It’s always good to have plenty of power. I have filmed a 9410R pulling another brand of high speed disk that was 26ft. I the 410 go tractor knew the implant was back their at 10 mph. Just a bit more hp can make the job easier as we can see in this video.
BTW great video as always sir. Wild impressive piece of equipment shown here. Lot of people criticize the setup but don’t understand that compaction, fall deep tillage, or price isn’t an issue when the fields are as wet as they have been this year. It’s horrible. Farmers are scared in southern Indiana right now that they may miss the corn window at this point. And that would be devastating to most farms small, big, or huge. So whatever it takes to open the fields up is being done around here. You can’t find a speed harrow for purchase, rent, or borrow right now because they are all getting drug through the mud already. We are looking at rain in a few days and the soil is just now starting to dry wet no rain for 2 days. Pretty worrisome for the 2019 spring crop.
Bigtractorpower! Thanks for all your hard work making these videos! Living in The Netherlands I really like it. Not only the fantastic filming. Also all the information you give us! You must be a walking encyclopedia..... greetings from Friesland. You and tractorspotter are doing a great job!!
@@ryanbbew4947 they perform better than conventional tires but not quite as well. Not of the testing is being done by the tire manufacturers and they tend to skirt around data that is contrary to their sales pitch. That said, yes...they are much cheaper.
We have a set on a 9620 to pull scrapers, and used to run tracks, and slowly are converting back to tires as money comes in. I used to think tracks were ideal, but we found out that tracks other than the initial cost, cost much more to maintain with very very small benefits. therr is more compaction too with tracks, especially when turning and on in even ground.
I still don't get the stupid row crop tires. The theory is that you don't press the rows when you plant, but you still make a lot of pressure in between, where the roots sit, and if the ground is somewhat wet, the pressure will extend towards the side of the tie, negating the benefit.
While growing up, my great grandpa would give me all of his farming magazines and loved it. Through the years, I have always loved farming and never got into it much, people talk about how they will go on vacations, buy houses and all that fun stuff if they win the lottery, I just want to buy a farm and start farming.
Great post. I collected sales literature from the time I was 3. I liked looking a the machine pictures and dreaming about the work they did. I enjoy getting a chance to be out in the field with them today.
I understand that Western Kentucky is going to be growing almost 60,000 acres of agricultural hemp this growing season. Any chance you can document how this crop is cultivated and brought to market as we go through the season? This is probably the only opportunity in our lifetime to observe an entire agricultural crop being developed from a standing start.
Bob Mann it isn’t exactly a standing start its more pilot scale to commercial scale. I live close to the gen canna mayfield expansion. Most of the work is getting new locally adapted cultivars. Also much of the kentucky hemp crop is for cbd oil production. Its closer to tobacco management than row crops.
@@derekmartin2817 Understood and don't think that I'm coming at this from a "Cool, dude...pass the bong, man!" perspective. I'm genuinely interested in how this comes to pass.
Its a gold rush some will do well some will loose. Ive seen fibre crops grown 2 seasons. cbd oil dedicated cloned plants 1 season. And one processor fold in the setting up process.
Impressive implement. This 2680 H and the Deagleman a few episodes back are made heavy to use high speed as inertia. One pass saves fuel over hundreds of acres the savings must be considerable, I like tilling & ploughing videos a lot. They are mesmerizing watching the soil turn. Appreciate the info and pricing. 🚜👍
My wife works at Deere, a project manager for master data, her grandfather was an engineer, and an uncle a welder on the combine line. I will attest that Deere equipment is built tough to last.
You make fantastic videos! I’m glad Tractor Time with Tim introduced you to his audience at the Farm Machinery show last winter. I’ve been mesmerized ever since. Your knowledge is beyond compare.
Could you imagine what the men of the last century who pulled single bottom plows with mules and draft horses would think of this? Their version of high technology was a single implement, Made of plow steel that wouldn't fold or crack Everytime it passed a rock, now we have this... Amazing.
Excellent video of an excellent machine! This was a joy to see haulin down the field. And as always thank you for the information too, I really love the background on the why's and how's. Cheers!
We run a Norwood HSD3000 and absolutely love it. You need to hit on the maintenance side, all of the pivot points are nylon bushings so the daily checks are quick, no greasing and you're on the go! You're right on power, any hills and you know it's back there. It does a great job in a reduced tillage program and wet conditions this spring are proving it again!
