4 роки тому

      I ended up finding some brand new 2 prong steel spring tines for an early John Deere hay rake on Ebay. They came from a parts supplier down south in GA or AL. They don't fall apart like the single rubber ball tines sold at TSC.

  • @thegreenerthemeaner
    @thegreenerthemeaner 5 років тому

    Every 469 I have seen had the rolls worn out on one end. A guy told me that is common because when in paralell, they are out of register, you had a hard time doing both. It usually was the non powered end. I had a Gehl with a smooth rubber top roll and a fluted steel bottom. Flutes were 2 inches apart. It would never slug but the sickle......

  • @hairymanonetwo
    @hairymanonetwo 5 років тому

    Im 62 yrs old....spent many days behind the 24 T baler...... 2000 bales a day..... common ! I still bale over 4000 bales a year...only a newer baler. I noticed this guy on the wagon.....pulling the bales up and out of the shoot.. I learned early on....allow the bale to come to you.....dont pull it out of the chamber / shoot ! Wasted energy ! Also the bales are much more firm because of the extra pressure of the bale still in the shoot ! No need for a bale hook !

  • @stephenburkholder9411
    @stephenburkholder9411 5 років тому

    The knoter was junk but other then that this was one great baker.

  • @countrygent4
    @countrygent4 5 років тому

    The mower works fine because you have good sickle sections and guard ledger plates but like the one my dad had was very nosy and vibrated at any speed. We traded our off in about 1966 for a the first balanced head 120 mower the dealer sold. Had it on a Super H and they said it would mow at 8mph. Sure enough next summer we had 40 acres of had that I mowed in one day with the Super H in 4th gear wide open 7 mph. That was a great mower. The first one we had had a 7' bar and the next one was a 9' bar.

  • @mikecubes1642
    @mikecubes1642 5 років тому

    i remember this scene very well but we had a 14T and a john deere 70

  • @rogergeorge5509
    @rogergeorge5509 6 років тому

    Brings back a lot of memories My Dad had one of these Was a good baler Spent a lot of time putting up hay back in the good old days

    • @soyman350
      @soyman350 5 років тому

      Thanks. We lost the tractor and baler in a fire a couple of years ago. So it's really nice to be able to see them here for many years to come.

  • @whosahwutchin9497
    @whosahwutchin9497 6 років тому

    Start rows the other direction.

  • @whosahwutchin9497
    @whosahwutchin9497 6 років тому

    Dosn't matter.

  • @whosahwutchin9497
    @whosahwutchin9497 6 років тому

    You 're baling the wrong way in one part of this video.

    • @soyman350
      @soyman350 6 років тому

      It's a 2 acre, triangular field. We have learned to do a couple of rounds on the outsides and then just do rows on the rest. The 35 degree angle at one corner is just too tight to try and make this a round and round field. But I'm impressed that you noticed!

  • @_abbybaudino
    @_abbybaudino 6 років тому

    WOAG

  • @markgamble8377
    @markgamble8377 6 років тому

    Nice working old baler.wanted to see tractor. Cause i have a 656.nice video

    • @soyman350
      @soyman350 6 років тому

      Thanks. Lost both the tractor and baler in a fire a couple of years ago. Nice to still be able to see them work.

  • @allanhunter2328
    @allanhunter2328 6 років тому

    This brings back fond memories

  • @nekbiodieselworks
    @nekbiodieselworks 6 років тому

    I'm in lyndonville. there is one on craigslist right now for 100.00 it says it for a lawn ornament. I wonder why and if I could fix and use it

    • @soyman350
      @soyman350 6 років тому

      They are very simple and very ruggedly built. I was walking by mine the other day thinking it had probably never seed shelter in many, many years and it still works just fine. Unless it has an actual broken piece, it probably still works. May need some lube and limbering up, but I can't imagine that they ever wear out.

    • @nekbiodieselworks
      @nekbiodieselworks 6 років тому

      the guy got back to me and said that it had a broken gear. I could probably fix it. I cut my hay with an opened up bush hog that acts like a poor mans haybine. I then rake it twice with an old side delivery rake and bale it with a NH 66. all of my equipment is old enough to collect social security. Always looking for something else including a tedder like yours. Maybe after Christmas but I need a hay elevator first.

