I saw a gleaner S77 harvesting corn and lots of it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! it's amazing how they keep the bad stuff out and the good stuff in! maybe you guys should do a program of how the gleaner S77 combine works :D you could say that i am definitely curious how it all works :D
Looks like them ole mid west boys got a good stand of beans this year! Those gleaners sure do eat through em though, kinda makes me wanna trade in our three green ones lol!
Gleaners S series’s in my observation of filming all brands of combines is the best on the cleanest sample and the least grain loss. They are great for wheat, corn and soybeans. They just not set up for rice. AGCO did offer an A series Axial-Rotor Gleaner from 2006-2011 for rice but it did not gain a big enough following.
@@bigtractorpower they are wonderful for reducing compaction as well, always thought they were a good machine, just wasnt able to be around them much. Thankyou for the reply sir!
Why? When Allis Chalmers made the Gleaner it was "the" machine to have if you were any type of farmer at all, regardless of the tractor brand you were loyal to, you had a Gleaner combine. In the mid 70's combines needed to get bigger, but Allis Chalmers wanted to build a smaller compact machine, as did other companies at the time, and the best way to do that was to go to a rotary combine. New Holland, IH and Allis Chalmers all hit the market at roughly the same time, New Holland had a twin rotor, axial, IH had a larger single axial, and Allis Chalmers being Allis Chalmers came with a transverse rotor. The flaw with the axial models was when the crop changed directions it bunched, and in tough conditions it made the problem worse, Allis Chalmers had a natural flow of the crop and it didn't change directions, it fed in the naturally and wound around the rotor, hence the reason they called it the N series. The N series capacity at that time was through the roof in comparison to other rotors or the John Deere self propelled thrashing machine on wheels style. So John Deere and International Harvestor did what they did best, rather then beating the competition with a superior product, like Allis Chalmers did, they built crap and then started a campaign of spreading rumors of what a huge pile of junk the new Gleaner was. Allis Chalmers brought the N6 to market a year to fast,.and there was flaws in the design that Allis Chalmers addressed and remedied, but the rumour mill ground on. Allis Chalmers then brought out the N7 the largest combine in the world that had a ferocious appetite, huge horse power, and bin size that could flood a truck. IH nor John Deere was expecting the beast, 1 N7 could harvest more then 2 IH 1480 or 3 8820 John Deere, and because neither company could beat the N7 they just upped their smear campaign. Allis Chalmers never fought back these BS rumors they just did there thing, but in 1985 when the farming economy was stuck in a devastating crash , Allis Chalmers withered into bankruptcy and the AG division was sold to Deutz, who killed the greatest line of conventional combines ever made, shoe horned a air cooled guttless wonder of an engine into the N series, rebadging them into the R series, which was the kiss of death for Silver Gleaner combines and Orange Allis Chalmers designed tractors. That's why they have so much hate.
@@RJ1999x thankyou for the info this is a great reply and I appreciate it. I grew up on a 1688, and most folks around had red or green but there were a few gleaners out there. I like them from what I see.
@@jakeadair8292 Your welcome. They are a good machine, although the new S series is pretty much the Allis Chalmers N series with a bigger cab,.and some minor updates, which means either the original design by Allis Chalmers was 40 years ahead, or that the machine is dated and is need of some serious upgrades!
I saw a gleaner S77 harvesting corn and lots of it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! it's amazing how they keep the bad stuff out and the good stuff in! maybe you guys should do a program of how the gleaner S77 combine works :D you could say that i am definitely curious how it all works :D
It sure seems like Gleaner has the market cornered on decibels.
Looks like them ole mid west boys got a good stand of beans this year! Those gleaners sure do eat through em though, kinda makes me wanna trade in our three green ones lol!
You wouldnt regret it mate :)
I'm impressed, 2:41 minutes and they didn't break down 😂
These new S series combines are solid machines. They harvest a quality sample and leave little behind.
Scott Jacobs All combines break down .
Of course not, they're not John Deere
Never see gleaners cutting rice, hmmm, I wonder why?
Gleaners S series’s in my observation of filming all brands of combines is the best on the cleanest sample and the least grain loss. They are great for wheat, corn and soybeans. They just not set up for rice. AGCO did offer an A series Axial-Rotor Gleaner from 2006-2011 for rice but it did not gain a big enough following.
100% honest question here, why do Gleaners get so much hate?
I am not sure. From what I see filming all brands Gleaner really stands out as the best for a clean sample.
@@bigtractorpower they are wonderful for reducing compaction as well, always thought they were a good machine, just wasnt able to be around them much. Thankyou for the reply sir!
Why? When Allis Chalmers made the Gleaner it was "the" machine to have if you were any type of farmer at all, regardless of the tractor brand you were loyal to, you had a Gleaner combine. In the mid 70's combines needed to get bigger, but Allis Chalmers wanted to build a smaller compact machine, as did other companies at the time, and the best way to do that was to go to a rotary combine. New Holland, IH and Allis Chalmers all hit the market at roughly the same time, New Holland had a twin rotor, axial, IH had a larger single axial, and Allis Chalmers being Allis Chalmers came with a transverse rotor. The flaw with the axial models was when the crop changed directions it bunched, and in tough conditions it made the problem worse, Allis Chalmers had a natural flow of the crop and it didn't change directions, it fed in the naturally and wound around the rotor, hence the reason they called it the N series. The N series capacity at that time was through the roof in comparison to other rotors or the John Deere self propelled thrashing machine on wheels style. So John Deere and International Harvestor did what they did best, rather then beating the competition with a superior product, like Allis Chalmers did, they built crap and then started a campaign of spreading rumors of what a huge pile of junk the new Gleaner was. Allis Chalmers brought the N6 to market a year to fast,.and there was flaws in the design that Allis Chalmers addressed and remedied, but the rumour mill ground on. Allis Chalmers then brought out the N7 the largest combine in the world that had a ferocious appetite, huge horse power, and bin size that could flood a truck. IH nor John Deere was expecting the beast, 1 N7 could harvest more then 2 IH 1480 or 3 8820 John Deere, and because neither company could beat the N7 they just upped their smear campaign. Allis Chalmers never fought back these BS rumors they just did there thing, but in 1985 when the farming economy was stuck in a devastating crash , Allis Chalmers withered into bankruptcy and the AG division was sold to Deutz, who killed the greatest line of conventional combines ever made, shoe horned a air cooled guttless wonder of an engine into the N series, rebadging them into the R series, which was the kiss of death for Silver Gleaner combines and Orange Allis Chalmers designed tractors. That's why they have so much hate.
@@RJ1999x thankyou for the info this is a great reply and I appreciate it. I grew up on a 1688, and most folks around had red or green but there were a few gleaners out there. I like them from what I see.
@@jakeadair8292 Your welcome.
They are a good machine, although the new S series is pretty much the Allis Chalmers N series with a bigger cab,.and some minor updates, which means either the original design by Allis Chalmers was 40 years ahead, or that the machine is dated and is need of some serious upgrades!
J
Those reels are way too low
Andrew Schott I always ran reel just above stalks with no problem or reel wrap
I find you get way to much shatter lose, but then again with a AWS bean saver the wind dose 70% of the job lol
Agree. by at least a foot.