Not sure if it's been mentioned, the difference between excavator mode and backhoe is it shifts the main boom/dipper arm control from the left stick to the right. I'm in the UK and use excavator mode most of the time if I use them as it's more handy having the boom on the sleu/left stick. Also you usually dig with full rpms. Great video though, very handy if you can justify them, if not like you said just rent when needed.
Great to see your videos from this week. I missed my fix since it is not safe to watch while driving, after 2500 miles, I am caught up again. Sadly, I haven't talked my very soon to be wife into a detour to Wisconsin on our way home. Keep up the wonderful work, Ryan.
Really cool vid my dad and me watch you when he feeds our cows And i like how you have been editing the beginnings and thumbnails of your videos👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Foot pedal adjusts angle of boom in relation to cab allowing you to dig along side a wall or also dig a square hole by changing the angle. Like a grave.
I absolutely loved this video. Loved the intro since I saw it on Facebook... I also loved the bottle flip fail lol. Good job Ryan P.S Could you add captions to your videos for people who are deaf? I am just asking. Thank you!
Nice vid... neat little excavator. We rented one when I was doing prep work for my parent's new house on the Shiner place about five years ago... handier than sliced bread! They can do a lot of work fast, and I had never operated *any* excavator or even a backhoe before and I managed to pick it up and be working at a fast pace in only an hour or two, so the learning curve was particularly easy... the only thing about it was, those little excavators are pretty limited in their capabilities... for instance, I tried to dig out a stump that the front end loader on the 5610S Ford couldn't push over, dug out around and it managed to pop some of the roots, but try as I might it just didn't have enough beans behind it to actually push the stump over (despite me cutting the tree off about 4 feet high so I'd have more leverage to "roll the stump out" later... and it was only about a foot diameter trunk at the base... not even a "big" stump per-se... Handy for doing basic trenching, but if you're doing serious land clearing, reclamation work, or moving a lot of dirt, a full-size excavator is DEFINITELY the way to go-- something with enough power to really get the job done without overtaxing or pushing anything too hard (or worse yet breaking something). If we were still farming cotton I'd love to have you film, but we quit cotton in the early 2000's... If you want to film cotton farming/harvesting, you'll have to travel a pretty long ways from Wisconsin! There's a little in far southern Kansas and Missouri which is about the closest to you... of course the Texas Panhandle from south of Amarillo, particularly around Lubbock, is "king cotton" country, and interesting because of the differences between irrigated cotton grown under pivots, versus dryland "skip-row" cotton (2 rows planted, 1 row off or "blank", usually). Course there's not as much dryland cotton as it used to be... most is irrigated now. But, they DO make some terrific yields up there most years. There's a lot of "stripper harvested" cotton in that part of the state... as you go down to South Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, etc in the heart of the cotton belt, you get into a lot more "spindle-picked" cotton-- two totally different types of harvesters (stripper cotton is more like ear-corn pickers that gather "everything" cob-n-all, where a cotton picker is more like a corn combine that separates the plant material from the cotton (or grain in a combine). The newest pickers have on-board mini-module builders (Case IH machines) or mega-round bales of seed cotton wrapped in yellow plastic (Deere machines) and can deposit these mini-modules on the end of the field, or in the field "on the go". This of course is interesting technology but IMHO boring to watch... FAR more interesting seeing the "old way" of doing it, with pickers or strippers gathering the cotton out of the field, then "dumping" the cotton out of the basket into module builders on the turning row (field end) where someone spreads and packs the cotton into large bread-loaf looking bricks of cotton called "modules" which are then picked up later by tandem trucks with chain-slat floors... The module builder packs the cotton into a "brick" using it's wedged-shaped sides and a huge hydraulically controlled packer "foot" that moves back and forth and up and down by an operator's control, then when the module is the desired size, a rear door opens upward, the machine is lifted up by hydraulically lowering its transport wheels to raise the machine off the ground (and give clearance between the sloped module builder sides and the module inside) and then the tractor is driven forward to the location where the next module will be built, the wheels are raised to put the machine onto the ground, and the rear door closed to begin making the next module... my sister in law was running a module builder for her Dad and Grandpa's farm when she was just 12 years old... I stopped and watched her building modules, because the technology had *just* started becoming common in our area about that time (well a few years before), replacing the "old, old" way of doing it-- dumping cotton directly into large wagon-type "cotton trailers" similar to really big "hay racks" and then pulling them to the cotton gin to be sucked out and the cotton ginned to remove the seed and press it into bales... (Which is what we did on our farm...) Later! OL J R :)
Hi Ryan, another great video! Greetings from De Soto Wisconsin. I miss being on the farm so your videos "ease my pain" haha. My favorite hobby on the farm was tractor pulling, hot farm. Do you have any farmers near by that you can video? Just a thought ..
