My God brought back loads of memories when I worked on a spud and dairy farm in co Wexford back in the mid 80s too the mid 90s .. farmers collection back then..all massy's ..135..240..were the babies 165 168 then my all time favourite the 188 with the waighted wheels and Flexi cab..few years went on 165 and 135 were traded for an ursus and a 390..god almighty definitely great memories.. absolutely class tractors great video lads and well done too all👌👌👍👍🤟🤟
Denis . Firstly thanks for your comment. They were only going 100 yards or so . I know its not the safest but we all survived. Thanks again for watching and commenting. Much appreciated 👍
your not very old this is hardly the beginning you make the sixty's and seventy's sound like along time ago some of us can still remember these machines brand new have agreat day
OK you've now taken me back to Easter 1960 when I left school at 15 and went to work on a collection of three farms owned by two brothers, the third farm was in fact a WWII POW farm with lots of messages scored into the army type barn walls. So June time we started silage making and I was promoted from the old Fordson Major petrol/TVO with a cast iron grill and steel sprung steel seat fitted with the optional extra folded sack for comfort. To the MF135 pulling I think a MF flail cutter silage maker, that unlike yours did not try to overtake the tractor it ran behind. A lever operated an up and down big hooked thingy that would go into the big O ring on the front of all the trailers. What a shame the tractor didn't have the same thing, The trailers had been fitted with sheep pen mesh to allow them to carry more grass, I often thought did the sheep mind ??? So I'd trundle around thinking of beer and birds till a tractor driver would scream at me something about I was F King spilling the F King stuff. We carried on cleaning out winter shed and spread the good stuff on the land, trouble was it made the grass grow like mad, and cos the silage pit was full we had to go hay making. Again MF135 and a MF baler with a scaffold tube sledge behind, the farmer liked heavy bales that I couldn't lift so I HAD to drive the tractor!!!!!! If the guy on the sledge gave me a bad time I'd squeezer up the revs each circle of the field to get my own back. After nine months I jacked farming in and went tunneling in London, wages were great I could buy a new Mini every month and still have money to give mum and buy beer. Gave up tunneling 2015 and retired, so Thanks for the memories, good luck to you all, you made an old man happy. All your tractors and equipment are a credit to your and are great.
love watching this Thank you for sharing, the 178 had the 2.48 Perkins i think they came standard with weighted rims, dry brakes, the 185 took over this spot
Id agree totally. The lads deserve alot of credit to mind these machines. Thanks for your comment. The lads that own these machines are on youtube too. They would appreciate your kind message
Good video very nicely restored tractors and equipment I remember buckraking with our MF 35 but we had 2 hydraulic valves mounted on the mudguard one for up and down and the other for the push off
love this content - my father worked on a farm driving a MF65, fordson and I think 780 David Brown working on a 320 acre milking farm in Monmouth south wales. I have restored a Leyland 804 to like factory condition, just finished restoring a Chieftain tank MK10 and now restoring a Dodswel DP100S 4 furrow which I hope the Leyland will be able to lift this plough? I have put up some videos of the Leyland on my channel.
Hi , great video. We used to have an old Martin markham forage harvester on the farm many years ago. Sadly went for scrap many years ago. Just wondered if any one still had one as does not seem any around anymore ☹️.
The flails whip around creating a great wind force that sucks up the grass and throws it into the trailer, I've got a similar setup for couple of aceas and I learnt quickly to keep the revs up so the grass doesn't get jammed in the shute
@@trevorslater2746 yes we always cut it first. We progressed onto pick up wagons for the last 25 years or so and a push off buckrake. Joint owned with 2 sets of neighbours.
A fine meadow just 1 thing i was totally disgusted to see that 4 wheele drive tractor with the Q cab in the field at the end of the video otherwise brilliant footage of the beautiful masseys and the tarrup single chop
Nice enough video, etc but I get so frustrated when folk come to me with burst vintage gearboxes - because they have NO IDEA and have put tractors which are FAR TOO BIG on small implements / machines and stretch the PUH Lift links or chains because they INSIST on using the drawbar instead of the hook. FFS what did they / you in Ireland think your great Harry Ferguson thought / did with the PU HOOK - to make hitching SAFER & quicker at the same time with nobody between tractor and trailer. .... and as for the smell of burning clutch components !!!! Come on Folks get a grip and fit the correct implement to its mating tractor - do the job PROPERLY and show modern Facebooker how to drive. we don't NEED 100+hp to cut / ted grass with. THat B47 can easily do 400 bales per hour on a 45 hp tractor. ( great things - these youtube rabbit holes on a wet day ! -sarc ) THanks for posting . Silage is great, Hay is difficult.
