Great video, some nice iron at work in the field. We haul 200 - 300 loads per year of "liquid gold" on our farm, using a Nuhn 7000 ga tanker, pulled by a CaseIH Magnum 260. In the late 1960's my Dad hauled with a Beatty 500ga tanker and Case 430 tractor. Times have changed over the years! Thanks for the video.
The selfdriving spreaders, that we have here in Europe, are impressive too! Since our small roads can only support a limited size of vehicle, we had to overcome that with a lot of clever engineering. Manufacturers like Vredo or Kotte have build awesome selfdriving spreaders and the combinations with the Claas SaddleTrac are interesting too!
Very interesting. Self driving machines are the future. There are not any specialized spreaders like that in the United States yet. Most spreaders are powered by tractors or mounted on trucks. Hopefully someday we will see your types of spreaders here.
We bought a Case 1818 for cleaning out 4X8 calf pens. Went from 2 weeks of forking 💩 to 3 days of cleaning pens. Had to modify the bucket for pen pack, but it worked.
We loaded with an H farmall because it had the loader and it wouldn't handle the BIG spreader. The 656 had that job. Plus it had a cab. But rocks broke out the rear windows but I guess it better than takin one to the head. Until about 1987 when we got a new loader for the 656 and pulled the spreader with the 44 massey harris. Long days on 100 cow dairy
Row crops now, but growing up Dad would load and I would spread with a 3010 with a new Idea 212 and a 60 and N spreader. We were a 2 spreader operation and thought we were big time.
That 1st Liquid Tanker, is Built in Sebringville Ontario. Those tires are over 6 feet tall. I was a truck driver at a Local company, that delivered those tires to that place Twice a week. They also made a smaller tanker with only Two wheels.They can be tricky to move, ones they stat rolling it's slow and steady
Great video Jason. Due to our wet and sometimes steep land ( Northern Ireland ) our contractor used an International 956 with a home built 1300 gallon tanker which had a driven axle and twin wheels, the axle was driven by the PTO and the pump driven hydraulically. The outfit would stay in the field and we would ferry the slurry with two tankers and fill it with booms from the road over the hedge or fence.
Very cool system. The 956 up to the 1456 XL are a cool series of tractors. We never had those in the US. The small range went from a 284 to a 784 then jumped to a 786 in the early 80’s and then a 3088 before the Case IH merger.
As a kid we loaded with a David brown 990 and spread with a new idea 213 then upgraded to a Oliver 1755 and a new idea 244 then went up to a new idea 354 and a white 2105. Presently use a white 2135 and a hagadorn 225 for pen pack and a 7040 Allis on a 3000 gallon blazer tank for hog manure
I've been in a loader and loaded manure. I've also loaded manure with pitch forks, as my parents has a few sheeps. I've seen them load all types of manure, from pigs, chickens, horses, beef, dairy and sheeps. I don't mind the smell, i've been in pig stables a few times
Another great video! I’m getting educated about manure spreaders! I’ve always seen the videos of European farmers using them but never seen them in use in the USA. Awesome!
The Oshkosh is a neat custom conversion from cement to spreader. This video was filmed in Western New York for the liquid spreaders and Western Kentucky for the box spreaders and drag line.
It's educational to see so many different ways to apply fertilizer, natural/man made. A few of the applications would take a lot of time. Very cool Jason 👍🏻.
We use for liquid Manure a John Deere 6830 AutoPower with 600/70R28 Front and 710/70R38 Backwehls and 190hp. Ouer Tanker is a Zunhammer MKE with 14000l (3080gal) and an Bomech injektor. Greetings from Germany (bavaria)
Nice spreading team. The 6830 is a tractor that was not offered in the United States. It is always neat to hear about different variations offered in Europe.
@@bigtractorpower in the use the 6030 or the new 6r series the farm tractors, in Germany they are often the main tractor. so big can the difference be.
The oshkosh one was the best cuz its not something ya see often is someone buying a front discharge cement mixer frame and mounting a maure tank and making it a liquid manure spreader
Many years ago, I saw an interesting logo on a tailgate on a local dealership's pickup truck, "We stand behind all the equipment we sell, except manure spreaders!".
Yeah, that’s what I was thinking too, front discharging cement trucks where the discharge chute is at the front and the engine compartment is in the rear of the machine which are fairly common down here in the state of Florida comes to mind
Biggest tractor iv ever driven was thst john deere only for a few minutes to move it out of my way when I was loading my b trains out in alberta for back home crazy big
We actually have 1 John Deere 9620 with a 40 foot pig poop applicator and use 6 37ft spreaders and we team up with people that we know and put pig poop down if the have pig barns close
Custom manure applicator here. Curious to know what areas of the country you found all that footage? And do you happen to know what tons per acre the dry spreaders were putting down? Some of those spread patterns were better than others. Thanks!
