Fantastic overview and presentation. My family's first Gleaner was a "C" (straight C). Although I was very young at the time, with every passing year I began to take more interest in it; today, I remember it like it was yesterday. 262 cu. in. 6-cyl gas engine, wooden idler blocks for the chains, wooden slats on the raddle chain, and more. It worked great in oats but as the years progressed and the corn yields and the stalks increased, that wooden raddle was the weak spot. Today, we also use green paint but Gleaner is where it all started. I sure wish they would have kept the Allis Chalmers orange paint for the tractors. Thank you for doing this.
This is the only non IH machine we have ever owned. Don’t get me wrong IH axial flow was a winner but Gleaner is Gleaner and our N Series is 7000 hours strong.
We started an emergency harvesting crew in 2003 after Hurricane Irene. We bought 44 series John Deere tractors for the wagons and a large Class 840 harvester, a Miller pro silo blower and we rented IH tractors to run the blower. It should have been only 1 tractor, but it ended up being 6. The PTO blew in short succession on all 6. So we finally got an old beatup John Deere 40 or 42 series tractor, and put it on the blower and it ran flawless the rest of the season. IH has not been good to us at all. Everything from 1066 to the newer fancy ones. They break easily and randomly. And JD has been the opposite. Almost indestructible.
Great video. Take it from a Case IH mechanic by day... Running 3 generations of gleaner at home in the evenings, G, R7, R72, simpler to work on, less down time, great grain samples.
@@robwar2288 my dad worked 20 years for agco and now 20 years for CNH. Ask him how many turret auger housings and gear boxes he's put in a red one and how many unloader joints he's replaced on a gleaner. Shaker bushings. Rotor transition cones. Case rotor variable speed is controlled by a glorified car window actuator. Gleaner it's a hydraulic cylinder integral to the variable speed drive hub. Yeah they are built heavy enough.
From 1959 to 1986 our farm had 5 Gleaner combines. Three of them had rice tires. Fun times when there is no cab or cab without an air conditioning setting in a glass bubble. Easy to service with access to all parts of the combine. Clean grain and minimum grain loss out of the back. RUclipsr Brian's Farming Videos bought a Gleaner combine in 2022. It is harder to get used to the feeder house being to the right instead of dead center. Wasn't the smoothest start with the transmission, but that was fixed. With a corn head, the back end is light. There is a weight package and I would definitely want that. I did not feel the combine was as stable as it should be. The grain is cleaner than the Claas, John Deere, and CaseIH combines I have seen on other RUclips videos. I am looking forward to hearing about your experience with a Gleaner combine this year. Great and informative video.
I remember when growing up in the 70's. A school friends parents had a Gleaner. We always picked on him saying Gleaner was so cheap they couldn't paint them. Guess Gleaner taught me a lesson. Still here today!
Honestly the transverse rotor is the most efficient and lightest footprint of all combines. Just wish here in NC there was a bigger or local dealer network. Despite some still running doing maintenance in house and take that 45-60 min drive for parts. Thanks BTP for the informative vid!
Not in a rice field they’re not. When gleaner switched to transverse rotor machines they quit selling them in rice country. They can’t handle the tough conditions.
miss the farm I worked on in CT river valley and the family that owned it...many fields scattered through many towns.....IH, FORD,,CASE, and a few DEERS....though not blood related ,...they will always be Family.....they are the REICHLE FAMILY... one of the oldest family owned farms in CONNECTICUT RIVER VALLEY.....they are all incredible people....who treated me as family....BLESSED BE TO ALL OF THEM🇺🇸❤️🤍💙😊
Massey has a strong presence world wide. It would have been nice to see AGCO orange continue in North America. If they had started consolidating to orange from the start it may have been a stronger brand.
100 years, wow....just incredible and thank you for sharing this video! Does Gleaner offer tracks direct from the factory? Just thinking about those guys 100 years ago with ideas and solutions....then prove it. Just incredible!
Hope to have one of those in a few years I’ve run and owned gleaners my whole life just needed a plaid drivers seat and a allis decal on the steering wheel
Brown Family Farms have a new Gleaner that had a warranty issue and Gleaner brought out a loaner combine no charge. Not many manufacturers will do this. When can we see a visit with Brian, Robert Sr. , and Bob Jr. ?
