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  • Опубліковано 1 гру 2016
  • Ever wonder how a combine works? This video shows the "insides" of a Deere 9770 combine, and explains how the components work together to thresh and separate the grain.
    Here is an animated video which will provide further insight on how the crop flows through a combine: • Crop Flow Animation
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 45

  • @RKHarm24
    @RKHarm24 7 років тому +3

    A very educational video for those who don't know how these work inside the machine.

  • @loganmoses8546
    @loganmoses8546 2 роки тому

    Hi Tim I like how you explain how a combine works and the inside of the combine as well so thank you vaery much for the viedo.

  • @TXEOC
    @TXEOC 7 років тому +1

    Mr Tim that was the best ever explanation of a combine workings ive ever seen. Thanks for recommending it from your other video vacation in Utah

  • @tomoaktree4951
    @tomoaktree4951 5 років тому +1

    Hi Tim,
    I've spent many hours chasing a combine around a field driving the Tractor/Grain Cart. The most challenging part was always loading on the go in headlands that had curves. rule number 1, "The Combine Never Stops".

  • @CashJohnston
    @CashJohnston 7 років тому

    Ooo! Sweet. Never saw inside before. I'm going to watch it again.

    • @TractorTimewithTim
      @TractorTimewithTim  7 років тому

      I'm glad you enjoyed it. This animation video might help even more. ua-cam.com/video/0hH4NP3OSjE/v-deo.html
      It shows the entire crop flow in the combine. When combined with my "real life" video, it should help you see the entire process.
      Hope you are doing well!

  • @dieselshadow
    @dieselshadow 7 років тому +1

    Great explanation Tim. Thanks for the tour.

    • @TractorTimewithTim
      @TractorTimewithTim  7 років тому

      +dieselshadowman probably a lot like the one I gave you in person at the NFMS!

  • @mi2tn
    @mi2tn 7 років тому

    Great video, thanks!

  • @jacksonhunterandfarmer2673
    @jacksonhunterandfarmer2673 6 років тому

    Great vid Tim Smile More God Bless Stay Safe Guys 👍

  • @Pete-from-Tn
    @Pete-from-Tn 6 років тому

    I did like seeing the insides of those things. Years ago, we had a 40 JD combine. I had to crawl up into it. When we had to change out bearings. Talk about a tight fit and be bloody when I crawled out. When we moved up to 45 and 55's. They were better then that old 40 for sure.

    • @TractorTimewithTim
      @TractorTimewithTim  6 років тому

      +Pete kildow same thing was true in the old Massey's. would have to crawl up under the hopper on those sharp worn straw walkers. No fun at all!

  • @MRICESAW
    @MRICESAW 7 років тому

    Good info for the people that don't know how a combine works. CaseIH came out with the rotary combine first. There are different concave for corn, wheat and soybeans. Also on the newer machines the sieves are self leveling for side hills so all the grain doesn't go to one side and overload the sieves and throw the grain out the back.

    • @buckhorncortez
      @buckhorncortez 6 років тому

      Not true. The first rotary combine was the Sperry New Holland in 1975. You don't get to take credit for it now just because New Holland and IH are part of Fiat.

  • @Spartan-ry1hh
    @Spartan-ry1hh 7 років тому

    Very comprehensive.

  • @stanhensley3082
    @stanhensley3082 7 років тому

    Well done.

  • @tangledspoons1396
    @tangledspoons1396 6 років тому

    Great video. Thanks for the info

  • @stephensfarms7165
    @stephensfarms7165 4 роки тому

    Great machine

  • @jakespoon8723
    @jakespoon8723 3 роки тому

    And great video I love your videos and I have watched every single one of your videos from beginning to end and all of your videos I just absolutely love them

  • @bigjim5723
    @bigjim5723 7 років тому

    well thanks to u tim, for showing me the inside of that kind of combine. never seen one like that. i was still back in the threshing machine era. ha!

    • @TractorTimewithTim
      @TractorTimewithTim  7 років тому

      +BigJim57 you're not that much older than me, Jim. I never saw a threshing machine used other than in historical demos, etc.

    • @bigjim5723
      @bigjim5723 7 років тому +1

      one yr back when i was around 10 or 12 my pap(mothers side) decided he wanted to show me how they threshed when he was a kid.
      we planted Japanese buckwheat(3 sided) he then went and bought a old binder to cut it with(for $8)lol. the one neighbor loaned us his threshing machine, and we used my dad's 38 B on the belt to run it. we had a good wagon load of buck wheat, so on the first Saturday morning of opening squirrel season, we commenced to start.
      after the day we had 36 bushel done ha! I had 18 bushel to for me, as i plowed and harrowed the field to get ready to plant with our tractor.
      we then used his grain cleaner to clean the buckwheat better, u know for the life of me, I can't remember the name of htat little contraption, but i can see it in my mind. lot's of good healthy work back then.
      if it hadn't been for my pap, i would of never got to see and do any threshing of my own. and 40 some yrs later i still play that yr out in my mind.
      aw-yeah-IIFC- i got around $1 something a bushel for my share at Farm Bureau lol.

    • @bigjim5723
      @bigjim5723 7 років тому +1

      aw-yeah forgot too-that grain binder -i got the honor of riding it thru the field when we cut it. i had to watch as it would put so much in little bunches, and tie it. if the kotter skipped i had to yell at pap, and then we would hand tie that bundle and continue-good times-i thought-but they was for a 10 or 12 yr old kid.