@@lfeco It handles rocks a lot better than you think. We have a couple fields in particular that are solid rocks of all sizes due to the previous renters loving deep ripping and with the coulters being mounted individually they float over them without a lot of trouble. We used to have a Kuhn Excellerator and they would either get wedged between the discs or stop the gang and skid it along the surface. We haven't seen any of that so far with the Norwood, no broken discs yet either. You still need to be careful in heavy rocks and slowing down helps but we're hoping that by picking the rocks on the surface and not bringing new ones up with reduced tillage that we can run full speed in those fields before too long. Keep the rocks where they belong - below the surface!
@@nickshamplo7489 wet conditions are tough to gauge. Wet ground doesn't seem to be an issue unless its wet enough that the ground slows the discs down and they push mud. Probably shouldn't be out in that. They are a heavy implement and will plow. The bigger issue is the rolling basket filling with mud in really wet stuff but again, probably shouldn't be in that. We are pulling ours with a Quadtrac so we can push further into a wet spot than we maybe should at times. That being said, it has done a great job "freshening" up fields this spring where things were a bit to wet to plant directly into. It left a nice smoothed surface that was great to plant into after a little sun. Better conditions than a field cultivator, that's for sure. Plow pan or hard pan doesn't seem to be any worse than anything else. Personally, I feel it's a matter of perspective. The goal is to do a shallow till, size and incorporate residue but mostly pin it to the surface for the worms and microbes to work. It will work as deep as it's set so you're going to see "loose" soil as far as it has worked and may see it firmer below. We are growing more and more cover crops to keep those roots going down so our strategy is to utilize the root structure to create an open channel for water and nutrient flow when they are not there. The primary benefit is that the soil structure is not completely destroyed and reset each year with heavy tillage. Right or wrong there's a lot to learn, that's the fun part of farming.
@@chrisbeach6385 it sounds like you are close to our practice of tillage. just enough to get residue and fertilizer incorporated into the soil. We did plow a field this year after doing soil test and seeing most of the nutrients were in the top 2" of the soil try to see if we could move more if it deeper so when we dry out in the summer it will stay available to the roots. In no way am i saying plow like that every year it something that we are trying this year to see if we move nutrients down in the soil. If it works it might be something we look at doing every 6 to 7 years.
Thanks for a great video, Jon ! Kinda kicks the NGD types in their appetite don't it ? I remain continually amazed by the agri-industry's progress i creating more and more efficient tillage and harvest tools that feed all of us ever more cheaply !
yes thats how the discs work best , i worked for a silly ol tosser but he said once the discs need to go fast to do any good , lovely outfit , good vidjo chaps
I think this model will get Garber’s attention here in Western Kentucky for spring tillage and especially fall tillage here where corn fields are planted into winter wheat.
Here in north Florida farmers are harvesting chip potatoes and then hilling the sifted soil back into 40 inch rows and then planting double drills of corn. The corn will be harvested in October with the stalks chopped and disced several times readying the land to be planted back in potatoes in January. Yields are about 160 bu an acre. The corn is planted on top of rows to cope with the summer rains. Our fields are crowned into 60' beds with a drainage furrow plowed between every bed. With the double crop expensive equipment gets used again instead of just sitting under a barn all summer.
Very interesting. Thank you for sharing. They plant potatoes some what like that is SE Missouri. They plant the potatoes in February and harvest them in May and plant soybeans. It helps give rotation to the cotton fields in that area.
What an amazing tool, besides the price of admission, a farmer's stress level should be diminished when working with such a capable equipment. The working speed and quality of the results are outstanding
The Oliver 70 was a big tractor in its day. When the 70 hit the market many farm’s were using horses. Can you imagine what a farmer with a team of horses thought when his neighbor rolled in with an Oliver 70 and plowed up field in less than a day where the team of horses had to take a break every few passes in the field.
Our Oliver 70 and 1942 Ford did replace two work horses. Their names were Dick a d Queen. I was a small child but I remember the two horses prior to getting our two tractors.
We had 32 head of dairy cattle to milk twice a day. We had surge electric milkers to speed up the milking process. We also had jogs, sheep and chickens. No vacations, we did go fishing a day or so but we had to milk the cows and feed the other animals. I loved the farm but my parents sold it in 1958.
Just zero till now, so we don’t bring too many rocks up, Our 40 ft drape header does a wonderful job of picking rocks on top. This results in some combine clanking in combine.
bigtractorpower we use heavy harrows or med heavy a lot. Some still use the old fashion cultivator but ground needs to be moist after harvest, but then it becomes a rock digger!
