It’s so cool to see someone actually start farming with no land personally I have always wanted to be a farmer but it is so expensive. Keep it up and I love the videos
I don't see how this man handles a gaming channel a farm and a farming channel. Keep it up Grant,you can do anything as long as you have the right mind and attitude.
Thank you grant, you are very inspiring to first generation farmers and future farmers. if you can make through this year with all the down corn you can make it through any year. I have grown up on the farm and am working on a farm right now and I am going hopefully continue the farming legacy when I am done school thank you so much and have a great rest of harvest!
I love your humble attitude towards this. My dad said to me and my brother from really early age, if you are finished learning in farming, you are lying to yourself.
Hi, I don't know what your laws are and how you manage the lands in general. But I'm from Europe, specifically form Czech Republic and In my opinion it is always nice to plow the ground (I mean the "real" plowing with furrow plough. You know, it helps to spread and decompose the trash. But in the spring you have to prepare the soil for sowing, and that requires 2-3 more tractor operations, than only till and sow, or only sow. But if you have the problems with water etc.. it is better to do no/strip-till. But everytime the yield will be lower. But as I have mentioned, those methods works in our climate.. Have nice day Grant! Keep making these amazing videos :-)
hello Grant. I am a new generation farmer in Sri Lanka. I came across a video of you on UA-cam by chance. Seeing that reminded me of how I started farming a few years ago now. I don't have as much technology and new machinery as you. It depends on our farmland and economic level. Anyway I wish your farm success. One day I dream of cultivating a farm like yours.😊😊😊
A tip for opening up fields is to take the second set of six rows around the field before you take the very outside six rows that way you have plenty of room to get over for tree branches.
You'll be able to pull the neighbor's disk ripper, just not very deep. Different rear-end in the 8100 vs 8400 so don't go crazy with the high horsepower tillage demands with your 8110. There are some tunes or power modules that you can install relatively easy and adjust with the twist of a dial. Our big horse is a CASE IH MX240. Stock horsepower is in the neighborhood of 220-240. Twist of a knob on the power module we can either leave it stock or bump it up 15% or 30% (270 or 300hp). Usually bump it up a little for chopping silage and 30% when pulling the neighbor's 24ft CIH True Tandem at +9mph
I have a schedule every day I watch the millennium farmer I watch soon's firm in South Dakota and I don't think that's the way it's spelled it but and then I watch just a few acres and then I watch our Wyoming life and then if you're on I watch you corn harvesting season has really been great to watch on all your channels
Having weights definitely helps and would also help with pulling both gravity boxes. Your tractor should have enough power to pull a 5 shank 2700 it's just lacking traction which weights would help.
The tune will help fuel efficiency and provide more power reserve. Use the disks on the jd2700 to tear up the stalks, only run the shanks at 8-9 inches. That should allow you to get by this Fall. Tillage speed is just as important as depth.
I just started a farm and I am 13 years old and I have made some money off of it and it is all because of you Grant I love all of your videos so keep up the good work
I definitely think you should get another tractor because two tractors will come in handy because you can do two things at once. But I don’t think it’s a bad idea to get the 8110 tuned because it would be good to have a little more power. We have 3 tractors tuned up and we are glad.
Traction for the combine probably the cheapest option would be duals with the added floatation advantage. Farming isn't easy because there is always something you'll want to improve and honestly it's hard to justify that with how much money we make sometimes.
Duals will be really close to the side of corn head being a 6 row. I've heard some guys saying they combined with duals and a 6 row and the dual was smacking the next row over.
Grant don't get too excited over fertility and tilling and such. It's a long term project it will take years to dial everything in to your farm. Your doing good. Keep Smilin!!
This is crazy. I've been watching you since 2015 and to see you go from wanting to farm irl while playing fs 15 to now and you actually did it. So proud of you and I wish i could start a farm like you one day.
