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Evan Costello
Приєднався 19 лип 2012
John Deere 7400 Baling Hay with a 346 baler 2021
1996 John Deere 7400 Tractor baling 1st cutting during the summer of 2021 using a John Deere 346 square baler
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Відео
Will a John Deere 60 Run a 6 Star Tedder?
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1955 John Deere 60 Running a Vicon 833T 6 Rotor Tedder summer 2021
How a John Deere Knotter Ties a Knot
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John Deere 346 Baler tying a Knot in slow motion
2 Stall Garage Site Work Day 1 (Time-Lapse)
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removing top soil and leveling gravel for a 2 stall garage build
Baling Hay with John Deere 346 and 1966 4020
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Summer of 2019, baling hay with a John Deere 346 baler and 1966 John Deere 4020 powershift in upstate New York
John Deere 4020 Raking with double rakes
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1972 John Deere 4020 Raking 1st cutting with 2 New Holland 56 rakes, July 2019
Brillion seeder
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A drive down mill rd
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Old house mill rd
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It is absolutely beautiful thing to watch. Now I finally understand.
For those that don't know what you see in the video happens in 1 second or less when a baler is running at normal speed in the field.
As Americans we must BOYCOTT john DEERE for laying people off and moving jobs to Mexico. Pass it on
John Appleby From winsconson was the inventor of the knotter son of English immigrates...😊
Best video I’ve seen on this
I love this machine, beautiful engineering.
Do you have any videos on how it looks after when the seed have grown
My Deere 318 lawn tractor would run a 6 basket Tedder.
My Massey Ferguson model 10 was built in 1950 and has these same knotters .
Will the 60 fold up the tedder?
I used a tandem hitch for over 20 years now what a time saver I wouldn't go back to a single rake again so easy to use many different ways
Can i screen shoot
God
How did you set up to tie with the chamber empty. I'm going to go through my knotters this winter and I want to get them adjusted long before mowing hay.
That blue twine will f.up your lawnmover!
Knot knot,,,,,, who's there? John Deere. John Deere who? NO John Deere Knot Tie!
That's a lot of metal to tie a knot
Came here expecting witchcraft, but...man, that is too cool.
No fluff, exactly what the title says. Have a like.
This is quite helpful. Working on these is a mix of magic and confusion
The knotters were invented by Claas in 1921. You can see it on the first Claas emblems.
Sorry your wrong.. see above.
that is so knotty
Well there ya go, if anyone told me John Deere made a knot tying machine they’d have got a very puzzled look. So this is in a baler?
Not just Jhon deer, any company that makes or made square bailers used something much like that.
I think that vintage machine works better with natural (not plastic) string.
It's like a sewing machine.
Saw it in my feed and figured "why knot"
Oh, dear.
Cool!
ಠ__ಠ what is a john deere knotter
Neat! 👍🏾🤘🏾
I guess what this shows is the ingenuity that’s common in mass manufacturing. They’ve taken a relatively simple manufacturing process and placed it on a portable machine.
Really satisfying to watch
Nice video
This is an awesome video showing how that works, good job 👍
The thought of getting my finger stuck in there just puts a knot in my stomach
Where does the inch of twine come from?
I don’t understand. Can you slow it down?
As a kid I was fascinated by the baling machines on the farm especially the knot tying mechanisms and wire twisting on balers that used wire. The whole machine worked in unison and when it didn't I knew why. I studied the dang things. Along with all the others we operated. I still like farm equipment. Combines of all types are the most fun. Am I weird?
Yes, you are very weird, but as a fellow Cook, I can confirm that it is to be expected. Have fun with your weird live Mr. Cook. Go study some farm equipment.
Do you guys remember as kids we took everything apart to see how it works and how it's made.👍👊.
No Darrell, you're not weird. I too love machinery and all sorts of mechanisms, whether simple or super complex. I absolutely love to take something apart that I've never seen before, to figure out how it works, and or how to fix it.
So, now baling twine has been replaced with some crappy plastic, just like tarps.
Good plastic twine is stronger than sisal, allowing for heavier, more tightly packed bales with less breakage. The downside is it doesn't decompose so dispose of it carefully, lest it wind up in manure spreader beaters, lawn mower blades and other places where it will cause problems.
Claas is the inventor
THIS IS CLEVER YOU THAKING A VIDDY OF THE KNOTTER IN ACTION AND POSTING SPOT ON SIR 👍👍
THOUGH I REALLY LIKE THE GALE KNOTTER IN HONESTY MY GALE HAS PUNCHED OUT MANY A THOUSAND SQUARS AND (NO) ISSUES WHAT SO EVER
LOOK'S LIKE THERE'S A BIT OF NEGLECT THERE IN THE CASE IF THE KNOTTER KNIFE LOOK'S REALLY DULL TO SAY THE LEAST SIR
So simple and at the same time so genius to design.
Don't talk to me about Baylor notice
What kind of witchcraft is this?!
That's exactly how I would have tied it! Amazing!
I’ve stood on a hayrack wagon watching an old new holland hayliner tying knots a bazillion gazillion times! How they figured out that would work must’ve taken a few tries. You can look at almost every single machine and they pretty much use the same thing. And that hayliner hardly ever missed
I drive tractors for a living doing mainly cultivation and drilling. But square bailers take the cake for the most complex things in agriculture I reckon. Maybe tied with combines, but it's amazing how someone came up with this idea and made it work
So clever engineering but when the timing is out, it will make you pull your hair out.
that tech is older than from 70's , bcoz when i was a kid, and now im 36, we had a machine that would tie straw, it did look almost exactly the same, except there was no edge on that 'finger' thing that grabs the knot, maybe it was used up, bcoz that machine at my grandfathers farm was there for at least 15~20 already. Would be interesting to know how it's called, then we could look up in which year the patent was made. I am pretty sure that Industry had used it first, and then a mobile version made it to farming machines. Forgot to add, we did not have the nylon string back then, there was something else, i may be wrong but it did feel like it had some wood component in the fibers , or the fibers were actually made of wood.
Before poly the twine was sisal, similar to Hessian sacks, jute. An American called John Appleby developed the twine knotter, he should be up there with Harry Ferguson, Cyrus McCormick and Henry Ford for the contribution he made to agriculture but he is all but forgotten 😢
@@Mackeson3 agreed - it's such a clever mechanism !
Makes it look almost obvious. About a simple as it needs to be.
Que ingenioso 👌🏻
zoommodore; your right they all tie like that. Thank God for the bell hook