John Deere ripping off a Case Quadtrac and a Norwood Quicktill with a can of Tremclad paint and some stickers...when you can't beat 'em...join 'em. Welcome to the party...a couple of years late. Great video...
With an implement like this every plenty of power is helpful. I filmed a similar type tillage tool that was 26ft on a 9410R and the 410 hp tractor knew the high speed disk was back there at 10 mph.
Are there any rocks in that area at all? I dare not take any piece of machinery in the ground that fast around here.... unless I want to haul something to the junk pile LOL! Even on clean fields, there are sometimes stray hidden boulders underneath, or even a badger hole too.
It is built on individual blades so an a blade encounters a stone it individually pops over the obstruction. It all depends on what works best in your region. In moderate stones these machine will not have the problems a traditional disk has. Here in WKY I think there will be more and more of these sold.
Too much speed has been proved to be actually ineffective in cost and wear terms. Increase of speed means increase in ground engaging parts or tools to the point when added to the extra Horsepower needed and flex and extra stress on the implement shows it's just not worth the extra effort. There is a sweet spot that I think most experienced farmers already know. And it's nowhere near the speed this is showing.
I am not a farmer at all but is this just a demonstration to show the power and the equipment and not saying you will love tilling and planting at these speed? That how I take it. The ground is very wet but this machine will till the soil and aide in drying it out. Isn’t that the message? Still it was amazing to watch the machine move and the dirt fly. Ohh man farmers get to play with the best tools. Blessing to all famers large down to the small homesteaders.
Is this machine built to compete with Case IH's Barracuda VT rig? I'd like to note, this ground is HARD and that disk is just scratching the surface. Plant in that 2" bed and your roots aren't getting into the nutrients. Need to break the hard pan.
We in Europa run disc cultivators like this for years! We normally drive with about 6 to 10 mph. Generally fast speeds are better for mixing the soil, but if you are to fast it will barely go in to the ground.
Väderstad Carriers are like the same thing like that ans gets u the same result. The discs are also induviduly mounted too but idk if that John deere high speed disc is available in sweden. Would love to see some väderstad equipment in the US but i think it’s very hard to find
I have a brochure on Vaderstad planters, air drills and tillage from Canada. They are sold in North America. I do not know if they have any dealers in the United States. They look like solid machines.
I wish us farmers in Central Indiana can get rolling. Especially when our Popcorn cut off date is 5-20-19 and more rain in the forest. No good but I'm sure we will get rolling soon .
What impresses vid👍that JD 9RX is flying along but still doing job that field cultivator is astonishing piece of farm equipment n people know i am CaseIH fan. Been wet what difference it makes wheels vs tracks tractor, also old disc set up to these high speed disc.
bigtractorpower CNH had announce that CaseIH n NH were going make there tractors more different from each other even though they will sharing platform including Styer. Also go different direction on farm equipment so CaseIH is on hunt for ag equipment company, so maybe High speed disk will be in next few years. CaseIH can’t use NH equipment which is shame.
Yes the high speed disk is starting to catch on in the United States. There are four different brands of these disks sold in the area I live in. One is imported from Europe.
These aren't even made by Deere, made by Norwood Sales. The problem with a lot of European brands is they tend to be build too lightweight. A lot of the American and Canadian brands are usually more robust.
Oh I wish I could get my local dealer to come demo that on my hay field. Dam Wild Hogs here in Texas are Destroying my place. That track tractor and high speed disk would fix it up really nice. I with JD would make a small 100 Hp track tractor for smaller equipment and smaller farms that would be the cats meow!!!!
@Giggitee O'Yeah you have zero idea what you're talking about. If these farmers we're depleting their soils they'd go out of business and you'd starve 😒
That’s the first pass. It took out about 75% on the first pass in the pasture. At the end of the video they are making a second pass over the ground. I think it worked the ground well compared to a plow normally needed.
Thank you very much putting this great video. What are the track and spacing for this 9570RX. John Deere have two options for this tractor (30 or 36 inch track available in 88 or 120 inch track spacing). Best,
Way too many moving parts for what work is being done. Bearings galore! I would think a good field cultivator would do as good or better a job on less fuel. Gotta love that RX
You know what they say about assuming...where are all these alleged bearings and moving parts …??? a cultivator would just rip up chunks of sod, a regular disc would make mud balls both at a fraction of the speed...
That tractor could turn a freight liner into a plow lol. Don't ask me how I know. Let's just say I was stuck in a field in Western Kentucky, when working a power outage storm.