Hey Ryan, awesome video it’s fun to learn to drive and use new things, but what brands of cameras do you have around your yard for security purposes?ive had a lot of break ins around me the last little bit but no one has proof of the vehicle of person doing it.. hope you see this. Thanks for your help!
I work in the wood. Drive both harvester and forwarder. Komatsu 931, komatsu 895 and John deere 1910e. And The joysticks works the same as the excavator
It's hard to beat a pro as an amateur. Let's just be honest about that. LOL! It would be cool if Chris made the trip to WI to show them a thing or two about operating a bigger model.
If you have the use for one of those machines I would get a bit bigger one for yourself. That way you can do a bit heavier work like getting stumps out, it will work with one of those but I prefer a little bigger one for those kind of jobs
Sorry if I missed it, but whatever happened to that metal silo that started to blow out on you? Was it impossible to save? Thanks as always... great videos.
We have a wheeled bobcat that uses footpeddles for the loader operation. And we rented a tracked one for manure work that had either footpeddle or joystick mode for loader operation. I tried both and the joystick mode just didn’t feel right to me.
Never heard of that one, SJ. I do, however, love watching weeds and otherwise unwanted vegetation die. Watching the Kuster brothers take out some trees in the pasture or elsewhere is always satisfying.
Matthew Hoag probably a good thing though must admit Brooke Burns (USA) host be nicer to look at than the original UK host Bradley Walsh though he is funnier. The pro quiz guy who would try to catch them was nicknamed 'the beast's Brooke introduced him by saying "release the beast" They showed the US episodes hereon an obscure channel at midnight during lambing when I came in for my dinner. Would eat it while watching half of it before collapsing into bed
We have been borrowing my uncle's excavator to clean out some ditches. Tried to play the mud splatter challenge with my sister unfortunately I forgot I had the front window open and splattered myself in return she took several of me pouting 😒☹️
I ran a backhoe for so many years I can't operate an excavator because it's opposite of a backhoe as far as the controls go. So I always have to switch it over to backhoe mode.
Ok, you switched the control option but didn’t show the difference. You just went right into the foot control for swinging the boom. The difference is the reach and boom switches between the left and right controls.
Yeah, sugar beets shouldn't be TOO far from Ryan's part of the world... Potatoes either, or tomato harvest or green beans... I know they grow quite a bit of that sort of stuff here around Rochester, Indiana, for the canning plants in the area... There's a Red Gold plant that my other brother-in-law has hauled semi-loads of tomatoes from the fields where they were being harvested back to the Red Gold plant (and they have some videos on UA-cam showing them) where they were being processed... the Del Monte plant in Plymouth, Indiana, just north of here, used to do tomato paste, green beans, and canned corn IIRC... (BIL's family used to work there-- he did too a long time ago). I've seen fields of green beans and potatoes around here, particularly over toward Winimac... they grow a LOT of white potatoes around there for canneries and such. Pretty interesting. Further north they grow a lot of mint and harvest it, and that's interesting to see too... Down in our part of the world (Texas) there's been a lot of interest in some 'alternative" crops, sesame being probably the most prominent among them, in our area anyway... course in a lot of ways, it's like soybeans-- the plants look a lot different, and pod in an alternating 2x2 pattern up the stalks (2 pods on opposite sides of the plant, then the next two opposite each other but 90 degrees out from the first pair, back and forth like that all they way up the stems of the plant, and the pods are sorta square shaped, with four rows of sesame seeds inside). They're combined similar to soybeans too, and planted with regular air or vacuum planters... Sugarbeets is more of a northern thing and would be interesting to see harvested, and hauled for processing. Sweet corn is neat to see too, on a commercial scale. Lots of seed corn growing/harvesting, which is picked as ear corn and hauled to the plant and put into the bins as ear corn, then shelled in special shellers at the plant to produce the seed grain... (I have a nephew and his sister's father-in-law that work at the Pioneer seed plant in Plymouth, Indiana-- both in the field and at the plant