Really awesome machines right there. Jason, when you interview the farmer and get his perspective it gives us viewers a chance to hear what farmers deal with and go through. GO BTP 💪
Thanks Jason. I really enjoy the extended opinions of the owners/operators of the equipment. When they talk about stuff they like as well as stuff they don’t you know it’s real info and not brand loyalty getting in the way and giving the impression one option/way/piece of equipment is perfect in every way.
This takes me back a few weeks ago when I ran an A&L F705 grain cart attached to a John Deere 7800 with a 740 Classic Loader for the first few days, then an 8120 when Praireland Partners finished working on it and I picked up a 9760 STS, and 2 9660 STS combines, one of them said "Bullet Rotor" on the side and the farm I work for uses those combines to cut anything from wheat, milo, soybeans, and corn. All the equipment I mentioned is all wheeled. There's no tracks on anything we run.
Always good to hear Mr. Joe Neal! A whole lot of great wisdom right there! A man could really learn a lifetime of great information, in just a few minutes talking to a man like this! Great video Jason! Will Mr Joe and his operation be getting any of the new 9RX640's?
An extra $96K just to add tracks?!? That's insane. That big service truck is pretty darn cool. That farmer was real down to Earth and quite funny. I enjoyed listening to him. For the price of those machines, they should come with all the stuff he mentioned LOL
I know that in the uk the biggest selling combine manufacturer claas now sells 90% of brand new combines with the terra trac system our lexion is on 800 size wheels though
Unfortunately we do not have a single Lexion dealer in Kentucky. The Lexion dealer left the market two years ago. I would say in this region 60% of the combines are John Deere, 20% Case IH with a few Gleaners and New Hollands. CLAAS was in third place but one the dealer left most farms with CLAAS immediately traded to Case IH.
What coordination is required between the combine operator and the tractor operator when unloading on the go? Seems to me each driver has a big job and then has to coordinate to dump the grain in the cart at the correct location without spilling?
There is coordinating to it but it runs smoothly. The cart pulls up and matches the speed of the combine. The combine operator fills the grain cart carefully. Many S700s have a camera on the spout so the operator can see every corner of the cart. I have a video on the way showing that feature.
The combine you see in my profile picture is one we literally picked up today. It’s a 2388 cih. We drove it 2hrs home and got everything ready to go and got the best grain I have ever seen for a field that was 80% weeds. It’s gone be sad when the old 1460 has to leave.
Congratulations on the 2388. Very nice combine. The IH 1400s are true classics but the 2388 is the penultimate of the original design. More power and far improved rotor.
yes, the brave 790 series is still doing its job for years, nice to see those old combines, but the combine drivers have to improve their skill…if the reel pulls out so many plants, it is set too low
We are running a 9670 with an RD35F are buggy tractor is a 8310 with a unverferth 860 cart we farm in south western Ontario we will be harvesting this week
Well I can only speculate. I would goes the market it pretty saturated with several successful grain cart brands and many other short lines. From 1972 to 19879 John Deere used UFT to offer the 1210 and 1210A grain cart. John Deere used A&L UFT from 1988 to 1992 to offer a 650 and 500 grain cart. From 2003 to 2006 John Deere used J&M to make a Frontier grain cart sold through Deere dealers. I am guessing the 1970’ s and 1980’s Deere grain carts to not reach their sales targets. The Frontier cart was very short lived.
The flattened area are from rain storms. Often you see them near tree lines. It’s an area that got too much fertilizer and the wheat grew so well the weight of the grain pulls the plant over when a heavy rain hits it. The Draper heads are good at shaving up the flattened wheat.
That is a very generalized statement. The combines you see in video will run through nearly 20,000 acres of grain in a season. You need an industrial machine to accomplish that which means making a hefty investment to ensure a proper and timely harvest.
Thank God for all the farmers of the world and all they do to keep this world nothing but respect God bless you all.
Always love it when you visit this farm, I could listen to Neil talk all day! Hope you get back with them for fall harvest again as well.👍
Same here!
Really awesome machines right there. Jason, when you interview the farmer and get his perspective it gives us viewers a chance to hear what farmers deal with and go through. GO BTP 💪
Great Video Jason !!!
Love when you talk to the great farmers nice enough to share their thoughts with us.
Thank You
Thank you Jason. From down under, New Zealand. Currently experiencing a lot of rain!
Love seeing the cars pulling over to allow them to pass safely.
Thanks Jason. I really enjoy the extended opinions of the owners/operators of the equipment. When they talk about stuff they like as well as stuff they don’t you know it’s real info and not brand loyalty getting in the way and giving the impression one option/way/piece of equipment is perfect in every way.