Till at 13 MPH,plant at 10MPH.Nascar in a corn field!
Justa haulin the mail!!!
That deere doesn't even know the harrow is behind it!! Awsome video as always BTP 👍
It’s always good to have plenty of power. I have filmed a 9410R pulling another brand of high speed disk that was 26ft. I the 410 go tractor knew the implant was back their at 10 mph. Just a bit more hp can make the job easier as we can see in this video.
BTW great video as always sir. Wild impressive piece of equipment shown here. Lot of people criticize the setup but don’t understand that compaction, fall deep tillage, or price isn’t an issue when the fields are as wet as they have been this year. It’s horrible. Farmers are scared in southern Indiana right now that they may miss the corn window at this point. And that would be devastating to most farms small, big, or huge. So whatever it takes to open the fields up is being done around here. You can’t find a speed harrow for purchase, rent, or borrow right now because they are all getting drug through the mud already. We are looking at rain in a few days and the soil is just now starting to dry wet no rain for 2 days. Pretty worrisome for the 2019 spring crop.
You are right. Hopefully the sun will shine this week.
Bigtractorpower! Thanks for all your hard work making these videos! Living in The Netherlands I really like it. Not only the fantastic filming. Also all the information you give us! You must be a walking encyclopedia..... greetings from Friesland. You and tractorspotter are doing a great job!!
Stefan Berkum if you want great toy farming videos check out toy tractor times his other channel on RUclips
Thank you Kolton.
Thank you for watching. Tractor Spotter has a great channel.
Stunning how the tracks performed over wheel tractors in certain conditions, thanks for the video
Jan Kotze. lsw tires would perform as well, for about $75,000 cheaper.
@@ryanbbew4947 That is for sure, and it looks awesome on tractors
@@ryanbbew4947 they perform better than conventional tires but not quite as well. Not of the testing is being done by the tire manufacturers and they tend to skirt around data that is contrary to their sales pitch. That said, yes...they are much cheaper.
We have a set on a 9620 to pull scrapers, and used to run tracks, and slowly are converting back to tires as money comes in. I used to think tracks were ideal, but we found out that tracks other than the initial cost, cost much more to maintain with very very small benefits. therr is more compaction too with tracks, especially when turning and on in even ground.
I still don't get the stupid row crop tires. The theory is that you don't press the rows when you plant, but you still make a lot of pressure in between, where the roots sit, and if the ground is somewhat wet, the pressure will extend towards the side of the tie, negating the benefit.
My granddad would freak out over 2” seed beds, one pass tillage in road gear and a $100K disc. Amazing really.
ruclips.net/video/SfGT3jJl1M8/видео.html
While growing up, my great grandpa would give me all of his farming magazines and loved it. Through the years, I have always loved farming and never got into it much, people talk about how they will go on vacations, buy houses and all that fun stuff if they win the lottery, I just want to buy a farm and start farming.
Great post. I collected sales literature from the time I was 3. I liked looking a the machine pictures and dreaming about the work they did. I enjoy getting a chance to be out in the field with them today.
Fantastic video sir! The Deere works really well and fast! Nice implement! Thanks for sharing!!!
It can cover some ground in a hurry.
I understand that Western Kentucky is going to be growing almost 60,000 acres of agricultural hemp this growing season. Any chance you can document how this crop is cultivated and brought to market as we go through the season? This is probably the only opportunity in our lifetime to observe an entire agricultural crop being developed from a standing start.
Bob Mann it isn’t exactly a standing start its more pilot scale to commercial scale. I live close to the gen canna mayfield expansion. Most of the work is getting new locally adapted cultivars. Also much of the kentucky hemp crop is for cbd oil production. Its closer to tobacco management than row crops.
@@derekmartin2817 Understood and don't think that I'm coming at this from a "Cool, dude...pass the bong, man!" perspective. I'm genuinely interested in how this comes to pass.
Its a gold rush some will do well some will loose. Ive seen fibre crops grown 2 seasons. cbd oil dedicated cloned plants 1 season. And one processor fold in the setting up process.
Bob Mann j
A better example would be Oregon. They just started and are already the highest producing state for it in the u.s
Impressive implement. This 2680 H and the Deagleman a few episodes back are made heavy to use high speed as inertia. One pass saves fuel over hundreds of acres the savings must be considerable, I like tilling & ploughing videos a lot. They are mesmerizing watching the soil turn. Appreciate the info and pricing. 🚜👍
These high speed disks are impressive. Stay tuned for a video soon on the Kinze Mach Till high speed disk.