With the corporate name of AGCO and the A standing for Allis, there should ALWAYS be AC orange in and on their products IMO. I always enjoy the videos with a Gleaner running in them, especially the newer Gleaners. Lots of old ones around here (and I mean old) but very rarely do we get to see a new(er) one here. I wish that would change.
It is nice to see the orange. AGCO has really become a strong company. While orange is not the brand today it built a world wide leader with top end products.
My dad traded 6 L2's for 3 N6's in the fall of '79, I found some black striping that looked something like the series three strips. A guy we knew at the time ran Gleaner experimental machine's and saw them, they put those on the '82 series three machines. I remember thinking that was cool of them.
@@bigtractorpower We harvested wheat from Texas to Nebraska, then went back south for rice, corn and soybeans, we ran those N6's then N7's till '88 then went back to 12 L3's.
If you are in Westlock or near Westlock Alberta, come join us at the annual Westlock Vintage Tractor and Machinery show on June 3-4 will be celebrating 100 years of Gleaner combines.
The thing I don't understand is,.....Fendt and Massey Ferguson are also part of AGCO, so why do they not make their combines "Natural Flow" like the Gleaners, if the "Natural Flow" is such a great concept?!?!
I bought a 100 years cap at this show right after the interview. They had several to choose from at the AGCO exhibit. Your best bet for AGCO merchandise is www.shopagco.com
I believe I saw the Fordson mounted unit that started the Gleaned run in the background? It would interesting to see them running side by in the field.
I've own gleaners from the f2 to l3 they where decent combines the n an r where not as good I went to john deere an never look back because the dealers have left the area
@@gleanerman2195 I’m telling you with the water ways in my fields it would surely hit the grain cart. I will stick with brands that updated their designs to meet modern day standards.
@@Sea-Bass I have ran Gleaners all my life, sometimes we had as many as 12 of them at one time, never have we hit anything with them and we have cut through waterways as well. . It's still the best design on the market even after being in used sense '73. I'll give you at tip, before you get to the gully cut your auger off and let the cart go through, then start back up, simple.
There is always a tile blow out that comes out of nowhere iv had case hit the buggy with the auger but I seen the hole the and warned the guy in the combine he got it shut off before it hit it helps the guy I'm the combine if the buggy guys is watching out in front of him to
I hope I couldn't order the hundredth anniversary of the Baldwin brother softball combined by using any other Chinese parts, electronics, bearings, steel? Give me a new combine with all German or American parts. Stainless steel bearings would be nice
That swivel unloader is spectacular, easy on grain, simple, uses less fuel, old school that works the best. Good job bigtractorpower.
Fantastic overview and presentation.
My family's first Gleaner was a "C" (straight C). Although I was very young at the time, with every passing year I began to take more interest in it; today, I remember it like it was yesterday.
262 cu. in. 6-cyl gas engine, wooden idler blocks for the chains, wooden slats on the raddle chain, and more. It worked great in oats but as the years progressed and the corn yields and the stalks increased, that wooden raddle was the weak spot.
Today, we also use green paint but Gleaner is where it all started.
I sure wish they would have kept the Allis Chalmers orange paint for the tractors.
Thank you for doing this.
I’m loving the paint scheme of the centennial edition. Gleaner never fails to impress.
It is very cool looking.
Nothing better than a Gleaner. Cleanest combines around. Thank you for the video
They are great combines.
This is the only non IH machine we have ever owned. Don’t get me wrong IH axial flow was a winner but Gleaner is Gleaner and our N Series is 7000 hours strong.
We started an emergency harvesting crew in 2003 after Hurricane Irene. We bought 44 series John Deere tractors for the wagons and a large Class 840 harvester, a Miller pro silo blower and we rented IH tractors to run the blower. It should have been only 1 tractor, but it ended up being 6. The PTO blew in short succession on all 6. So we finally got an old beatup John Deere 40 or 42 series tractor, and put it on the blower and it ran flawless the rest of the season. IH has not been good to us at all. Everything from 1066 to the newer fancy ones. They break easily and randomly. And JD has been the opposite. Almost indestructible.