This takes me back a few weeks ago when I ran an A&L F705 grain cart attached to a John Deere 7800 with a 740 Classic Loader for the first few days, then an 8120 when Praireland Partners finished working on it and I picked up a 9760 STS, and 2 9660 STS combines, one of them said "Bullet Rotor" on the side and the farm I work for uses those combines to cut anything from wheat, milo, soybeans, and corn. All the equipment I mentioned is all wheeled. There's no tracks on anything we run.
Another great video !! You did a great job with the commentary & Joe Neal was very informative. Nice Job !!
I love the train in the background in the opening!!
Always good to hear Mr. Joe Neal! A whole lot of great wisdom right there! A man could really learn a lifetime of great information, in just a few minutes talking to a man like this! Great video Jason!
Will Mr Joe and his operation be getting any of the new 9RX640's?
Enjoyed hearing the farmer’s perspective while you rode along with him. 👍
Joe Neal is always great to visit with.
Awesome Jason... We all really appreciate the time and work you put in to bring us these videos and the info...
It’s fun spending time in the field seeing these machines at work.
I enjoy your videos and learning about the equipment! Thanks for sharing!!
I like Billy and Matt from Garrett's but Jason I gotta say this ole boy here is my favorite. Such a pleasure to listen to.
Joe Neal is always great to talk to. Stay tuned for a Matt and a Billy video.
@@bigtractorpower oh yeah no doubt..knew there'd be one soon! 👍
Whether or not John Deere puts a restroom in the cab, just depends. Get it, Depends :-) Thanks for all the great videos.
Fantastic video Jason, especially the in cab footage, could have watched that all night.
Thank you for watching. Joe Neal is always great to visit with.
Great video I like to see the combine on tracks running
The tracks are a nice feature.
Great Video, its interesting talking to the farmer.
Thank you for watching.
One of my very best friends just died,
Watching your videos really brings peace to my mind and peace to me thank you very much
Bill I am sorry to hear of your friends passing. Prayers to you and his family.
@@bigtractorpower thanks a lot you're a great man
Great vídeo Jason.
Great video as always btp
Very knowledgeable farmer, pointing out the differences in tracks vs duels...
Always great content btp..... 👍 👍
Great video. Looks like a great machine.
Thank you for watching.
Seeing the equipment out in the field sometimes forget how big and wide it is until you see it driving on the road next to cars
It’s often a challenge to move down the road.
you could fit most vehicles inside these grain carts.
The Best combine 💪
Because it's John Deere green
just about finished with wheat, north ohio. thanks for the upload. take care out there. 3:16 is that a cowbell?
Great video!
Thank you for watching.
Good video.
Harvesting is probably my favorite thing to watch
Gotta love it
An extra $96K just to add tracks?!? That's insane. That big service truck is pretty darn cool. That farmer was real down to Earth and quite funny. I enjoyed listening to him. For the price of those machines, they should come with all the stuff he mentioned LOL
Hopefully you will be able to get to western ny to film cabbage harvesting I think that would be interesting
I will see what I can do. BTP filmed peas in WNY today.
@@bigtractorpower first time I seen pea harvest was next to the tired iron tractor museum. That was 1995i wonder if that place is till open
@@markcollmer4215 unfortunately tired iron closed about 10 years ago. The owner passed away. It was such a cool place.
Seeing pea harvest would be great, summer of 1989 worked in Southern Minnesota where we harvesting peas.
It's impressive to see a big combine going down the road😁👍
Nice video👍👍
It’s a challenge to transport these machines. Unfortunately it was quite windy that day in the field and road. A storm was blowing in.
Hello! Massive machine...
Awesome Video Buddy!!
The S790 is a nice combine.
I know that in the uk the biggest selling combine manufacturer claas now sells 90% of brand new combines with the terra trac system our lexion is on 800 size wheels though
Unfortunately we do not have a single Lexion dealer in Kentucky. The Lexion dealer left the market two years ago. I would say in this region 60% of the combines are John Deere, 20% Case IH with a few Gleaners and New Hollands. CLAAS was in third place but one the dealer left most farms with CLAAS immediately traded to Case IH.
Has got his reel running at the correct speed and not beating the heads to death.
Yes it is running well. If you watch any of my wheat videos estuarine any brand of combine they all run at this speed.
When you move the combine from one field to another what happens when they run into a traffic light? Can the combine go under the traffic light?