@DanEichorn : Great questions! When applying, do different types of liquid manure/bedding combinations require different handiling/application techniques? Do you apply at a heavier rate if there is substantial bedding material suspended in the slurry?
I do not know the spread rates. The Kuhn, Jamesway and Diller spreaders were filmed in NY. The Meyer Spreaders, Bunning and Manure Plow were filmed In KY.
@@khoughton411 Yes, depending on the consistency of the material being spread and the rate at which it is being spread does require different equipment. However a lot of application equipment in today's market allows for versatility in different attachments that can be switched on the same piece of machinery. As far as how much can be spread at one time, I work in the Great Lakes region of the country and we have government mandates that determine how much can be applied to a given field. It all starts with getting nutrient samples of the manure to be spread. That way the levels of mainly Phosphorus, along with Nitrogen and Potassium etc, do not exceed the need for the next crop.
I’m sure all those clips must have been really difficult to film due to the stench of all that manure being applied being absolutely awful, unless that’s not an issue once it gets slowly and completely absorbed through the ground.
The spreaders with the injectors are not too bad. Most of the smell is Monti gated in the soil. The box spreaders in this video are applying chicken manure. Chicken litter has a powerful ammonia smell. It soaks into everything. I take a change of clothes to drive home in after filming.
That Oshkosh rules. Man, that’s cool. Is that as fast as draglines go? Seems like I’ve seen another going faster than that. It looks horribly inefficient, fuel-wise and time-wise.
The Oshkosh is a cool set up. The drag line is slow but it maintains a constant pressure and application rate. When you are applying with a tanker you run an acre and you are empty. Then it’s time to run back for a refill. Refilling takes 5 minutes on a 9,000 gallon tanker. They you run back to where you left off and empty in 2 minutes. This repeats all day long. All the travel from the application acres to the refill point compacts the soil. Plus you have a fleet of trucks and drivers running back and forth to fill the tanker. With the drag line you have one operator and constant application with no compaction, no refill time and less labor.
@@bigtractorpower OH wow I didn't think you could spread liquid manure on top anymore, I thought it had to be knifed in now days guess I was wrong🤷♂️ Thanks🙂
Great video, some nice iron at work in the field. We haul 200 - 300 loads per year of "liquid gold" on our farm, using a Nuhn 7000 ga tanker, pulled by a CaseIH Magnum 260. In the late 1960's my Dad hauled with a Beatty 500ga tanker and Case 430 tractor. Times have changed over the years!
Thanks for the video.
The selfdriving spreaders, that we have here in Europe, are impressive too! Since our small roads can only support a limited size of vehicle, we had to overcome that with a lot of clever engineering. Manufacturers like Vredo or Kotte have build awesome selfdriving spreaders and the combinations with the Claas SaddleTrac are interesting too!
Very interesting. Self driving machines are the future. There are not any specialized spreaders like that in the United States yet. Most spreaders are powered by tractors or mounted on trucks. Hopefully someday we will see your types of spreaders here.
My dad and I loaded the spreader with pitch forks. Gran dad would spread. Took us a week to clean out the big barn.
That is allot of work. Did you pitch right on the spreader or have a manure trolley to move it from the barn to the spreader?
We bought a Case 1818 for cleaning out 4X8 calf pens. Went from 2 weeks of forking 💩 to 3 days of cleaning pens. Had to modify the bucket for pen pack, but it worked.
This is definitely one of the best videos you've done. I enjoyed seeing these operating in the field.
Thank you for watching.
We loaded with an H farmall because it had the loader and it wouldn't handle the BIG spreader. The 656 had that job. Plus it had a cab. But rocks broke out the rear windows but I guess it better than takin one to the head. Until about 1987 when we got a new loader for the 656 and pulled the spreader with the 44 massey harris. Long days on 100 cow dairy
Lots of hard work. All good long lasting tractors. What brand of spreader did you run?
Row crops now, but growing up Dad would load and I would spread with a 3010 with a new Idea 212 and a 60 and N spreader. We were a 2 spreader operation and thought we were big time.
That 1st Liquid Tanker, is Built in Sebringville Ontario. Those tires are over 6 feet tall. I was a truck driver at a Local company, that delivered those tires to that place Twice a week. They also made a smaller tanker with only Two wheels.They can be tricky to move, ones they stat rolling it's slow and steady
Great video Jason. Due to our wet and sometimes steep land ( Northern Ireland ) our contractor used an International 956 with a home built 1300 gallon tanker which had a driven axle and twin wheels, the axle was driven by the PTO and the pump driven hydraulically. The outfit would stay in the field and we would ferry the slurry with two tankers and fill it with booms from the road over the hedge or fence.