Grant I really recommend a McFarlane 20ft reel disc, it needs about 160-180 drawbar hp but our 4650 pulls it just fine (140 drawbar hp) it does a great job smoothing out shallow - medium ruts, on level ground with your discs shallow it knocks down stalks and leaves the ground covered and has your stalks chopped up and ready to go for tillage in the next spring before planting, and about corn going out the back, drop your speed down to 1.5 to 3 mph and go about 40 feet, get out and check behind to see how it’s doing, if it’s really clean in the tank and still shooting corn out the back open things up a bit, and then go your normal speed again
Yeah Chuck Hessey I like Larson's but I've been watching Iver's Farms lately too I find them very interesting as well. Approximately 6000 acre's of corn 4000 soybeans give or take on each. On the Illinois/Indiana border. I believe they have one field that's 650 acres. They don't brag about things but just kind of tell how they run their farm. It's pretty interesting in my opinion...🇺🇸
Love this channel, the Larson’s farm, sonne farms and a few others! They do a great job. If you want to see some more farm family fun check out the County Line Cowpokes!
You play the long game! I can relate, I have a conversation that has been going on for 5 years and it all started with a merry Christmas from a wrong number!
Hey Grant, just a tip, don't over fill those wagon tires. They should not have nearly as many psi as when they are on a semi. Guys will break axles off of those wagons if they fill the tires up too much because there is not enough flex. Rough country roads can be very hard on those axles if the tires are too inflated. I think we run ours in the 60 to 75 psi range. You should definitely expect to see them squishing alot when the wagon is loaded. Keep up the good work though! Great and inspiring content!
I’ve always wanted to start a UA-cam channel, I’m 18 and I just started farming with my dad. It’s a hell of an adventure to start farming. I couldn’t imagine starting from nothing.
Water your tires down and add dual tires to your front and that will help you with traction on Tillage I would recommend Disking before you chisel plowed to help make the residue smaller where it won’t plug up on the chisel plow and I would pull it just as deep as the tractor would pull it
farming is awesome, yesterday i was on the fence of my grandparents farm and the neighbors were harvesting right next to the fence and i got blown in face with chaff!, awesome times
In Australia we put A frames on the front of quad bikes and utes that then connect to the back of tractor or trailer so then if ur working alone you can drop the tractor off and drive back.
What would be smart is make this your grain Cart and planter tractor, then get an older 4wd articulating tractor for all your tillage, Cole the cornstar does that even though they do mainly no till they have an old Massey they use only tillage
If you are thinking about putting in drain tile you can always run tile in the real wet spots/ low areas to help out for now instead of grid tilling since you are just starting out. Keep up the great work guys I enjoy the your videos.
Depending on soil type and moisture I have pulled a 5 shank ripper with 110 hp. If its dry it will be hard and only 1.5 mph. You have plenty of power. Front duals and axle weight will be a big help.
Keep up the outstanding work as always! Hope your enjoying the first year of farming! Love seeing the irl content!for the lincon creek series can you use a johndeere 8970?YEEYEE, and have a good one!
Yes a 8110 is identical to a 8210, 8310 and 8410. Only difference was a tune at the factory, and the price of course. Worth it to turn it up, even if you are only going to use it for a planting tractor and pull gravity wagons. Engine will be laboring less, resulting in better fuel efficiency.
Swap the trailer hitch receiver out with a single bike hauler on the cart. Lot easier than loading front. Lots of guys do that on tillage equipment to help speed up moving.
if you aren't afraid to spend a couple days driving a tractor, big 4wd articulated tractors can be had for dirt cheap in the dakotas. Take the duals off and road it back. 250mi in a 10hour day.
If you plan on tialling the field, get an on-off switch. It will allow you to turn it off when there is a drought and have it on when there is a wet season
Tune it you'll never regret it we have a 8100 that we believe is tuned because on Dyno she pushes out 210 and pulled two wagons for the first time this year with it instead of our 8320 and I don't think we could have did it without that extra horsepower
I’m not sure if your corn head actually has it or not but most do, it should have a safety bar you can drop down so that stops the head from dropping and crushing you while you work/adjust the head
Grant tuning the tractor will benifit you in the long run. Not only will you pull the implements easier but your fuel economy should increase because you can pull a bigger gear while keeping Roma down and speed up. I have a Duramax truck and when I had it tuned my biggest tune was 230hp extra and it got the best fuel mileage on that tune going to indiana. I went from about 20mpg stock to 28 mpg on the big tune. Just my input from experience. Make a video of the tuning process if you do it.