Great video. Take it from a Case IH mechanic by day... Running 3 generations of gleaner at home in the evenings, G, R7, R72, simpler to work on, less down time, great grain samples.
Are they built Heavy enough??
@@robwar2288 my dad worked 20 years for agco and now 20 years for CNH. Ask him how many turret auger housings and gear boxes he's put in a red one and how many unloader joints he's replaced on a gleaner. Shaker bushings. Rotor transition cones. Case rotor variable speed is controlled by a glorified car window actuator. Gleaner it's a hydraulic cylinder integral to the variable speed drive hub. Yeah they are built heavy enough.
As an old Allis guy, thank you gleaner for remembering AC in your heritage. Fantastic looking combine.
I am excited to film a 100 Years Edition in wheat this June.
R.I.P Kevin Bein. Kevin kept the Gleaner brand alive. Wish he could have made it to the 100th anniversary.
Kevin is greatly missed. Aaron is a life long Gleaner enthusiast and really enjoys being a part of AGCO.
Kevin inspired many. I became a gleaner fan three years ago watching every episode of the gleaner roadshow.
That is/was a huge loss for the Gleaner brand. He really pushed to improve Gleaner in the last years.
Huge loss!
@@bigtractorpower sir can be share your video on my youtube channel and i given also your credit in video description and video link share
From 1959 to 1986 our farm had 5 Gleaner combines. Three of them had rice tires. Fun times when there is no cab or cab without an air conditioning setting in a glass bubble. Easy to service with access to all parts of the combine. Clean grain and minimum grain loss out of the back. RUclipsr Brian's Farming Videos bought a Gleaner combine in 2022. It is harder to get used to the feeder house being to the right instead of dead center. Wasn't the smoothest start with the transmission, but that was fixed. With a corn head, the back end is light. There is a weight package and I would definitely want that. I did not feel the combine was as stable as it should be. The grain is cleaner than the Claas, John Deere, and CaseIH combines I have seen on other RUclips videos. I am looking forward to hearing about your experience with a Gleaner combine this year. Great and informative video.
I remember when growing up in the 70's. A school friends parents had a Gleaner. We always picked on him saying Gleaner was so cheap they couldn't paint them. Guess Gleaner taught me a lesson. Still here today!
Honestly the transverse rotor is the most efficient and lightest footprint of all combines. Just wish here in NC there was a bigger or local dealer network. Despite some still running doing maintenance in house and take that 45-60 min drive for parts. Thanks BTP for the informative vid!
Not in a rice field they’re not. When gleaner switched to transverse rotor machines they quit selling them in rice country. They can’t handle the tough conditions.
miss the farm I worked on in CT river valley and the family that owned it...many fields scattered through many towns.....IH, FORD,,CASE, and a few DEERS....though not blood related ,...they will always be Family.....they are the REICHLE FAMILY... one of the oldest family owned farms in CONNECTICUT RIVER VALLEY.....they are all incredible people....who treated me as family....BLESSED BE TO ALL OF THEM🇺🇸❤️🤍💙😊
Bravo AGCO, this guy must be an engineer.
100 years is an amazing achievement. Congratulations.
Can’t wait to get in our gleaner for wheat harvest in July.
Gleaner !! The Meaner Cleaner Picker Upper ! Mine all mine 🇨🇦😄
I love my Gleaner. They're great combines and always have been. Agco should have dumped the Massey name and stayed with the orange Agco line.
Massey has a strong presence world wide. It would have been nice to see AGCO orange continue in North America. If they had started consolidating to orange from the start it may have been a stronger brand.
100 years, wow....just incredible and thank you for sharing this video! Does Gleaner offer tracks direct from the factory? Just thinking about those guys 100 years ago with ideas and solutions....then prove it. Just incredible!
and he said it...best sample, Gleaners rule. Its come a long way since the N7...
Gleaner combines are nice machines😁👍 that logo looks great👍😉
Thanks for the video👍👍
They are very good combines. I am looking forward to wheat harvest 2023.
👋 hi 👋 from Dexter,Missouri my friend.