Have to admit, usually not a John Deere fan, but impressed with this HP Disk
It’s quite the tillage team.
My wife works at Deere, a project manager for master data, her grandfather was an engineer, and an uncle a welder on the combine line. I will attest that Deere equipment is built tough to last.
Phillip Anderson very cool. It’s a strong company.
You make fantastic videos! I’m glad Tractor Time with Tim introduced you to his audience at the Farm Machinery show last winter. I’ve been mesmerized ever since. Your knowledge is beyond compare.
Tim does a great job. I am a yard farmer my self. Thank you for watching.
ruclips.net/video/SfGT3jJl1M8/видео.html
#1 channel on u tube ,plus u always tell us the price of tractors etc. Keep up the good vidros.
Thank you for watching and for you kind comment.
I just love watching these videos ☺
Thank you for watching.
I'm surprised at the finished field. Incredible
Could you imagine what the men of the last century who pulled single bottom plows with mules and draft horses would think of this? Their version of high technology was a single implement, Made of plow steel that wouldn't fold or crack Everytime it passed a rock, now we have this... Amazing.
Love the machine and its concept. I wish they’d been out when I was farming!
The price tag! Wow! God Bless our farmers!
Excellent video of an excellent machine! This was a joy to see haulin down the field. And as always thank you for the information too, I really love the background on the why's and how's. Cheers!
ruclips.net/video/SfGT3jJl1M8/видео.html
Look at the dirt flying! That tractor isn't even working up a sweat!!!
S
We run a Norwood HSD3000 and absolutely love it. You need to hit on the maintenance side, all of the pivot points are nylon bushings so the daily checks are quick, no greasing and you're on the go! You're right on power, any hills and you know it's back there. It does a great job in a reduced tillage program and wet conditions this spring are proving it again!
Chris Beach, how does it handle a rock if you should happen to hit one?
@@lfeco It handles rocks a lot better than you think. We have a couple fields in particular that are solid rocks of all sizes due to the previous renters loving deep ripping and with the coulters being mounted individually they float over them without a lot of trouble. We used to have a Kuhn Excellerator and they would either get wedged between the discs or stop the gang and skid it along the surface. We haven't seen any of that so far with the Norwood, no broken discs yet either. You still need to be careful in heavy rocks and slowing down helps but we're hoping that by picking the rocks on the surface and not bringing new ones up with reduced tillage that we can run full speed in those fields before too long. Keep the rocks where they belong - below the surface!
how does it do in wet conditions? will it make a plow pan at the depth you set it?
@@nickshamplo7489 wet conditions are tough to gauge. Wet ground doesn't seem to be an issue unless its wet enough that the ground slows the discs down and they push mud. Probably shouldn't be out in that. They are a heavy implement and will plow. The bigger issue is the rolling basket filling with mud in really wet stuff but again, probably shouldn't be in that. We are pulling ours with a Quadtrac so we can push further into a wet spot than we maybe should at times. That being said, it has done a great job "freshening" up fields this spring where things were a bit to wet to plant directly into. It left a nice smoothed surface that was great to plant into after a little sun. Better conditions than a field cultivator, that's for sure.
Plow pan or hard pan doesn't seem to be any worse than anything else. Personally, I feel it's a matter of perspective. The goal is to do a shallow till, size and incorporate residue but mostly pin it to the surface for the worms and microbes to work. It will work as deep as it's set so you're going to see "loose" soil as far as it has worked and may see it firmer below. We are growing more and more cover crops to keep those roots going down so our strategy is to utilize the root structure to create an open channel for water and nutrient flow when they are not there. The primary benefit is that the soil structure is not completely destroyed and reset each year with heavy tillage. Right or wrong there's a lot to learn, that's the fun part of farming.
@@chrisbeach6385 it sounds like you are close to our practice of tillage. just enough to get residue and fertilizer incorporated into the soil. We did plow a field this year after doing soil test and seeing most of the nutrients were in the top 2" of the soil try to see if we could move more if it deeper so when we dry out in the summer it will stay available to the roots. In no way am i saying plow like that every year it something that we are trying this year to see if we move nutrients down in the soil. If it works it might be something we look at doing every 6 to 7 years.
That would be a neat field to look for arrowheads.
I like how you think
The arrowheads (is this near Kansas City?) would cause lots of flats, sew it’s just the smart thing to do to use tracks !¡!¡!