On cycle. Have a lower, better bracket made. Or run it out in pickup, drop off. I made a bracket to flat tow my old Ford Escort as run home car. Worked great, even chained to digger without rear hitch.
If you get a bigger tractor with pto. Decent size grain carts used can be cheap. (Under 800 bu are less in demand, under 400 nobody wants) So you could get a grain cart to fill when boxes to elevator, quick fill almost both between cart, and combine hopper. We would have been dune today but flat rear tire on combine. I think he drove @10 rounds with it flat. I kept thinking “his end turns look weird” but right side rear, I was running grain cart…. If I kept quiet we would have been done.
My 2 cents on your questions. 1. Tillage; Your right there boarder line on HP for a 5 shank Disk Ripper/ you might sacrifice quality & depth of Job. I hate running tillage at 100% Capacity anyway. With your tractor I’d split the operation onto 2 passes if it’s just 1 year. 4 or 5 shank in-line ripper followed by a 10 to 11 foot heavy offset disk ideal pulling a Cultipacker/Harrow. 2. Quality of farm land & price; Once you understand Prescription Tillage & Soil Health a lot can be done to turn Land & Yields around, keep in mind Randy Dowdy in Georgia, his first farm nobody wanted to buy, poorest yields in County, in 3 to 4 years he was producing World Record Yields because he understood Agronomy, Prescription Tillage & Soil Health. 3. Fertility & low producing areas on your land; you should be doing Tissue Analysis thru out the Growing Season, comparing planter fertility to your actual goal, only way to uncover a problem & have time to change it. Best of Luck, take it slow and easy the first 3 years until you get a solid foundation with unforeseen events & real life production issues.
8110, 8210 have different components than a 8310, 8410 (axles, ring gears etc.) So careful tuning it thinking it's the same because it's not. But it will pull a 5 shank ripper to get you by this year. Also your 8110 probably has a little more hp than what it's rated at according to the book. That's the case for most JD tractors. I pull a heavy 13 shank chisel plow with my 8320 at 6.2 mph.
Tuning and weights would be the cheaper option vs buying another tractor. Just go with what you can afford. Love the videos man keep them coming. We just started corn got a ways to go. Cheers 🍻
2700 on that tractor should do fine, biggest thing would be soil type… If it’s more sand or loam, it’d be manageable. If it’s a tighter clay, that’s where you’d struggle. You can just not pull it as deep if it’s a struggle. Sometimes we rip in the fall and in the spring on our corn on corn. It’s primarily sandy soils so it’s easy pulling. Been corn on corn for around 40 years now.
Another problem why the corn along the trees was yielding bad it could have been the trees taking moisture out of the ground so the corn had barely had any Great video keep it up!
Even if you get a bigger tractor it still wouldn't hurt to havr the 8110 turned up to an 8310 or 8410. Stuff happens equipment brakes, so even with the bigger tractor if it where to brake your not completely screwed because you have a backup.
Grant, what ever happened with the text? Be sure and let us know the reply. Love seeing your videos, so cool to see a start up farm, really unique! We had a 9560 combine just like that years ago. You should definitely start doing your own spraying, it is easy, and for what the coop charges, its a money maker for sure
It’s so cool to see someone actually start farming with no land personally I have always wanted to be a farmer but it is so expensive. Keep it up and I love the videos
#fundedbybitcoin haha
Spend a lot make a lot
@@jgeer9772 Or spend less make more
Regardless if it was funded by Bitcoin or any other investment, it's impressive he took his gains and chose farming, that's what took balls.
Be a bull rider
I don't see how this man handles a gaming channel a farm and a farming channel. Keep it up Grant,you can do anything as long as you have the right mind and attitude.
Grant, I know nothing about farming… but I sure do enjoy watching you bro’s tackle the farming together. It really is inspiring…
Thanks Doc!