  • @isfahelww
    @isfahelww 6 років тому

    Im new to putting up my own hay. I'm currently using a NH sickle mower, and if you cross any cut hay you foul the blades. In this vid you cross the already mown part with no issue. How does that work? I thought theNH haybine was basiclly a sickle mower combined with a conditioner?

    • @soyman350
      @soyman350 6 років тому

      isfahel ww Really good question. You are right, it you cross any hay, it will foul/plug the cutter bar. When you come to the end of the standing hay, you raise the head as you go around to make the next pass. As you approach the next swath of standing hay, you quickly drop the head as you are passing over the previous swath of cut hay. It's really a timing thing, as to raising and lowering the head to avoid already down hay. Also, because of the reel, the haybine will cut much better than a sickle bar mower. I have an old video on my channel where I used our old sickle bar mower, but anytime the hay was really thick, usually first cutting, I spent more time stopping and unplugging the sickle bar than actually mowing. That's when I finally broke down and bought a haybine. Best move ever. I've never been sorry. Just one more thing about the haybine. When you drop the head, it will actually ride on the ground, with the cutter bar maybe and inch or inch and a half above the ground. I don't like to cut any hay that close to the ground as it delays recovery time and will shorten the stand life. I lowered the head in the driveway and installed depth control donuts on the hydraulic cylinder that raises and lowers the head. You can buy the at you local farm store and they come in different thicknesses. They just snap over the rod of the cylinder and you use mix/match the different sizes to make the head stop at your predetermined height. I leave 3 1/2 to 4 inches of stubble. It just stresses the crop out much less than going lower. Good luck.

  • @farmgrowncountrystrong
    @farmgrowncountrystrong 7 років тому

    Nice!

  • @cathrinebelgium1640
    @cathrinebelgium1640 7 років тому

    Hey,soyman350! I love your video! I know this comment is marked as spam,that's because it contains a link. But please check out this video and approve the comment! ua-cam.com/video/YG1dF_XAXuQ/v-deo.html You are free to use this song in your upcoming videos!

  • @user-tx3hi3fm3e
    @user-tx3hi3fm3e 7 років тому

    памогите выстовить зажигание на током прессе видео скиньте

    • @mx500a4
      @mx500a4 6 років тому

      Do they have John Deere in Russia?

  • @farmgrowncountrystrong
    @farmgrowncountrystrong 7 років тому

    Nice to see a 24T in action!

    • @soyman350
      @soyman350 7 років тому

      It still has to work for a living. Right now, we have three balers and they all have to work for a living.

    • @farmgrowncountrystrong
      @farmgrowncountrystrong 7 років тому

      That's the way to keep them.

  • @robertlong7033
    @robertlong7033 7 років тому

    Wait until you see what they do to buckwheat.

    • @soyman350
      @soyman350 7 років тому

      I've only used this combine twice since I bought it, once on the oats and once on the black soybeans. I've harvested buckwheat several times in the past with an IH 715. Did a nice job, but as with all standing buckwheat harvest, you only get about half, at best. I don't have any future intentions of planting buckwheat again, as it can quickly become a serious weed without using herbicides. Almost lost a corn crop to leftover buckwheat many years ago.

  • @timh9407
    @timh9407 7 років тому

    What variety of OP corn did you use.

    • @soyman350
      @soyman350 7 років тому

      This field was Reids Yellow Dent. Our other field was Bloody Butcher.

  • @justinstearns9723
    @justinstearns9723 8 років тому

    It's Rutland Vermont lol. I live about 45 minutes from there, and I have a nearly identical Grimm Tedder.

  • @danthurston5264
    @danthurston5264 8 років тому

    If you want to hear a noisy baler listen to a John Deere 14T or 24T, they all sound like they are falling apart while going through the field.

    • @bueno7052
      @bueno7052 Рік тому

      That brought up a memory. Neighbors had one pulled by JD 60. We could hear it while out 46 was running behind a case SC.....from the wagon.

  • @timh9407
    @timh9407 8 років тому

    Wow . First time I seen a jd 246 narrowed up. My grandfather had his set on 40 inch rows. I got a 59 D17. Great tractor. Mine needs rebuilt . What kind of open pollinated corn did you use? Reids yellow dent is most common. I want to try some henry moore. Higher in lysine for when i get hogs. How did yours yield? Great video. Hope to see more. I'm in indpls, but farm is in sw indiana.