@@Victor-ng1lc j have uu
Thanks for a great video, Jon ! Kinda kicks the NGD types in their appetite don't it ? I remain continually amazed by the agri-industry's progress i creating more and more efficient tillage and harvest tools that feed all of us ever more cheaply !
It is impressive how a machine replaces in one pass that took 3 or 4 machines and multiple passes across the field a few decades ago.
ruclips.net/video/SfGT3jJl1M8/видео.html
Wow nice and wet soil! In Sweden it is very dry in the ground😕 but the seed is growing
I really enjoy the videos and the narration makes them better than most others
Thank you for watching. It is fun filming and sharing farm machines.
yes thats how the discs work best , i worked for a silly ol tosser but he said once the discs need to go fast to do any good , lovely outfit , good vidjo chaps
Wow that was extremely impressive I can see that being a real hot seller for John Deere
I think this model will get Garber’s attention here in Western Kentucky for spring tillage and especially fall tillage here where corn fields are planted into winter wheat.
Here in north Florida farmers are harvesting chip potatoes and then hilling the sifted soil back into 40 inch rows and then planting double drills of corn. The corn will be harvested in October with the stalks chopped and disced several times readying the land to be planted back in potatoes in January. Yields are about 160 bu an acre.
The corn is planted on top of rows to cope with the summer rains. Our fields are crowned into 60' beds with a drainage furrow plowed between every bed. With the double crop expensive equipment gets used again instead of just sitting under a barn all summer.
Very interesting. Thank you for sharing. They plant potatoes some what like that is SE Missouri. They plant the potatoes in February and harvest them in May and plant soybeans. It helps give rotation to the cotton fields in that area.
Very impressive, glad I got to see this tiller, it made a very very good job indeed, one of the best I´ve seen
I was impressed watching and surprised how fast it could operate
Great Video BTP. technology like this make it possible to get over more acres with less passes, thanks for sharing
What an amazing tool, besides the price of admission, a farmer's stress level should be diminished when working with such a capable equipment. The working speed and quality of the results are outstanding
That's amazing , a far cry from our old Oliver 70 and 1942 Ford tractor on our Indiana farm in the 1950s.
The Oliver 70 was a big tractor in its day. When the 70 hit the market many farm’s were using horses. Can you imagine what a farmer with a team of horses thought when his neighbor rolled in with an Oliver 70 and plowed up field in less than a day where the team of horses had to take a break every few passes in the field.
Big tractor power. Our Oliver 70 and our 1942
Our Oliver 70 and 1942 Ford did replace two work horses. Their names were Dick a d Queen. I was a small child but I remember the two horses prior to getting our two tractors.
The two tractors made farming for my dad alot easier. As I got older I also plowed and disced with the tractors giving my dad a hand.
We had 32 head of dairy cattle to milk twice a day. We had surge electric milkers to speed up the milking process. We also had jogs, sheep and chickens. No vacations, we did go fishing a day or so but we had to milk the cows and feed the other animals. I loved the farm but my parents sold it in 1958.
Now, that is some fine hammer down disking. I love it!
It will cover some ground in a hurry.
Way to go- what a pro!!!
Just zero till now, so we don’t bring too many rocks up, Our 40 ft drape header does a wonderful job of picking rocks on top. This results in some combine clanking in combine.
Rocks can really cause problems for sure.
bigtractorpower we use heavy harrows or med heavy a lot. Some still use the old fashion cultivator but ground needs to be moist after harvest, but then it becomes a rock digger!
Hello from Italy : I love Usa for this big fields , very big tractors and The Big White ( Big bud )
Hi. Thank you for watching. I like watching hillside farming in Italy.
Good Stuff! Enjoyed this!
Thank you for watching.
Tank you vidéo magnifique super
Thank you for watching.
Heck of a machine! I could do that all day...
👍
Eres una enciclopedia de la maquinaria felicidadez
I don't care what color it is, I just love horsepower!
👍 Thank you for watching.
Horsepower is cool but torque is where its at
Really cool disk!
John Deere ripping off a Case Quadtrac and a Norwood Quicktill with a can of Tremclad paint and some stickers...when you can't beat 'em...join 'em. Welcome to the party...a couple of years late. Great video...
Even in the game the tracked tractor works great on high moisture.
👍👍. FS19?
One impressive tractor! 👍
👍👍
That Deere just out walking the Dog en kicking the Cat👍👍👍
With an implement like this every plenty of power is helpful. I filmed a similar type tillage tool that was 26ft on a 9410R and the 410 hp tractor knew the high speed disk was back there at 10 mph.