Lovely collection of classic tractors! The 135 with the flexi cab is my favourite. It and it's bigger brother are restored to a high standard👌
Thanks very much for watching and commenting. Its appreciated and the owner would be delighted to hear that . Thanks again 👍
finally some music that doesn't drive you insane watching a video. Thank you.
Im getting negative comments on the music but thanks so much for your kind comment. Its appreciated by me and all the lads involved. Thanks again 👌
The old fella standing on the drawbar is re living a childhood memory
As my nan used to say.once a man twice a child
thanks for taking me back 50 years ish not long retired after all my working life on the same farm
Widow makers, best description of them small square bales. Great video well done. Great music.
Brings back memories we used to have a single chop back then days seemed to go on and on
Ow oww beautiful place and tractors I wish I am there driving that 178😍🤗🚜
fantastic collection of classic masseys
Great video,memories of better times..Great song selection.
And that’ll be a thumbs up from me. Great stuff.
Great video. So good to see the vintage tractors and machinery well maintained and working well
Two of my favourite tractors from our family farm in the 60's and 70"s in the lovely 178 and the 35. My uncle had a 135 too.
My God brought back loads of memories when I worked on a spud and dairy farm in co Wexford back in the mid 80s too the mid 90s .. farmers collection back then..all massy's ..135..240..were the babies 165 168 then my all time favourite the 188 with the waighted wheels and Flexi cab..few years went on 165 and 135 were traded for an ursus and a 390..god almighty definitely great memories.. absolutely class tractors great video lads and well done too all👌👌👍👍🤟🤟
"Put some in the trailer !"😆
Very nice little tractor!
Great video, Reeling in the years at its Best!!
the man standing on the drawbar of the silage trailer, madness, I thought them days were gone
Denis . Firstly thanks for your comment. They were only going 100 yards or so . I know its not the safest but we all survived. Thanks again for watching and commenting. Much appreciated 👍
You'll always get one who won't use his head?
A very exhibition of how all silage was made in the beginning well done lads
your not very old this is hardly the beginning you make the sixty's and seventy's sound like along time ago some of us can still remember these machines brand new have agreat day
Beautifully restored tractors, good job !
OK you've now taken me back to Easter 1960 when I left school at 15 and went to work on a collection of three farms owned by two brothers, the third farm was in fact a WWII POW farm with lots of messages scored into the army type barn walls. So June time we started silage making and I was promoted from the old Fordson Major petrol/TVO with a cast iron grill and steel sprung steel seat fitted with the optional extra folded sack for comfort. To the MF135 pulling I think a MF flail cutter silage maker, that unlike yours did not try to overtake the tractor it ran behind. A lever operated an up and down big hooked thingy that would go into the big O ring on the front of all the trailers. What a shame the tractor didn't have the same thing, The trailers had been fitted with sheep pen mesh to allow them to carry more grass, I often thought did the sheep mind ??? So I'd trundle around thinking of beer and birds till a tractor driver would scream at me something about I was F King spilling the F King stuff.
We carried on cleaning out winter shed and spread the good stuff on the land, trouble was it made the grass grow like mad, and cos the silage pit was full we had to go hay making. Again MF135 and a MF baler with a scaffold tube sledge behind, the farmer liked heavy bales that I couldn't lift so I HAD to drive the tractor!!!!!! If the guy on the sledge gave me a bad time I'd squeezer up the revs each circle of the field to get my own back.
After nine months I jacked farming in and went tunneling in London, wages were great I could buy a new Mini every month and still have money to give mum and buy beer. Gave up tunneling 2015 and retired, so Thanks for the memories, good luck to you all, you made an old man happy. All your tractors and equipment are a credit to your and are great.
Great video,well shot and compiled but pity couldn't hear the tractor sounds instead of the music.
Nice video. Go to 9:51 to hear the sound of the harvester without music.