in fall/winter). Another nephew's large family farm grows seed corn for Pioneer in this area, as well as popcorn, field corn, and Plenish soybeans as well as "regular" soybeans... They've grown cucumbers in the past one time (have some vids on UA-cam IIRC) for a commercial cannery... Another "sourthern" crop that'd be interesting to film is sugarcane... gotta go to Florida or southern Louisiana for that though... there used to be sugar cane grown in our area, but that stopped decades ago-- the sugar plant in Sugarland, TX now processes sugar grown and initially processed in Louisiana. Rice is another interesting southern crop, but other than the additional step of milling the hulls off the grain, it's much like wheat or other small grains when harvesting... Grain sorghum is also widely grown in our area, but it's combined with a platform like wheat and threshed by the combine-- from there it's handled like any other grain... Anyway, I'm sure Ryan could bring videos about ANY of these subjects to a completely new level, with his fine videography skills and sense of style... but travel would be pretty extensive for some of them!!! Later! OL J R :)
The chain saw bottle opener trick... I'd be afraid of the think nicking the glass and dropping a shard in a beer and then drinking it... but I suppose if you just used it to open a bottle to demonstrate the trick and then threw the bottle of beer away (use Natural Lite-- that stuff is only suitable to throw away anyway) it'd be okay... Seen the backhoe bottle opener trick too on UA-cam... Later! OL J R :)
Just realized we will be camping near you this week. Bringing some southern Indiana to the great state of Wisconsin for the week.
Love how you go into great detail on how to operate all different kind of machinery! Keep it up!
Not sure if it's been mentioned, the difference between excavator mode and backhoe is it shifts the main boom/dipper arm control from the left stick to the right. I'm in the UK and use excavator mode most of the time if I use them as it's more handy having the boom on the sleu/left stick. Also you usually dig with full rpms. Great video though, very handy if you can justify them, if not like you said just rent when needed.
Great to see your videos from this week. I missed my fix since it is not safe to watch while driving, after 2500 miles, I am caught up again. Sadly, I haven't talked my very soon to be wife into a detour to Wisconsin on our way home. Keep up the wonderful work, Ryan.
Glad you had a safe trip!
You present such interesting, informative, and professional-quality videos, Ryan. Thanks for sharing your time...
Enjoyed the chopping video and would like to see more like it. We harvest cotton and peanuts on our farm, but we are about 1000 miles away.
Thanks for all the great videos Ryan look forward to them all every week. Keep up all the great work!!!
Your videos are soo clear I can see the nats and Flys
Great demo! Really enjoying your vids and I am presently out shopping for a small farm, so your videos are really educational!
Cool video Ryan! That WOULD be very useful around the farm! Happy to see Rocket again! Congrats to Tyler if you see this comment!
I love your how to videos and all the rest keep up the good work
I may never use the machine, but loved the peek into how it works.
It’s funny how even if I already know how to run a piece of equipment, if I see a HFW video on how to run it I watch anyway😂. Good video!
All of your videos are great keep up the good work
Love all the "how to operate" videos. Good job Ryan👍🏻
Could use one of these around my farm for a few days, bet it work great for pulling stumps!👍
I like it! Me and my brotha have a bigger caterpillar 305c but it's basically the same controller! Love your content
Really cool vid my dad and me watch you when he feeds our cows And i like how you have been editing the beginnings and thumbnails of your videos👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Thanks for the feedback!
How Farms Work your welcome
Thank you for sharing your amazing video. God bless you and your family
Thanks for sharing Ryan. Keep up the great work...
Very enjoyable video Ryan thanks
Foot pedal adjusts angle of boom in relation to cab allowing you to dig along side a wall or also dig a square hole by changing the angle. Like a grave.
Liked the intro. I've ran a cat 305.5 they are great.
I absolutely loved this video. Loved the intro since I saw it on Facebook... I also loved the bottle flip fail lol. Good job Ryan
P.S Could you add captions to your videos for people who are deaf? I am just asking. Thank you!
Love the into !!! Keep up the good work
Love it when a 1st timer does a how to video, lol.