Are there any rocks in that area at all?
I dare not take any piece of machinery in the ground that fast around here.... unless I want to haul something to the junk pile LOL! Even on clean fields, there are sometimes stray hidden boulders underneath, or even a badger hole too.
It is built on individual blades so an a blade encounters a stone it individually pops over the obstruction. It all depends on what works best in your region. In moderate stones these machine will not have the problems a traditional disk has. Here in WKY I think there will be more and more of these sold.
Too much speed has been proved to be actually ineffective in cost and wear terms. Increase of speed means increase in ground engaging parts or tools to the point when added to the extra Horsepower needed and flex and extra stress on the implement shows it's just not worth the extra effort. There is a sweet spot that I think most experienced farmers already know. And it's nowhere near the speed this is showing.
also it effects the overhead camshaft to such an extent that it will wear into the rota.
I am not a farmer at all but is this just a demonstration to show the power and the equipment and not saying you will love tilling and planting at these speed? That how I take it. The ground is very wet but this machine will till the soil and aide in drying it out. Isn’t that the message? Still it was amazing to watch the machine move and the dirt fly. Ohh man farmers get to play with the best tools. Blessing to all famers large down to the small homesteaders.
Same as norwood kwik till. Been around a few year. Need a 40 footer on there! That one is tiny for the tractor
@krvnjrcbs why does is matter tracks or wheels?
Is this machine built to compete with Case IH's Barracuda VT rig? I'd like to note, this ground is HARD and that disk is just scratching the surface. Plant in that 2" bed and your roots aren't getting into the nutrients. Need to break the hard pan.
Awesome video
TY for sharing
Thank you for watching.
I wonder if the theory the faster you go the better it works with this machine? Great stuff as usual
We in Europa run disc cultivators like this for years! We normally drive with about 6 to 10 mph. Generally fast speeds are better for mixing the soil, but if you are to fast it will barely go in to the ground.
Great video 👍🏼
It’s an impressive machine. I enjoy watching your farm channel. Keep up the good work.
Fast and furious western Kentucky drift 😂😂😂😂
😁👍
nice disc, nice countryside
Thank you for watching.
I do not see this piece of equipment lasting very long. The trade off for speed is longevity.
It also depends on the width or size of the tiller because if it was bigger it would've been slower
@@dennisnyaga9660 That is all relative to how much power is pulling it.
Bearings that run in oil. Heavy frames. I don't see the problem?
@@alexanderheadley5644 Are you familiar with the concept of friction?
Yeah you'll wear the blades eventually but that's any disk lol
wow only three qtrs. of a million for this setup as pictured , that's a lot of bushels of 3.50 cent corn
It’s a big investment but can push up planting dates, save hours in the field and eliminate the need for other implants.
Subsidized farming ending no time soon huh😁
@@tonym109 Leased
That looks like an awesome tool
I can make a whole loooot of passes with a regular disk for $700,000
Otium Borealis good one....
Oh see the depth control at end
Väderstad Carriers are like the same thing like that ans gets u the same result. The discs are also induviduly mounted too but idk if that John deere high speed disc is available in sweden. Would love to see some väderstad equipment in the US but i think it’s very hard to find
I have a brochure on Vaderstad planters, air drills and tillage from Canada. They are sold in North America. I do not know if they have any dealers in the United States. They look like solid machines.
Ye they are real workhorses 😉
@@TheWilliamTW yep they do a nice corn planter
I wish us farmers in Central Indiana can get rolling. Especially when our Popcorn cut off date is 5-20-19 and more rain in the forest. No good but I'm sure we will get rolling soon .
I hope sunshine finds your fields soon.
this is a no-till tool design licensed by John Deere from Norwood called the Norwood Kwik-Till.
Yes that is correct. Unfortunately I have not had an opportunity to film a Norwood version.
What impresses vid👍that JD 9RX is flying along but still doing job that field cultivator is astonishing piece of farm equipment n people know i am CaseIH fan. Been wet what difference it makes wheels vs tracks tractor, also old disc set up to these high speed disc.
It’s an impressive tillage tool. It can work wet and get the field to dry up. I do wonder when Case IH will enter the high speed disk market.
bigtractorpower CNH had announce that CaseIH n NH were going make there tractors more different from each other even though they will sharing platform including Styer. Also go different direction on farm equipment so CaseIH is on hunt for ag equipment company, so maybe High speed disk will be in next few years. CaseIH can’t use NH equipment which is shame.
TRANSPORT MODE!