    • @bigjim5723
      @bigjim5723 7 років тому +1

      another thing-got to walk thru the field, pick them bundles up, and stand them into shaucks, had to be stacked a certain way as to let air in, and rain out. then came along with the hay wagon, picked them up and stacked onto the wagon. had to leave them on wagon a week-IIRC- before threshing began.
      my pap had 2 other threshers, and his own grain binder back then, but he said they was pretty much worn out by that time, and he had other farmers cut his grain with their combines..here i am writing and talking about it all this time later. i got to say my pap was good.

    • @TractorTimewithTim
      @TractorTimewithTim  7 років тому

      Good stuff, Jim. Thanks for the story!

  • @jonathanguess4052
    @jonathanguess4052 6 років тому +1

    Sweet

  • @oakvillefarmer
    @oakvillefarmer 5 років тому +1

    And between the feeder house and the rotor there is a spinning drum that is called a feed accelerator. It tosses the crop into the rotor so the crop flows in without wrapping the front of the rotor causing a huge bearing to go bad. Also in the back there is a pan above the sieve that catches more thrashed crop off of the rotor which directs the seeds to the front of the sieve so when the seeds drop down on the sieve the crop can then travel the whole length of the sieve instead of just a portion. If the crop ever leaves the back of the top sieve it is lost.

    • @loganmoses8546
      @loganmoses8546 2 роки тому

      Hey I like you how you said it great job.

    • @davemurphy2774
      @davemurphy2774 2 роки тому

      Tim did not know "asked" if you could adjust the concave from the cab on the 9770.. In 48 years of Combining never seen one you could not adjust to some degree from the cab so when he was a kid?? Must be much older than he sounds. And if the concave is too close or fast or too grain too dry it can damage the grain!!! But.... Good video for the green horn!!!

  • @jakespoon8723
    @jakespoon8723 3 роки тому

    Next fall do you think you can mount your camera or cameras on the corn head and soybean head, inside the feederhouse, in where the rotor and sieves and the spreaders and tailings elevator and both clean grain elevators are and on top of the grain tank and on the unloading auger to get some video of all of that stuff in action?

    • @TractorTimewithTim
      @TractorTimewithTim  3 роки тому

      I doubt it. Too much ‘violence’ in there for us to safely mount a camera.

  • @bigstud98
    @bigstud98 4 роки тому

    Look like u got leaks some where on your left side fan. Lots of Beans there. I bet u also have beans in the fan.

  • @ral3178
    @ral3178 Рік тому

    We have the same combine and have a problem with soybeans coming out the back and hitting the grain cart . Do you have the same problem? Any suggestion? Thank you

  • @mcinkyt
    @mcinkyt 7 років тому

    About $500,000 in Canada now

    • @TractorTimewithTim
      @TractorTimewithTim  7 років тому +1

      +mcinkyt yep. Actually more than that with both heads (corn and grain).

  • @peterkober6758
    @peterkober6758 6 років тому

    Tim never was inside of a combine this something I always wonder about it I don't think I could be a farmer to much to take care of every day may be more people should take time to see the farmers pareil
    PaK

  • @davemurphy2774
    @davemurphy2774 2 роки тому

    Worth it to buy a "Grain Cart" to keep the combine going as it is the most expensive machine on the farm!!! Your "PERSPECTIVE"... You need extra "PEOPLE" to move to fields...Say 3 miles away to and from still need to move the "TRUCKS" Clean the "CART" "TRUCKS" "CMBINE" for the wheat field ETC.. You underestimate... If Combining "Canola" at 25 bu/acre you do 160 acrea you empty the tank about 15 times to be realistic...So say 5 minutes to walk to your truck at the end of the field swipes and unload X 15 is about 1 hour and 15 minutes for the day to save the cost $$$$ of a cart plus tractor time plus more fuel for the cart tractor and combine. Risk of mishaps and if short rows you need to stop to unload anyway... Have neighbors who use cart for 4 combines Or field "BAGGING" it is more efficient.. But many do not work "SUNDAY" such a "LAUGH" the save all their "MINUTES" and then stop for a day.. Then it rains on "MONDAY!!! Unloading at the truck gives the operator the chance to do a walkaround on the first unload while unloading to check if all is running good with the combine when you can damage a machine if there is something IE leaking odd noise etc especially at night!!!

    • @TractorTimewithTim
      @TractorTimewithTim  2 роки тому

      Never dreamed someone would attempt to be argumentative about this.
      Never dreamed someone would compare 25bu canola harvest to 150-200bu corn harvest.
      Oh well.

    • @davemurphy2774
      @davemurphy2774 2 роки тому

      Never dreamed someone would say the cart is ***** always money well spent***** when they do not know how the others farm. Next time say in corn harvests.... A cart is most always a good investment. Kinna like 50 foot heads in 10 acre fields spend more time hooking and unhooking. We find the best money goes to a grain dryer to keep the combine going but you would not know what a northern harvest is like some years! OH WELL!!! @@TractorTimewithTim

    • @davemurphy2774
      @davemurphy2774 2 роки тому

      @@TractorTimewithTim We also harvest 150bu. or better Oat crops just need extra people to operate a cart wear etc pays for 2 or more combines then but not "ONE" unless the field is soft or Bagging!! We use Tandems or tri axle with 1300bu. Oat capacity and faster unload in yard. 2 people can harvest not 1 in combine 1 on cart and 1 in the truck to save 1 hour a day X 15 days of harvest and $$$ for the cart... then others holiday on Sunday but you don't!!!