McCormick Corn Binder Two Row!

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  • Опубликовано: 20 окт 2024

Комментарии • 89

  • @charlesstorms2999
    @charlesstorms2999 3 года назад +3

    I can certainly relive a few memories seeing the two row binder. My dad had one in the early 60's. Filled a 10x35 silo with a Papec silo filler

  • @TomSmith-me7ph
    @TomSmith-me7ph 6 месяцев назад +1

    I never saw a two row binder or knew there was one. Thanks for sharing.

  • @chrisrexroat3240
    @chrisrexroat3240 6 лет назад +2

    I had never seen one of these until now. Interesting old equipment.

  • @alastairmccormick9657
    @alastairmccormick9657 7 лет назад +6

    Wow I didn't know such a machine existed!! The binders that were used in my country were for grain only.
    Greetings from Ireland by the way. Brilliant video👏

    • @boehmfarm4276
      @boehmfarm4276  7 лет назад +4

      Hello, thank you for your viewership! I rarely see grain binders anymore. The one row binders for corn are more common.

    • @lukestrawwalker
      @lukestrawwalker 2 года назад

      @@boehmfarm4276 Yeah there's video of a corn chopper for making silage out of those shocks on my channel-- they have one at the Winimac Power of the Past Show in Indiana-- they run the machinery a couple times a day and do sawmilling demonstrations with an old Case steam engine powered sawmill... OL J R :)

  • @michael7423
    @michael7423 4 года назад

    Thank you Jacob, I really love seeing how the vintage machinery works. I love your productions and thank you for sharing, I think you are awesome!

  • @kolilagephart3766
    @kolilagephart3766 3 года назад +1

    The last time I saw corn shocked up for stover was 1956 in Cass county IL. My grandpa had a bucket of corn knives

  • @PAFarms
    @PAFarms 7 лет назад +4

    I have an IHC toolbox in my collection just like that one. My neighbor has a 1 row, never seen a 2 row. Neat to watch in action.

    • @boehmfarm4276
      @boehmfarm4276  7 лет назад +3

      What are those old tool boxes worth?

    • @PAFarms
      @PAFarms 7 лет назад +2

      Boehm Farm I see them on eBay for $20-$60. Some bring more. If they weren’t re-painted they seem to be worth more

  • @fredf3391
    @fredf3391 7 лет назад +2

    Neighbor years ago raised vegetables and had stand and also sold to others would binder up like you are doing but used sweetcorn stocks after harvesting corn .He raised onions to pumpkins and everything in between 🚜 outstanding job👍

    • @boehmfarm4276
      @boehmfarm4276  7 лет назад +2

      We have tried sweet corn stalks, but when they dry, they fall apart easily.

  • @curtweatherbee2523
    @curtweatherbee2523 7 лет назад +2

    Boy you guys are so cool with your farming operation I love the videos this is what it's all about for me like you for very educational thanks LC Weatherbee frog hollow farm Quinton NJ south🐝

  • @AndersonCattleCo
    @AndersonCattleCo 7 лет назад +2

    That was pretty cool, we have a binder for small grains but I've never seen it work but I know that my Grandpa and his brother still ran a thrashing crew until 1960 because it was cheaper,and faster than owning a combine ,and labor was cheap.

    • @boehmfarm4276
      @boehmfarm4276  7 лет назад +2

      I am surprised on combine prices even for the early seventies. I have the receipts for the sales of my Gleaner K.

  • @timerfarms113
    @timerfarms113 7 лет назад +2

    Never seen a two row very neat piece of equipment. We use to have a one row.

  • @MrMagnum7220
    @MrMagnum7220 7 лет назад +1

    Never seen one run. Thanks for posting.

  • @curtweatherbee2523
    @curtweatherbee2523 7 лет назад +1

    I like your videos like I said they're very educational I love them that's what I meant to say you guys take care👍🏻 Curt Weatherbee frog hollow farm

  • @banditfarmer1900
    @banditfarmer1900 7 лет назад +3

    I'll bet them Amish fellows had there cash out ready to buy it ! That is a piece you just don't see anymore, I've seen plenty of 1 row binders put I can say you got the only 2 row I've ever seen and that's saying something ! LOL Keep up the great work JB or should I say Poncho and Lefty ! LOL Bandit

  • @MrGkoplitz
    @MrGkoplitz 7 лет назад +1

    Very cool, we never did that but we did have a two row new idea corn picker

    • @boehmfarm4276
      @boehmfarm4276  7 лет назад +1

      A picker is much less work than a binder because we have to pick up the bundles.

  • @samtalley791
    @samtalley791 7 лет назад +1

    I have never seen a two row. We have 1 row ground drive at our antique show and a PTO wheat binder both are fun to run and watch.