He'llo from co limerick.great work lads.brings back memories of my youth god bless you
love watching this Thank you for sharing, the 178 had the 2.48 Perkins i think they came standard with weighted rims, dry brakes, the 185 took over this spot
Great work men. The time and effort involved to get these machines into this condition must have taken alot of dedication.
The 175 looks class.
Id agree totally. The lads deserve alot of credit to mind these machines. Thanks for your comment. The lads that own these machines are on youtube too. They would appreciate your kind message
Good video very nicely restored tractors and equipment I remember buckraking with our MF 35 but we had 2 hydraulic valves mounted on the mudguard one for up and down and the other for the push off
love this content - my father worked on a farm driving a MF65, fordson and I think 780 David Brown working on a 320 acre milking farm in Monmouth south wales.
I have restored a Leyland 804 to like factory condition, just finished restoring a Chieftain tank MK10 and now restoring a Dodswel DP100S 4 furrow which I hope the Leyland will be able to lift this plough? I have put up some videos of the Leyland on my channel.
Smashing video,well done.
Only in the road from you,know the pub well.
Lovely tractors and machinery.
Bloody beautiful.
Great collectipn . I think every farm needs a 135 . Hardy wee tractors that punch way above their weight .
that 178 is putting out a bit of blue smoke there!!
Aint we all at that age.
@@TheByard sorry it might have been the editing but too be fair the owner has them in serious condition 😅
@@JBAgrivideos The stuff looked better than new.
que linda canción hermosa
Hi , great video.
We used to have an old Martin markham forage harvester on the farm many years ago. Sadly went for scrap many years ago.
Just wondered if any one still had one as does not seem any around anymore ☹️.
Coś pięknego 😍❤️
This brings back memories from 30+ years ago on the farm
sweet video. Prefer to hear the engines working though :)
Im enjoying pat Murphy meadow.
Is that Johnny McEvoy singing the song?
Yes sure is 👍
@@JBAgrivideos Sound out 👍
Great looking tractor and cool video can someone tell me who's singing the song in the back ground really like it but have no idea the singer
178 harika 👍
The best trators
Class
Couldn't hear the machinery (the best bits) because of the music.. shame! 😮
How is the grass forced up the chute? We had this gear back in the day but never asked that question.
The flails whip around creating a great wind force that sucks up the grass and throws it into the trailer, I've got a similar setup for couple of aceas and I learnt quickly to keep the revs up so the grass doesn't get jammed in the shute
The flails also cut the grass ,or it can be cut by another mower to allow it to dry a bit before pickup by the silorator and trailer
@@trevorslater2746 yes we always cut it first. We progressed onto pick up wagons for the last 25 years or so and a push off buckrake. Joint owned with 2 sets of neighbours.
What size is that silage trailer
Some gear there lads
Sehr schönes Video mit den MF Traktoren MfG aus Ostfriesland ( MF 188 )
A fine meadow just 1 thing i was totally disgusted to see that 4 wheele drive tractor with the Q cab in the field at the end of the video otherwise brilliant footage of the beautiful masseys and the tarrup single chop
dónde los tienen ? están en venta?
Why put music over footage?
Og grønthøsteren er dansk, ren nostalgi.
Hader musikken
🚜🚜🚜😎😎😎😎👍
Раритет в работе)
How wide is the harvester
42 inch
Nice enough video, etc but I get so frustrated when folk come to me with burst vintage gearboxes - because they have NO IDEA and have put tractors which are FAR TOO BIG on small implements / machines and stretch the PUH Lift links or chains because they INSIST on using the drawbar instead of the hook. FFS what did they / you in Ireland think your great Harry Ferguson thought / did with the PU HOOK - to make hitching SAFER & quicker at the same time with nobody between tractor and trailer. .... and as for the smell of burning clutch components !!!! Come on Folks get a grip and fit the correct implement to its mating tractor - do the job PROPERLY and show modern Facebooker how to drive. we don't NEED 100+hp to cut / ted grass with. THat B47 can easily do 400 bales per hour on a 45 hp tractor. ( great things - these youtube rabbit holes on a wet day ! -sarc ) THanks for posting . Silage is great, Hay is difficult.
Machinery is great to watch, music needs to go
Slow way to harvest silage
Now we are Talking !!
Sorry but the music ruined the video just my opinion