Super amazin video. As alAways.
Have a super amazein weekend.
Thank you James.
Thanks for sharing, good video!
Thank you for watching.
Looks great 👍. We run gleaners, they work great for us.
Very nice. What models?
@@bigtractorpower 1993 R52 and a 2002 R72
Hope to have one of those in a few years I’ve run and owned gleaners my whole life just needed a plaid drivers seat and a allis decal on the steering wheel
The plaid seat would be Gleaner perfection.
Always a great job Jason 👍👍👍
Thank you for for watching.
Thanks, Jason great video
Thank you for watching Brad. Hopefully I will have a 100 Years S97 filmed in June.
@@bigtractorpower I think that would be a great idea
Brown Family Farms have a new Gleaner that had a warranty issue and Gleaner brought out a loaner combine no charge. Not many manufacturers will do this. When can we see a visit with Brian, Robert Sr. , and Bob Jr. ?
Gleaner is by Far the Best on the Market. Some people Love them, Others dont. Glad to see them Celebrate 100Th Anniversary.
Great machines
They are impressive harvesters.
Wish you a nice weekend
With the corporate name of AGCO and the A standing for Allis, there should ALWAYS be AC orange in and on their products IMO. I always enjoy the videos with a Gleaner running in them, especially the newer Gleaners. Lots of old ones around here (and I mean old) but very rarely do we get to see a new(er) one here. I wish that would change.
It is nice to see the orange. AGCO has really become a strong company. While orange is not the brand today it built a world wide leader with top end products.
When they formed Agco it stood for Allis-Gleaner company, how they have abused it.
Was always a gold standard in combines.
👍👍
I can’t wait to see some video of it in the field
Me too 😁👍
Looking forward to seeing it in the fields for wheat then fall harvest. They definitely are a lighter combine.
Me too. It is a cool combine.
My dad traded 6 L2's for 3 N6's in the fall of '79, I found some black striping that looked something like the series three strips. A guy we knew at the time ran Gleaner experimental machine's and saw them, they put those on the '82 series three machines. I remember thinking that was cool of them.
Wow what a great history. Thank you for sharing. What crops were you harvesting. I hope to film the N5, N6 and N7 at some point. Very cool combines.
@@bigtractorpower We harvested wheat from Texas to Nebraska, then went back south for rice, corn and soybeans, we ran those N6's then N7's till '88 then went back to 12 L3's.
We still run an N5. You can come film it for winter wheat harvest if you would like. We are in Southern Illinois
Simple design on the Gleaners .
They are good harvesters .
What was the first gleaner with a cab?
The Meaner Gleaner Cleaner Picker Upper??? What a comment and commercial!!!🇨🇦😄
If you are in Westlock or near Westlock Alberta, come join us at the annual Westlock Vintage Tractor and Machinery show on June 3-4 will be celebrating 100 years of Gleaner combines.
Nice!
Thank you for watching.
Great video, Jason you need to get some video of one of those anniversary plaques. Also I need some 100 years of gleaner stickers for my tool box
When it comes to the number 100,the name Farmall comes to mind.
It does. Stay tuned.
Hello! Congratulations, Gleaner, The Cleaner!
100 Years is a big landmark.
@@bigtractorpower 👌
Cleaner with GLEANER!
They are good harvesting machines.
Great to see you filming more gleaners!
I am always looking for Gleaner combines. Stay tuned for a rare C62 this summer.
The thing I don't understand is,.....Fendt and Massey Ferguson are also part of AGCO, so why do they not make their combines "Natural Flow" like the Gleaners, if the "Natural Flow" is such a great concept?!?!
Because that concept was developed by gleaner and belongs in the gleaner name.
Parabéns eu sou seu fã amo seus vídeos e seu canal sucesso sempre 👏👏👏👍👍👌👌👌🚜🚜🚜💪💪🇧🇷🇧🇷
😁👍👍
I love the cap he is wearing. Where can I get one?
I bought a 100 years cap at this show right after the interview. They had several to choose from at the AGCO exhibit. Your best bet for AGCO merchandise is www.shopagco.com
i like the gleaner cap he's wearing. where can i order one?