    • @boehmfarm4276
      @boehmfarm4276  7 лет назад +1

      I wish I had time to take it to shows.

    • @lukestrawwalker
      @lukestrawwalker 2 года назад

      Yeah that was for rich farmers... Dang guys next thing you know they'll be renting 20 acres more! LOL:) OL J R :)

  • @timerfarms113
    @timerfarms113 7 лет назад +1

    When I was a kid we did a whole wagon load of shocks and put it through a chopper blower into our silo. That was sure depressing to see that little pile in the silo after that big wagon load was empty.

    • @boehmfarm4276
      @boehmfarm4276  7 лет назад +1

      The more loads you cut, the bigger the pile. It's sorta the opposite for hay. It takes up more space off the wagon.

  • @jamisgood21
    @jamisgood21 7 лет назад +2

    Definitely very cool!

  • @emilianhristov715
    @emilianhristov715 6 лет назад +1

    That is a neat machine

  • @kanye-ke6bv
    @kanye-ke6bv 7 лет назад +1

    Awesome equipment

  • @williamchristopher1560
    @williamchristopher1560 5 лет назад +1

    With rubber tires, AND 2 row, iot was likely early 50s, late 40s

  • @michiganfarming1955
    @michiganfarming1955 7 лет назад +1

    wow 2 row binder thats a rare piece. now all you need is a f12 to pull it!

    • @boehmfarm4276
      @boehmfarm4276  7 лет назад +3

      I think we'll stick with the 70 year age difference between the binder and the TC30.

  • @coopervories1262
    @coopervories1262 7 лет назад +3

    It is a gatherer for cornerback

  • @alancooper5386
    @alancooper5386 7 лет назад +1

    Hi guys, well i lived and am back home from my brain surgery. nice too so ur stuff again. did not know if i ever would again. beat the odds of 25% survival. now to heal for up to 6months

    • @boehmfarm4276
      @boehmfarm4276  7 лет назад +2

      Yay!!! We have been wondering how you are. We haven't heard from you in a while.

    • @jamisgood21
      @jamisgood21 7 лет назад +1

      Wow, i'm not sure who you are, but I'm happy you made it! That's quite a scary thing to go against. You're a lucky man.

    • @alancooper5386
      @alancooper5386 7 лет назад +2

      am taking heeps of drugs, and we tryed lots. just after coming outta the coma the pain was then felt, since my scalp was partly cut away then my head skull bone was cut open to reveil my brain and the tumor that grew out from it. was told it was not as expected, but it grew out like a mushroon so it was easy to cut it off the brain by its roots. my brain was not cut open or things could have been different. now all that has to grow back into place. right now am taking 50mgs of hydromorphine every 8 hours. am mostly pain free for 4 hours then all kinds of things start happening, a itching in my skull that u can not reach to scratch, a burning of the area where my scalp was stretched away, and then the worst headache u ever had. but i am alive and with lots of rest everything should grow back into place. only wish right now is that i don't get addicted to any of these drugs. lots to explain to someone who cares as most don't tell things the way they are.

    • @boehmfarm4276
      @boehmfarm4276  7 лет назад +2

      Wow, I am glad it went well. The recovery must be awful, and since you need the pain pills, when you're healed, you hopefully will feel no need for them.

    • @alancooper5386
      @alancooper5386 7 лет назад +1

      thats what worriest me the most, becoming a druggy like some homeless drugged up street people.as seen on news tv

  • @vintagemarketatthemill7125
    @vintagemarketatthemill7125 Год назад

    Do you leave ears on? Also, how do you price for wholesale? So much per bundle? How much is a bundle wholesale? Great video! Thanks

  • @DennysCountryLife
    @DennysCountryLife 7 лет назад +1

    That was really cool! We could use a few bundles fro decorations. Shipping might be expensive though!

    • @boehmfarm4276
      @boehmfarm4276  7 лет назад +2

      Half the cost of goods comes from shipping.

  • @turboalways7884
    @turboalways7884 4 месяца назад

    Amazing

  • @lukestrawwalker
    @lukestrawwalker 2 года назад

    SO you sell the corn stalks for yard decorations in the fall?? My SIL goes out and cuts some by hand and stacks them like an old corn shock. I'd figure you'd want somewhat drier stalks but I guess if it's too dry it breaks up the leaves and makes it unattractive... better to cut it green and let it dry in the shocks. Do yall stand them up to dry or what? Curious because its an interesting idea that NOBODY does down here in Texas...
    I know when I was farming cotton my wife suggested we could make a lot of money doing the same thing with cotton stalks with the open cotton bolls still on them-- she saw little bundles of cotton stalks, maybe a half-dozen stalks, with the open cotton bolls still hanging on them, for like $6 a bundle at Hobby Lobby or something. A wheat binder could probably make them I guess or a guy could cut them and tie them off by hand... lotta work though and you gotta have an outlet. Still you could make more money off one acre of cotton cut and sold as decorations than you can off probably 100 acres of cotton harvested for ginning and selling the cotton for regular use... OL J R :)

    • @boehmfarm4276
      @boehmfarm4276  2 года назад +1

      We just use the machine for decoration bundles.