Nice vid... neat little excavator. We rented one when I was doing prep work for my parent's new house on the Shiner place about five years ago... handier than sliced bread! They can do a lot of work fast, and I had never operated *any* excavator or even a backhoe before and I managed to pick it up and be working at a fast pace in only an hour or two, so the learning curve was particularly easy... the only thing about it was, those little excavators are pretty limited in their capabilities... for instance, I tried to dig out a stump that the front end loader on the 5610S Ford couldn't push over, dug out around and it managed to pop some of the roots, but try as I might it just didn't have enough beans behind it to actually push the stump over (despite me cutting the tree off about 4 feet high so I'd have more leverage to "roll the stump out" later... and it was only about a foot diameter trunk at the base... not even a "big" stump per-se... Handy for doing basic trenching, but if you're doing serious land clearing, reclamation work, or moving a lot of dirt, a full-size excavator is DEFINITELY the way to go-- something with enough power to really get the job done without overtaxing or pushing anything too hard (or worse yet breaking something).
If we were still farming cotton I'd love to have you film, but we quit cotton in the early 2000's... If you want to film cotton farming/harvesting, you'll have to travel a pretty long ways from Wisconsin! There's a little in far southern Kansas and Missouri which is about the closest to you... of course the Texas Panhandle from south of Amarillo, particularly around Lubbock, is "king cotton" country, and interesting because of the differences between irrigated cotton grown under pivots, versus dryland "skip-row" cotton (2 rows planted, 1 row off or "blank", usually). Course there's not as much dryland cotton as it used to be... most is irrigated now. But, they DO make some terrific yields up there most years. There's a lot of "stripper harvested" cotton in that part of the state... as you go down to South Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, etc in the heart of the cotton belt, you get into a lot more "spindle-picked" cotton-- two totally different types of harvesters (stripper cotton is more like ear-corn pickers that gather "everything" cob-n-all, where a cotton picker is more like a corn combine that separates the plant material from the cotton (or grain in a combine). The newest pickers have on-board mini-module builders (Case IH machines) or mega-round bales of seed cotton wrapped in yellow plastic (Deere machines) and can deposit these mini-modules on the end of the field, or in the field "on the go". This of course is interesting technology but IMHO boring to watch... FAR more interesting seeing the "old way" of doing it, with pickers or strippers gathering the cotton out of the field, then "dumping" the cotton out of the basket into module builders on the turning row (field end) where someone spreads and packs the cotton into large bread-loaf looking bricks of cotton called "modules" which are then picked up later by tandem trucks with chain-slat floors... The module builder packs the cotton into a "brick" using it's wedged-shaped sides and a huge hydraulically controlled packer "foot" that moves back and forth and up and down by an operator's control, then when the module is the desired size, a rear door opens upward, the machine is lifted up by hydraulically lowering its transport wheels to raise the machine off the ground (and give clearance between the sloped module builder sides and the module inside) and then the tractor is driven forward to the location where the next module will be built, the wheels are raised to put the machine onto the ground, and the rear door closed to begin making the next module... my sister in law was running a module builder for her Dad and Grandpa's farm when she was just 12 years old... I stopped and watched her building modules, because the technology had *just* started becoming common in our area about that time (well a few years before), replacing the "old, old" way of doing it-- dumping cotton directly into large wagon-type "cotton trailers" similar to really big "hay racks" and then pulling them to the cotton gin to be sucked out and the cotton ginned to remove the seed and press it into bales... (Which is what we did on our farm...)
Later! OL J R :)
You could come film seed corn harvest in central Minnesota
Hi Ryan, another great video! Greetings from De Soto Wisconsin. I miss being on the farm so your videos "ease my pain" haha. My favorite hobby on the farm was tractor pulling, hot farm. Do you have any farmers near by that you can video? Just a thought ..
Looks like it is pretty easy to operate!
The "Grapple" is actually called a Thumb.
That's right. And if it's hydraulic like his is it's a "live thumb" to get technical.
Great video
thanks ryan for the videos
Just subscribed Good stuff to know. Good video.
great vid it makes more sense now
I bet that is a fun toy to have around. Do you plan on getting one for the farm
Lumnah Acres more for construction purposes rather than farm. nice for fixing broken tile tho
Great video make more like this!!
Hello you make nice vids
You get to play with the best toys!
Ryan being left alone with that seems like a case of " In my defence I was left unsupervised"
Hey Ryan, awesome video it’s fun to learn to drive and use new things, but what brands of cameras do you have around your yard for security purposes?ive had a lot of break ins around me the last little bit but no one has proof of the vehicle of person doing it.. hope you see this. Thanks for your help!