Our neighbor had 2 gleaner combines back in the day an I got to run both
Very cool.
THANK YOU ,GUYS.......................👍✌👋 💛💛💛
Thank you for watching.
I believe I saw the Fordson mounted unit that started the Gleaned run in the background? It would interesting to see them running side by in the field.
The first Gleaners were mounted on a Fordson power unit. I have seen one in a collection. It would be exciting to see one harvesting.
The first self propelled combine was the Berry, built and patented in 1886.
I am very excited to see the 150th commemorative edition of the Berry in 2036.
Love your videos. What brand is your favorite?
Really enjoyed the video here. That sale person really knows his stuff. Great job here. John T.
He is a life long Gleaner fan in his dream job at AGCO 😁👍
Wasn't there a slogan at one time, "Nothing runs cleaner than a Gleaner?"
Gotta Love Spending 250 Thou and getting a plauque 🤔
gleaner combine are the eaiet toervice i have been to to glea
My neighbor runs three Gleaners! 2 s series and a R 72!
Very cool. The R72 is a monster.
Howdy bigtractorpower
Thank you for watching.
Why don't all Combines have backup cameras on them
Yes, should be standard on all brands.
I've own gleaners from the f2 to l3 they where decent combines the n an r where not as good I went to john deere an never look back because the dealers have left the area
Hopefully there is enough farmers left in the next 100 years??
There will be. Some body has to feed the world.
I wonder if they would do something like that next year for 110 years of Allis Chalmers
Unfortunately not. Allis-Chalmers is owned by an oil pump company.
The tractor part I thought was owned by agco
If you have ever had to work on a red or green you would own a gleaner
I am always impressed with the modern S series Gleaners.
Too bad they don't make a throw back Allis Chalmers tractor
That would be neat. They made an Allis-Chalmers retro lawn mower about 15 years ago.
Next video big tractor, let someone film you so we can put a face to you.
One of these days I will.
Anybody feel in there heart to give me one of them n series I’d be glad to take it off your hand lol my dream machine
The N series is on my wish list to film. It would be great to find the N5, N6 and N7.
@@bigtractorpower there’s a guy in Richland tn right below Columbia tn that runs one might see if he would
Shoulda come w orange wheels, don't seem like a real gleaner wo orange rims
It is exciting they brought back orange for one year. Orange wheels would have been perfection.
Give me an hour with that auger. I could have it broke off by then.
So, you are telling us that you are not a combine operator.
@@gleanerman2195 I’m telling you with the water ways in my fields it would surely hit the grain cart. I will stick with brands that updated their designs to meet modern day standards.
@@Sea-Bass I have ran Gleaners all my life, sometimes we had as many as 12 of them at one time, never have we hit anything with them and we have cut through waterways as well. . It's still the best design on the market even after being in used sense '73. I'll give you at tip, before you get to the gully cut your auger off and let the cart go through, then start back up, simple.
@@gleanerman2195 I thought every combine operator was smart enough to know that. Evidently I was wrong.
There is always a tile blow out that comes out of nowhere iv had case hit the buggy with the auger but I seen the hole the and warned the guy in the combine he got it shut off before it hit it helps the guy I'm the combine if the buggy guys is watching out in front of him to
They still haven't gone back to orange rims an reels on the bean header
That would look extra cool.
They had that burnt orange look
But they didn't use galvanized sheet metal.
Got to be the biggest pile of a combine you can buy!
I film every brand and I am most impressed the Gleaner S series.
I hope I couldn't order the hundredth anniversary of the Baldwin brother softball combined by using any other Chinese parts, electronics, bearings, steel? Give me a new combine with all German or American parts. Stainless steel bearings would be nice
Needs orange rims
That would be extra cool.
I’m not impressed with the transverse rotor machines. It says a lot when they don’t sell any in rice country.
I guess they are not set up for rice. I film every brand of combine and find when it comes to wheat, corn and soybeans they are the best on market.
No company sold more bearings than Gleaner.
We don’t have trouble with ours
They all do.
Thats probably because they sold ten times more combines back then than anyone else.
When the claas lexion cab keeps showing up on other manufacturers machine.😅