@@granthilbert5632 You are very welcome… have a great weekend.
Thank you grant, you are very inspiring to first generation farmers and future farmers. if you can make through this year with all the down corn you can make it through any year. I have grown up on the farm and am working on a farm right now and I am going hopefully continue the farming legacy when I am done school thank you so much and have a great rest of harvest!
I love your humble attitude towards this. My dad said to me and my brother from really early age, if you are finished learning in farming, you are lying to yourself.
For the algorithm. Likes, comments, shares, and subscriptions help your content creators more than you realize. Keep it up Grant!
Hi, I don't know what your laws are and how you manage the lands in general. But I'm from Europe, specifically form Czech Republic and In my opinion it is always nice to plow the ground (I mean the "real" plowing with furrow plough. You know, it helps to spread and decompose the trash. But in the spring you have to prepare the soil for sowing, and that requires 2-3 more tractor operations, than only till and sow, or only sow. But if you have the problems with water etc.. it is better to do no/strip-till. But everytime the yield will be lower. But as I have mentioned, those methods works in our climate.. Have nice day Grant! Keep making these amazing videos :-)
hello Grant. I am a new generation farmer in Sri Lanka. I came across a video of you on UA-cam by chance. Seeing that reminded me of how I started farming a few years ago now. I don't have as much technology and new machinery as you. It depends on our farmland and economic level. Anyway I wish your farm success. One day I dream of cultivating a farm like yours.😊😊😊
A tip for opening up fields is to take the second set of six rows around the field before you take the very outside six rows that way you have plenty of room to get over for tree branches.
You'll be able to pull the neighbor's disk ripper, just not very deep. Different rear-end in the 8100 vs 8400 so don't go crazy with the high horsepower tillage demands with your 8110.
There are some tunes or power modules that you can install relatively easy and adjust with the twist of a dial. Our big horse is a CASE IH MX240. Stock horsepower is in the neighborhood of 220-240. Twist of a knob on the power module we can either leave it stock or bump it up 15% or 30% (270 or 300hp). Usually bump it up a little for chopping silage and 30% when pulling the neighbor's 24ft CIH True Tandem at +9mph
I have a schedule every day I watch the millennium farmer I watch soon's firm in South Dakota and I don't think that's the way it's spelled it but and then I watch just a few acres and then I watch our Wyoming life and then if you're on I watch you corn harvesting season has really been great to watch on all your channels
Having weights definitely helps and would also help with pulling both gravity boxes. Your tractor should have enough power to pull a 5 shank 2700 it's just lacking traction which weights would help.
The tune will help fuel efficiency and provide more power reserve. Use the disks on the jd2700 to tear up the stalks, only run the shanks at 8-9 inches. That should allow you to get by this Fall. Tillage speed is just as important as depth.
I just started a farm and I am 13 years old and I have made some money off of it and it is all because of you Grant I love all of your videos so keep up the good work
You need a combine with tracks for those hills. Get r done! Love that you are like a kid in a candy store regarding farming. Very refreshing to see!👍
Tune it then over the winter find a older high hp 4WD for some cheaper power...it's always good to have a second tractor
I second that find a 4wd with a pto so if you ever get a catch cart ur golden
I definitely think you should get another tractor because two tractors will come in handy because you can do two things at once. But I don’t think it’s a bad idea to get the 8110 tuned because it would be good to have a little more power. We have 3 tractors tuned up and we are glad.
hes also just starting you guys probably didnt buy 3 tractors at once
Watching your videos is my favourite thing to do while uploading my own
Dude just wear a GoPro 24/7 and record constantly. Can't get enough of these videos we're all living our dream through your UA-cam channel :)
Traction for the combine probably the cheapest option would be duals with the added floatation advantage. Farming isn't easy because there is always something you'll want to improve and honestly it's hard to justify that with how much money we make sometimes.
Duals will be really close to the side of corn head being a 6 row. I've heard some guys saying they combined with duals and a 6 row and the dual was smacking the next row over.