Great video! Any live streams planned soon?
I work in the wood. Drive both harvester and forwarder. Komatsu 931, komatsu 895 and John deere 1910e. And The joysticks works the same as the excavator
Not hardly as good as letsdig but getting better.
It's hard to beat a pro as an amateur. Let's just be honest about that. LOL! It would be cool if Chris made the trip to WI to show them a thing or two about operating a bigger model.
If you have the use for one of those machines I would get a bit bigger one for yourself. That way you can do a bit heavier work like getting stumps out, it will work with one of those but I prefer a little bigger one for those kind of jobs
It would be nice if you personally owned one of these things, they have a lot of good uses.
You should do this. Good video
It is the same controls for a CAT mini excavator I use mine for landscaping!
You could come here Finland to watch us chop second crop in august. 😏
I find it interesting those small excavators
Sorry if I missed it, but whatever happened to that metal silo that started to blow out on you? Was it impossible to save? Thanks as always... great videos.
It’s still standing. We’re likely going to tear it down at some point.
Awesome intro!
JB Aerial thanks, I’m trying to emphasis where we are located, I’ve answered that question so many times lately!
Cool machine :)
We have a wheeled bobcat that uses footpeddles for the loader operation. And we rented a tracked one for manure work that had either footpeddle or joystick mode for loader operation. I tried both and the joystick mode just didn’t feel right to me.
You are lucky to get so many experiences like this. Now, let's see some destruction! Unleash the beast!
Matthew Hoag now I am thinking you like your game shows too like the Chase USA
Never heard of that one, SJ. I do, however, love watching weeds and otherwise unwanted vegetation die. Watching the Kuster brothers take out some trees in the pasture or elsewhere is always satisfying.
Matthew Hoag probably a good thing though must admit Brooke Burns (USA) host be nicer to look at than the original UK host Bradley Walsh though he is funnier. The pro quiz guy who would try to catch them was nicknamed 'the beast's Brooke introduced him by saying "release the beast"
They showed the US episodes hereon an obscure channel at midnight during lambing when I came in for my dinner. Would eat it while watching half of it before collapsing into bed
Gosh dang it could I come and visit you
In south-west Norway someone has a self-propelled carrot harvester :D
Thank you.
You should go to the Sunbelt Ag Expo.
Nice intro
Thanks for the feedback!
I will win a hat!! But seriously great video like always can't wait for more!
Loggers like to play checkers with their grapplers using a very large game board and stand on ends logs.
the two different types of operating controls are ISO and SAE. you started In SAE then went to ISO.
We have been borrowing my uncle's excavator to clean out some ditches. Tried to play the mud splatter challenge with my sister unfortunately I forgot I had the front window open and splattered myself in return she took several of me pouting 😒☹️
Excelent!
Interesting, very expensive for the size. Thanks for the low down.
Whats better case ih or john deere?
Youre right they are straight forward until you climb up the cab of a grader
Nice vid.Like
Geez, if a dealer dropped off a hoe at my farm for a couple of days it'd be going back with 48hrs on it, lol.
This one was already sold, so we couldn’t abuse it too much!
You could have used it to clean up your fence lines. That is really not big enough for Demolition of Barns.
Did you have to pay to rent that?
would a cat skidsteer count
I ran a backhoe for so many years I can't operate an excavator because it's opposite of a backhoe as far as the controls go. So I always have to switch it over to backhoe mode.
Why not use a rototilt on that machine and get the job done in halv the time?
I got my new shirt today (07/23/28) THANKS a lot
I hope you enjoy it!
Does it have A/C?
Steve Holsten look at the video! Stupid😂😂
Hey, Useless; Kiss my Ass!!!
Price of machine
If I had one of those jobs, I'd have holes dug everywhere. I'b be worse than a groundhog.....LOL
Ok, you switched the control option but didn’t show the difference. You just went right into the foot control for swinging the boom. The difference is the reach and boom switches between the left and right controls.
Is that your new intro for every video
Haven’t decided. Might put it in here and there pending more input from viewers.
I halterbreak steers amd heifers for showing if you are intrested.
Your Bucket grapple is commonly called a "Thumb"
It would be nice to have a digger 😄
If you do a potato harvest video you may want to do a sugar beet video. How about a cranberry harvest video?