    • @kennzimmerman8016
      @kennzimmerman8016 8 років тому

      +tim henslee Those were set at 36". I did use Reids Yellow Dent but only because I could not get Henry Moore. I like both. The Reids yielded about 110 bpa but that was with about 30 to 40 % deer damage. When you would drive back there at night, all you could see was eyeballs glowing back, and they didn't seem to care whether you were there. They didn't run, they just kept eating. Of course it was right next to an alfalfa field. My Reids tested almost 12% crude protein which is close to the Henry Moore. All my livestock love the OP corn. I am planning to grow some Bloody Butcher this year also.

    • @timh9407
      @timh9407 8 років тому

      +Kenn Zimmerman E+R seeds in ne indiana had henry moore and there is several seed catalogs that have it too.1356 e 200 s monroe,in 46772. They're amish so no online site.they have about three catalogs,seed and plant, You might be able to google and find their phone number. You can also pick up directly if you let them know in advance.

    • @kennzimmerman8016
      @kennzimmerman8016 8 років тому

      I only live about 10 miles from E & R. In fact I went to school with Ervin and remain friends with him still. Best garden seed company ever.

    • @timh9407
      @timh9407 8 років тому

      Cool. I need to get some seeds from him but havent gotten a catalog yet.. No tile and wet weather have kept me from getting a crop out last few years but now hoping to make up for that in retirement.I've driven my semi past there on the highway but never got to go past.

    • @kennzimmerman8016
      @kennzimmerman8016 8 років тому

      +tim henslee I get there a couple of times a month, even in the winter. It is really a great place. We had our class reunion a couple of years ago and my wife and I had dinner with Ervin and his wife Ruth ( E&R). They are very good people.

  • @MarcoAtlarge
    @MarcoAtlarge 9 років тому

    Please grease and oil it, jack shaft fittings for pickup can be missed, one to right under twine box, auger hole, one in twine box for auger. 2 for plunger stop, Only thing that may be sealed is the 2 U joints that that shaft has going to the packer fingers, everything else has a fitting, knotter drive dog....roll baler you will see it.

    • @soyman350
      @soyman350 9 років тому

      Thanks. The one under the twine box was the only one we missed. the first time. We went through it with a fine toothed comb while it was still clean and logged all the grease points so that we don't miss any if we get in a hurry. Still been a great little baler.

    • @lloydkukon1336
      @lloydkukon1336 3 роки тому

      Baked 20000 bales a hay and straw a year with one Sometimes more Remember putting woodchuck wheel on it. Many times kicker pan would have the ejector arm caught under it.trusty screwdriver to pop the pan free We pulled ours with a 656 high clear

  • @tmoenste
    @tmoenste 10 років тому

    Man, that is sure some dry hay. Light windrows, so I guess it dried out really quickly. Looks like it was making nice bales though. I grew up with an IH 46 baler. We put a ton of bales through it over the years. It was a very good machine for its day. Surprising capacity too for its size and being made late 1950's through 60's. We kept the pickup a little more full most of the time than you do in the video... the auger was usually floating near the top of its travel. That old 46 ate it all up and popped them out though! I realize you might have been driving a little slower than usual - hard enough to aim the camera backwards and drive straight along the windrow at the same time! In the early days, we pulled it with a Farmall 656 too. So your combination brings back great memories for me! Would've liked to see some footage of the tractor from the driver's seat too. One more thing: Are you greasing all the fittings on that baler well from front to back? In the video I hear a lot more squeaking/squealing noise than I remember ours making.

    • @soyman350
      @soyman350 9 років тому

      We grease and lube that thing religiously EVERY time it goes to the field. I think most of it comes from the pickup teeth scraping the bands on the pickup.

  • @Fullern90
    @Fullern90 10 років тому

    That's a nice old McCormick baler, I almost bought a model 47 with a thrower but unfortunately the bale chamber was rusted out.

  • @brianzyburabrian8227
    @brianzyburabrian8227 10 років тому

    Your video is very good. Just strictly showing the machinery at work. No music, no baloney, and no nonsense. Try not to work too hard. Brian from southern Ontario Canada.