@@mickha..8013 get a life
Grant don't get too excited over fertility and tilling and such. It's a long term project it will take years to dial everything in to your farm.
Your doing good.
Keep Smilin!!
This is crazy. I've been watching you since 2015 and to see you go from wanting to farm irl while playing fs 15 to now and you actually did it. So proud of you and I wish i could start a farm like you one day.
Grant I really recommend a McFarlane 20ft reel disc, it needs about 160-180 drawbar hp but our 4650 pulls it just fine (140 drawbar hp) it does a great job smoothing out shallow - medium ruts, on level ground with your discs shallow it knocks down stalks and leaves the ground covered and has your stalks chopped up and ready to go for tillage in the next spring before planting, and about corn going out the back, drop your speed down to 1.5 to 3 mph and go about 40 feet, get out and check behind to see how it’s doing, if it’s really clean in the tank and still shooting corn out the back open things up a bit, and then go your normal speed again
Larson's farm is a great UA-cam channel chet the big Swede and Dougo you got to love them LOL 😂
Yeah chuck started watching them after they got down harvesting and watched them every since and that Dougo is a real character
Yeah Chuck Hessey I like Larson's but I've been watching Iver's Farms lately too I find them very interesting as well. Approximately 6000 acre's of corn 4000 soybeans give or take on each. On the Illinois/Indiana border. I believe they have one field that's 650 acres. They don't brag about things but just kind of tell how they run their farm. It's pretty interesting in my opinion...🇺🇸
Love this channel, the Larson’s farm, sonne farms and a few others! They do a great job. If you want to see some more farm family fun check out the County Line Cowpokes!
But what they do and where they farm aren’t a match. They are BTO’s.
Love watching new farmers living their dream, keep it up
You play the long game! I can relate, I have a conversation that has been going on for 5 years and it all started with a merry Christmas from a wrong number!
I love how you kept wiping the dipstick while talking! Love the videos Grant.
Hey Grant, just a tip, don't over fill those wagon tires. They should not have nearly as many psi as when they are on a semi. Guys will break axles off of those wagons if they fill the tires up too much because there is not enough flex. Rough country roads can be very hard on those axles if the tires are too inflated. I think we run ours in the 60 to 75 psi range. You should definitely expect to see them squishing alot when the wagon is loaded. Keep up the good work though! Great and inspiring content!
Those drone shots are the best I’ve every seen from any farming youtuber
I’ve always wanted to start a UA-cam channel, I’m 18 and I just started farming with my dad. It’s a hell of an adventure to start farming. I couldn’t imagine starting from nothing.
You won’t regret the tune. More power and better fuel economy is better no matter what job your doing with the machine.
I find it so cool that you are a one man show. I bet it is super hard on you keep it up👍
I love learning about farming machines while watching these awesome videos! Thank you Grant! 🙌🏼💪🏼
Water your tires down and add dual tires to your front and that will help you with traction on Tillage I would recommend Disking before you chisel plowed to help make the residue smaller where it won’t plug up on the chisel plow and I would pull it just as deep as the tractor would pull it
farming is awesome, yesterday i was on the fence of my grandparents farm and the neighbors were harvesting right next to the fence and i got blown in face with chaff!, awesome times
What you said about the auger sound made me laugh, because I absolutely love that sound too - thought I was the only one! Haha
Can’t wait to watch y’all grow as farm through the years
In Australia we put A frames on the front of quad bikes and utes that then connect to the back of tractor or trailer so then if ur working alone you can drop the tractor off and drive back.
What would be smart is make this your grain Cart and planter tractor, then get an older 4wd articulating tractor for all your tillage, Cole the cornstar does that even though they do mainly no till they have an old Massey they use only tillage
If you are thinking about putting in drain tile you can always run tile in the real wet spots/ low areas to help out for now instead of grid tilling since you are just starting out. Keep up the great work guys I enjoy the your videos.
Great video again really enjoy them. Be careful out there by you self.
your leaf blower is like your best friend
Great show, Good working hard on cornfield 🌽 !