OMG amazing combine 😱😱😱😱👍
Sweet combines. Nothing runs like a Deere. If it ain't green... It ain't mean!!!
Do they not raise corn? I all have the premium residue choppers on them.
Does the combine sync the mph with the grain cart tractor?
Great video 👍
Thank you for watching.
Funny when you see them configured in Europe... set as NARROW as possible... These machines are MONSTERS compared to what I ran in the 70-90's...
What coordination is required between the combine operator and the tractor operator when unloading on the go? Seems to me each driver has a big job and then has to coordinate to dump the grain in the cart at the correct location without spilling?
There is coordinating to it but it runs smoothly. The cart pulls up and matches the speed of the combine. The combine operator fills the grain cart carefully. Many S700s have a camera on the spout so the operator can see every corner of the cart. I have a video on the way showing that feature.
Great technology for farmers
The combine you see in my profile picture is one we literally picked up today. It’s a 2388 cih. We drove it 2hrs home and got everything ready to go and got the best grain I have ever seen for a field that was 80% weeds. It’s gone be sad when the old 1460 has to leave.
Congratulations on the 2388. Very nice combine. The IH 1400s are true classics but the 2388 is the penultimate of the original design. More power and far improved rotor.
yes, the brave 790 series is still doing its job for years, nice to see those old combines, but the combine drivers have to improve their skill…if the reel pulls out so many plants, it is set too low
Parabéns like like eu sou muito seu fã e do seu canal sucesso sempre 👏👏👏👍👍👍🚜🚜🚜👌👌👌🇧🇷🇧🇷
🛤 Great shot of the train going by & the field.. If you had a still shot of that, it would be on my wall..
Did I hear that right, the tracks are a $96,000 dollar option?
Yes. 30 inch tracks are $93,000.
@@bigtractorpower Wow!!
Good
How many combines does this Farm have I noticed some wheeled combines in this video
They run four in wheat and three in corn.
I miss living in western Kentucky. :(
It is a great farming area.
We are running a 9670 with an RD35F are buggy tractor is a 8310 with a unverferth 860 cart we farm in south western Ontario we will be harvesting this week
Very nice harvest team. I hope your harvest goes well.
What is the name of this farm again?
Triple Oaks
Hi Jason! Can you share with your broader audience why John Deere doesn't manufacture grain carts?
Well I can only speculate. I would goes the market it pretty saturated with several successful grain cart brands and many other short lines. From 1972 to 19879 John Deere used UFT to offer the 1210 and 1210A grain cart. John Deere used A&L UFT from 1988 to 1992 to offer a 650 and 500 grain cart. From 2003 to 2006 John Deere used J&M to make a Frontier grain cart sold through Deere dealers. I am guessing the 1970’ s and 1980’s Deere grain carts to not reach their sales targets. The Frontier cart was very short lived.
Very impressive combine for sure but just at the end of the video there there’s a big long row of wheat flattened what happened there
The flattened area are from rain storms. Often you see them near tree lines. It’s an area that got too much fertilizer and the wheat grew so well the weight of the grain pulls the plant over when a heavy rain hits it. The Draper heads are good at shaving up the flattened wheat.
could you do some filming of the insides of the combines
It’s very difficult, and may result in the destruction of a camera, but it may be possible if he has an expendable camera around
@@Beyonder8335 i mean showing the walkers of a walker combine probly wouldnt destroy it if they wernt chopping the straw
I miss the text explaining the specifications.
Oh okay So you don't need to them They are hard Workers and Smart
It’s not my farm. I film at several farms that have H2A workers who do a great job helping the farm run.
@@bigtractorpower okay Just let me know if you need them Because the farm we worked on Now is not good
Incredible machines. They must really need those tracks to invest another $100K for the upgrade.
Tracks really make an improvement on compaction. Which is especially helpful as soybeans are planted right behind the combine.
You can add another $100K for that flex draper.
Making it a million dollar combine. 10 million that you can't ever pay off if you put it on your Capitol One credit card.
That is a very generalized statement. The combines you see in video will run through nearly 20,000 acres of grain in a season. You need an industrial machine to accomplish that which means making a hefty investment to ensure a proper and timely harvest.
@@bigtractorpower I didn't mean to offend you man but it's true. That's what's going on. It's $20 -30 for a small piece of steel.
They know there reel hight is adjustable right? 🤣
They sure do.
Do you need a group of Mexican they can drive anything and They fix anything
This farm does not use H2A workers.
Bad chopping
Nice to hear a farmer that can string so many words together, rather than just “yep”. 🙂