Yeah, sugar beets shouldn't be TOO far from Ryan's part of the world... Potatoes either, or tomato harvest or green beans... I know they grow quite a bit of that sort of stuff here around Rochester, Indiana, for the canning plants in the area... There's a Red Gold plant that my other brother-in-law has hauled semi-loads of tomatoes from the fields where they were being harvested back to the Red Gold plant (and they have some videos on UA-cam showing them) where they were being processed... the Del Monte plant in Plymouth, Indiana, just north of here, used to do tomato paste, green beans, and canned corn IIRC... (BIL's family used to work there-- he did too a long time ago). I've seen fields of green beans and potatoes around here, particularly over toward Winimac... they grow a LOT of white potatoes around there for canneries and such. Pretty interesting. Further north they grow a lot of mint and harvest it, and that's interesting to see too...
Down in our part of the world (Texas) there's been a lot of interest in some 'alternative" crops, sesame being probably the most prominent among them, in our area anyway... course in a lot of ways, it's like soybeans-- the plants look a lot different, and pod in an alternating 2x2 pattern up the stalks (2 pods on opposite sides of the plant, then the next two opposite each other but 90 degrees out from the first pair, back and forth like that all they way up the stems of the plant, and the pods are sorta square shaped, with four rows of sesame seeds inside). They're combined similar to soybeans too, and planted with regular air or vacuum planters...
Sugarbeets is more of a northern thing and would be interesting to see harvested, and hauled for processing. Sweet corn is neat to see too, on a commercial scale. Lots of seed corn growing/harvesting, which is picked as ear corn and hauled to the plant and put into the bins as ear corn, then shelled in special shellers at the plant to produce the seed grain... (I have a nephew and his sister's father-in-law that work at the Pioneer seed plant in Plymouth, Indiana-- both in the field and at the plant in fall/winter). Another nephew's large family farm grows seed corn for Pioneer in this area, as well as popcorn, field corn, and Plenish soybeans as well as "regular" soybeans... They've grown cucumbers in the past one time (have some vids on UA-cam IIRC) for a commercial cannery...
Another "sourthern" crop that'd be interesting to film is sugarcane... gotta go to Florida or southern Louisiana for that though... there used to be sugar cane grown in our area, but that stopped decades ago-- the sugar plant in Sugarland, TX now processes sugar grown and initially processed in Louisiana. Rice is another interesting southern crop, but other than the additional step of milling the hulls off the grain, it's much like wheat or other small grains when harvesting... Grain sorghum is also widely grown in our area, but it's combined with a platform like wheat and threshed by the combine-- from there it's handled like any other grain...
Anyway, I'm sure Ryan could bring videos about ANY of these subjects to a completely new level, with his fine videography skills and sense of style... but travel would be pretty extensive for some of them!!!
Later! OL J R :)
I love John Deere Farm tractors but for equipment you have to go Caterpillar
How much would it cost to go with full automatic machine control for this?
You're welcome to come to Texas and harvest cotton with us
Give me dates and I’ll mull it over!
How Farms Work usually we start harvesting in mid October and finish in December but some of it depends on when we get a good freeze
I got potato harvesting lol
I feel like a GoPro would be best for this sort of thing.
they are starting picking potatoes up here right now i know some people that own big potato farms
All ways wanted to run one
My dad has the same excavator but his is a 2015
A local custom worker can open a bottle of beer and adjuste the volume of a Dewalt heavy duty radio with such a machine .
Makes a good back scratcher....LOL
I have been told a chainsaw does as well but that was from someone who doesn't like livestock farming so not sure to trust them
There's videos of that on UA-cam... It *can* be done, if one has had enough "practice" running the things all the time...
Later! OL J R :)
luke strawwalker the digger/bottle, the digger/back scratcher or the chainsaw? If it's the latter they're nuts! 😁
The chain saw bottle opener trick... I'd be afraid of the think nicking the glass and dropping a shard in a beer and then drinking it... but I suppose if you just used it to open a bottle to demonstrate the trick and then threw the bottle of beer away (use Natural Lite-- that stuff is only suitable to throw away anyway) it'd be okay...
Seen the backhoe bottle opener trick too on UA-cam...
Later! OL J R :)
do you have a job in america i am operator |.am turkey
Hi
Hey man
Sehr gutes Video.
Bitte etwas weniger labbern. Hast du eine Kartoffel in der Schnorrä
Chong hong bong choy cha hoy long dong soy che huey!
31st
Bottle flip is old