😁😁👋👋🚜🚜🚜
Depending on soil type and moisture I have pulled a 5 shank ripper with 110 hp. If its dry it will be hard and only 1.5 mph. You have plenty of power. Front duals and axle weight will be a big help.
Keep up the outstanding work as always! Hope your enjoying the first year of farming! Love seeing the irl content!for the lincon creek series can you use a johndeere 8970?YEEYEE, and have a good one!
I sure hope Dave makes an appearance before harvest is over! He seemed like a great help the few seconds we saw him!
Dave will be back!
@@granthilbert5632 Good to hear!
Love the vids Grant. Every time you post you make my day
I loved the drone shots at the end, I would love to see more drone footage, maybe a time lapse? Love the video!
Will def put more drone shots and timelapse!
Yes a 8110 is identical to a 8210, 8310 and 8410. Only difference was a tune at the factory, and the price of course. Worth it to turn it up, even if you are only going to use it for a planting tractor and pull gravity wagons. Engine will be laboring less, resulting in better fuel efficiency.
Swap the trailer hitch receiver out with a single bike hauler on the cart. Lot easier than loading front. Lots of guys do that on tillage equipment to help speed up moving.
Boom great way to start the day
Keep up the good work on the videos
if you aren't afraid to spend a couple days driving a tractor, big 4wd articulated tractors can be had for dirt cheap in the dakotas.
Take the duals off and road it back. 250mi in a 10hour day.
I love how you have gone from gaming and taking it into reality
Dude that’s hilarious about saving that text!
Bst harvest video you made all year keep it up
If you plan on tialling the field, get an on-off switch. It will allow you to turn it off when there is a drought and have it on when there is a wet season
Not how tiling works... Tile only removes excess water.
@@strandedkansan8367 yes but you can get a switch to turn a valve that will stop or let water drain into a ditch.
We have a tune on our 8200 and it helps a lot
So awesome to see you living your dream! Keep up the good work man!
The drone shots you used to finish the video are excellent!
Tune it you'll never regret it we have a 8100 that we believe is tuned because on Dyno she pushes out 210 and pulled two wagons for the first time this year with it instead of our 8320 and I don't think we could have did it without that extra horsepower
My son and I have enjoye your videos
Love ur videos and I’m listening you in agriculture right now
I’m not sure if your corn head actually has it or not but most do, it should have a safety bar you can drop down so that stops the head from dropping and crushing you while you work/adjust the head
Love your videos Grant!
Hey bro love your vids I’ve watched them for forever and thank u because you inspired me to start my UA-cam
Grant tuning the tractor will benifit you in the long run. Not only will you pull the implements easier but your fuel economy should increase because you can pull a bigger gear while keeping Roma down and speed up. I have a Duramax truck and when I had it tuned my biggest tune was 230hp extra and it got the best fuel mileage on that tune going to indiana. I went from about 20mpg stock to 28 mpg on the big tune. Just my input from experience. Make a video of the tuning process if you do it.
On cycle. Have a lower, better bracket made. Or run it out in pickup, drop off. I made a bracket to flat tow my old Ford Escort as run home car. Worked great, even chained to digger without rear hitch.
If you get a bigger tractor with pto. Decent size grain carts used can be cheap. (Under 800 bu are less in demand, under 400 nobody wants)
So you could get a grain cart to fill when boxes to elevator, quick fill almost both between cart, and combine hopper.
We would have been dune today but flat rear tire on combine. I think he drove @10 rounds with it flat. I kept thinking “his end turns look weird” but right side rear, I was running grain cart…. If I kept quiet we would have been done.