Very impresive!
I wonder how well it would work in the Texas panhandle and our dryland farms. Still I wouldn't run any ground implements that fast
Where can we see test plots of mature crops after different methods of soil preparation?
JIM
An equipment dealer or seed company would have to put one together.
That's a beast..
It really can cover some ground.
I watch farming videos from overseas and they have use the same implement. Seems like John deere took the overseas farm equipment idea.
Yes the high speed disk is starting to catch on in the United States. There are four different brands of these disks sold in the area I live in. One is imported from Europe.
These aren't even made by Deere, made by Norwood Sales.
The problem with a lot of European brands is they tend to be build too lightweight. A lot of the American and Canadian brands are usually more robust.
Wow , would that be going a little bit over board on power for my 5 acres ?
Nah, do it up! 😉 might even be on the small side.
Still a lot of green stuff on the surface. I wonder if good old mold board plowing isn't the best way to go considering the cost of chemicals, etc
Oh I wish I could get my local dealer to come demo that on my hay field. Dam Wild Hogs here in Texas are Destroying my place. That track tractor and high speed disk would fix it up really nice. I with JD would make a small 100 Hp track tractor for smaller equipment and smaller farms that would be the cats meow!!!!
Dave Miller I loved to find an area to hunt hogs down there…!
Call and see if they have a demo
Very impressive
It does a nice job in a hurry.
That's the real deal right there thanks .sam
It sure can cover some ground.
Great stream I myself would love to ride along once tear it up great jog guys
👍👍
I must have missed it what sizes does it come in does it come in narrow enough of a size that you can put a smaller tractor on it
All the way up to 8 feet
Very impressive peice of equipment.
It can really cover some ground.
Too expensive for most farmers , and hourly rate is probably more than you could afford as well. Only for mega farms
Big Ears no shit. This is for guys that have 10000 acres
@Giggitee O'Yeah you have zero idea what you're talking about. If these farmers we're depleting their soils they'd go out of business and you'd starve 😒
Nice tool.....Looks like JD sort of copied the Deglman Protill.
Horsch joker got copied by degelman protil and degelman is making JD's
Does it not need to be lifted in the corners?
According to my tour guide in this video it does not. He and I talk about it in the video and he says no you can keep it down on the turns.
can you set the depth on that disk to a deeper cut to get or bury the grass seems like it is just cutting the surface
****notice that the grasses/broadleaves are not tilled up.......its not tillage its seed bed preparation that's all
That’s the first pass. It took out about 75% on the first pass in the pasture. At the end of the video they are making a second pass over the ground. I think it worked the ground well compared to a plow normally needed.
Sure wish I was able to try one of those out and with the track tractor to
This set up can cover some ground.
13 mph is top speed of my old massey Ferguson (on street and just the tractor by itself) jaja
Thank you very much putting this great video. What are the track and spacing for this 9570RX. John Deere have two options for this tractor (30 or 36 inch track available in 88 or 120 inch track spacing).
Best,
Any footage of the other tractor getting stuck? Or the removal?
pretty much impressive, how about fuel consuption at that speed?
I would guess it would be around 20 gallons and hour. I will ask to confirm.
It comes down to fuel consumption per acre.....
Are there ANY new discs that are a "left turn only" like old pull type cover crop discs?
Not that I know off. The last ones were built in the late 70’s and early 80’s.
Are they making smaller versions of this tillage tool? I have to upgrade my tillage practices. Need something to finish in front of the planter.
Yes they start at an 8ft 3pt model and go up from there.
bigtractorpower 👍
Like a boss
Power!
Good info
Thank you for watching.
R they gonna rip that field before planting it when it dries up more?
Way too many moving parts for what work is being done. Bearings galore! I would think a good field cultivator would do as good or better a job on less fuel.
Gotta love that RX
It runs all sealed bearings. So no greasing required.
You know what they say about assuming...where are all these alleged bearings and moving parts …???
a cultivator would just rip up chunks of sod, a regular disc would make mud balls both at a fraction of the speed...
Awesome.
It sure covers some ground in a hurry.
You said the plow had 20" disc. Maybe... however, it's only going 2 " deep. That wont kill the weeds in my area.
You can set it up to 5 inches deep.
Are the front wheels stopping it from going in ours we have the wheels up
I wonder if they do farming as a hobby or for living or both.
That tractor could turn a freight liner into a plow lol. Don't ask me how I know. Let's just say I was stuck in a field in Western Kentucky, when working a power outage storm.