  • @Turfman1967
    @Turfman1967 3 года назад

    just curious how do you dry them without them getting moldy

    • @boehmfarm4276
      @boehmfarm4276  3 года назад

      I'm sure there might be some black spots on the leaves, but not big fuzzy mold. We don't even leave them in the field, they get shipped green. Merchant doesn't want them dry because they crumble then.

  • @Highway-f1o
    @Highway-f1o 6 лет назад +1

    Great.

  • @makingithappen9722
    @makingithappen9722 5 лет назад +1

    Things were built to last at that time.

  • @irondarknessdarkness8900
    @irondarknessdarkness8900 5 лет назад

    i want to take that apart and copy it..for hemp harvesting...cit the plant at ground level and big binder bundles dropped on a catching platform to be laid on a chain bit loader to like a side dump trailer..so you can just take then whole plants off the field at ground level in 1 pass so its ready for the next thing.

    • @boehmfarm4276
      @boehmfarm4276  5 лет назад +1

      Way back when, there was a special machine to mow hemp and lay it out to dry.

    • @irondarknessdarkness8900
      @irondarknessdarkness8900 5 лет назад

      @@boehmfarm4276 i thought there might have been such things but i have not seen even pic's. you get all these hi power mower/chopper combines in ytube searches. i am interested in bunching and taking the whole thing off to a processing house instead of leaving it out for a number of reasons and i was looking at vids of the single row bunchers when i ran across this 2 row version u have..was nice to see it work.
      and planting with a no till method.

    • @irondarknessdarkness8900
      @irondarknessdarkness8900 5 лет назад

      @@boehmfarm4276 what row space? 36 inch row?

  • @MrJohndeere3720
    @MrJohndeere3720 7 лет назад +1

    very cool. :)

  • @allisjoe
    @allisjoe Год назад

    How wide is it
    I’m picking one up this weekend

    • @boehmfarm4276
      @boehmfarm4276  Год назад

      I think the wheels will fit on an 8' wide trailer.

  • @koryleague8833
    @koryleague8833 7 лет назад +1

    Do you sell those for decoration sorry if you answered my phone doesn't have the best speakers

  • @armstrongfamilyapiaries3516
    @armstrongfamilyapiaries3516 3 года назад

    What's the row spacing on the corn your cutting

  • @ivanperezokhuysen1788
    @ivanperezokhuysen1788 5 лет назад

    since I dont think there is anyone who builds this things nowadays, it would be great to have some detailed images to replicate it

    • @boehmfarm4276
      @boehmfarm4276  5 лет назад

      I have never seen another two row PTO binder. It'll take some creativity to replicate.

    • @lukestrawwalker
      @lukestrawwalker 2 года назад

      Basically gathering chains and a sickle underneath to cut the stalks off, and then basically the sideways equivalent of a baler needle and knotter that trips and ties it off when enough stalks accumulate... OL J R :)

  • @peterjames2004
    @peterjames2004 10 месяцев назад

    do you still have this

    • @boehmfarm4276
      @boehmfarm4276  10 месяцев назад

      Yes, but we haven't used much. Contemplating on finding it a new loving home.

  • @Masseydriver
    @Masseydriver 7 лет назад +1

    Never seen a two row, lots of one row around here though.

    • @boehmfarm4276
      @boehmfarm4276  7 лет назад +2

      I know. This is like having a super stereo system based around cassette tapes. Fancy, but at the end of the line for corn binders.

  • @stephanfarms9307
    @stephanfarms9307 6 лет назад

    Why would you need to bind corn?

    • @boehmfarm4276
      @boehmfarm4276  6 лет назад

      We sell the bundles for fall decoration.

  • @pocketchange1951
    @pocketchange1951 3 года назад

    👍👌🇨🇦❤

  • @javierserranoival8725
    @javierserranoival8725 3 года назад

    No la retira lo suficiente en la vuelta lo va a venir pisando

    • @javierserranoival8725
      @javierserranoival8725 3 года назад

      Quien Lo hizo debe responder,por q. Tu equipo solo trabaja para un la dado? Y en la. Bueltaa que?.