AC/DC and John Mellencamp, good choice in music
You should get a small 4 wheeler and build a hitch so you can pull it behind wagons, that’s what we do - works really good when your by your self
I watches both of your channels pretty cool I love all your content
I have watched every one of your videos, and this one has had by far the best montage of the equipment. Keep up the great videos! =)
My 2 cents on your questions. 1. Tillage; Your right there boarder line on HP for a 5 shank Disk Ripper/ you might sacrifice quality & depth of Job. I hate running tillage at 100% Capacity anyway. With your tractor I’d split the operation onto 2 passes if it’s just 1 year. 4 or 5 shank in-line ripper followed by a 10 to 11 foot heavy offset disk ideal pulling a Cultipacker/Harrow. 2. Quality of farm land & price; Once you understand Prescription Tillage & Soil Health a lot can be done to turn Land & Yields around, keep in mind Randy Dowdy in Georgia, his first farm nobody wanted to buy, poorest yields in County, in 3 to 4 years he was producing World Record Yields because he understood Agronomy, Prescription Tillage & Soil Health. 3. Fertility & low producing areas on your land; you should be doing Tissue Analysis thru out the Growing Season, comparing planter fertility to your actual goal, only way to uncover a problem & have time to change it. Best of Luck, take it slow and easy the first 3 years until you get a solid foundation with unforeseen events & real life production issues.
Great vid as always
Yes you could use it we ran an 8770 newholland on a DMI 5 Shank
You should do a video after harvest where you talk about your plan for the future of the farm.(maybe like equipment you would like to purchase)
To tune that year of tractor u can put a larger fuel pump and bigger injectors. We did it to our 8200 and it work really well
Great video. Very interesting watching you learn and do a good job at it.
My personal opinion is put the tune on. Extra horse power is never a bad thing to have especially during a wet year
8110, 8210 have different components than a 8310, 8410 (axles, ring gears etc.) So careful tuning it thinking it's the same because it's not. But it will pull a 5 shank ripper to get you by this year. Also your 8110 probably has a little more hp than what it's rated at according to the book. That's the case for most JD tractors. I pull a heavy 13 shank chisel plow with my 8320 at 6.2 mph.
Great video! You could get a 8450 or 8650 to pull a ripper. Those are good tractors. They are pretty cheap too.
Love the video and haven’t even watched all of it
Like the set up
Hell yeah keep it up yall r doing a awesome job!!
I really like your videos,I use to work in Davenport Ia,I never knew there were so many adjustments to make on the equipment Love the game fs22
Great video. Love what your doing
The most farm sim thing ever love the vids grant
Good old yz250f for you. We had the same bike with the same problem.
Tuning and weights would be the cheaper option vs buying another tractor. Just go with what you can afford. Love the videos man keep them coming. We just started corn got a ways to go. Cheers 🍻
2700 on that tractor should do fine, biggest thing would be soil type… If it’s more sand or loam, it’d be manageable. If it’s a tighter clay, that’s where you’d struggle. You can just not pull it as deep if it’s a struggle. Sometimes we rip in the fall and in the spring on our corn on corn. It’s primarily sandy soils so it’s easy pulling. Been corn on corn for around 40 years now.
This is high CEC soil, it’s gonna be a little rough in some places with power.
Another problem why the corn along the trees was yielding bad it could have been the trees taking moisture out of the ground so the corn had barely had any
Great video keep it up!
Even if you get a bigger tractor it still wouldn't hurt to havr the 8110 turned up to an 8310 or 8410. Stuff happens equipment brakes, so even with the bigger tractor if it where to brake your not completely screwed because you have a backup.
Grant it would be cool if you had Buck out there in the field with you running grain cart.
Ah yes just like they old lives he always ran the grain carts
Smart thinking with the dirt bike. Maybe you can make a hoist to get it up there
Grant, what ever happened with the text? Be sure and let us know the reply.
Love seeing your videos, so cool to see a start up farm, really unique! We had a 9560 combine just like that years ago.
You should definitely start doing your own spraying, it is easy, and for what the coop charges, its a money maker for sure
great video really enjoyed it
Wanted all and they all amazing
It takes some balls to take his UA-cam revenue to start a farm, I tell you what. Not many in this world would do it. Thanks for producing, Grant!
I bet hes finding out its alot easier and more lucrative to play farm sim on youtube than to actually farm.
@@lomparti true.
Grant. put a tow hitch on the front of a 4 wheeler and drag that for wheels.
Boost up your power on your tractor. Pick up some front end weights at a action. Your doing a great job Grant.