Very cool system. The 956 up to the 1456 XL are a cool series of tractors. We never had those in the US. The small range went from a 284 to a 784 then jumped to a 786 in the early 80’s and then a 3088 before the Case IH merger.
As a kid we loaded with a David brown 990 and spread with a new idea 213 then upgraded to a Oliver 1755 and a new idea 244 then went up to a new idea 354 and a white 2105. Presently use a white 2135 and a hagadorn 225 for pen pack and a 7040 Allis on a 3000 gallon blazer tank for hog manure
Very cool line up and spreading team history. Nice tractors.
I've been in a loader and loaded manure. I've also loaded manure with pitch forks, as my parents has a few sheeps. I've seen them load all types of manure, from pigs, chickens, horses, beef, dairy and sheeps. I don't mind the smell, i've been in pig stables a few times
Semoga cepat selesai kerja nya bos ku
If only we had a way to spread the manure from Washington DC so efficiently.
Video yang bagus teman 👍 Terima kasih sudah berbagi
😁👍 Thank you for watching.
Another great video! I’m getting educated about manure spreaders! I’ve always seen the videos of European farmers using them but never seen them in use in the USA. Awesome!
Thank you Jason,
First off very pretty farm land you are filming. The Oshkosh was my favorite. Cool truck and a very uniform delivery of manure. Boe
The Oshkosh is a neat custom conversion from cement to spreader. This video was filmed in Western New York for the liquid spreaders and Western Kentucky for the box spreaders and drag line.
Great to see big tankers and spreaders out in the field👍😁
Yeah, they’re all beasts!
These pieces of equipment are the only ones the dealer won’t stand behind! 😎
Thx Jason.... Awesome equipment my friend..
Thank you for watching.
It's educational to see so many different ways to apply fertilizer, natural/man made. A few of the applications would take a lot of time. Very cool Jason 👍🏻.
It does take allot of time. A tank or box full only goes a short distance and it’s back for a refill.
Hello! Being grateful to the soil...
Thank you.
@@bigtractorpower 👌
Wow amazing video my friend 👌
Thank you for watching.
Real I didn’t realize there’s so many different methods you can use the spread manure very interesting
There are many different types of application and a variety of brands. I hope to find more to feature.
WOW!!
So big....all!!
NICE!!
Thank you for watching.
this one was great one of the best.
Thank you for watching.
I’m old enough to remember loading everything with a fork and a 1650 Oliver tractor with a little spreader. These machines are impressive!
Neat history to hear about. The Oliver 1650 is a good tractor.
Our politicians can spread manure better than any tractor ever made!
Biggest drag line I’ve seen was Lamb Farms, had pump tractor 1 mile from farm to boost pressure to the drag line another mile away. Very impressive.
That is an impressive drag line set up.
Bet you appreciated the zoom feature on your camera lenses a lot more on this one. Taking one for the team here.
Zoom is a big plus 👍👍👍
I have used a John Deere 7800 with a 740 Classic Loader on it to pull a Hagedorn 275 Series II hydra-spread manure spreader.
Very nice spreading team lead by a 7800.
We use for liquid Manure a John Deere 6830 AutoPower with 600/70R28 Front and 710/70R38 Backwehls and 190hp. Ouer Tanker is a Zunhammer MKE with 14000l (3080gal) and an Bomech injektor.
Greetings from Germany (bavaria)
P.S. very Cool
Nice spreading team. The 6830 is a tractor that was not offered in the United States. It is always neat to hear about different variations offered in Europe.
@@bigtractorpower in the use the 6030 or the new 6r series the farm tractors, in Germany they are often the main tractor. so big can the difference be.
The oshkosh one was the best cuz its not something ya see often is someone buying a front discharge cement mixer frame and mounting a maure tank and making it a liquid manure spreader
It is a cool way to recuse a cement truck. 👍👍
@bigtractorpower It's a great idea, after all the farmer probably didn't spend alot money on it and gets a job done without needing a tractor
You missed the Knight Pro Slinger. Alot of the Biosolids applicators use them, and they do a great job.
We use sbx 800 artex for hauling that, works great
Many years ago, I saw an interesting logo on a tailgate on a local dealership's pickup truck, "We stand behind all the equipment we sell, except manure spreaders!".
That’s funny. Great to get customers attention that they sell a full line.
👋hey👋 from Dexter,Missouri my friend.
Super amazein video. As alAways.
Be safe on 🛣️ roads 🛣️
Have a super amazein 🌃night🌉
Thank you James.
Great video as always, but I'm willing to bet whether it was slung, sprayed, injected or buried, I bet it smelled real good out there.
Luckily it is not 4d viewing.
That’s what ya call a crappy day lol 😆
Ikr??? the stench must be absolutely awful and coming home smelling quite literally like cow excrement is surely not going to end well.
Interesting video Jason.
Thank you for watching.
How exactly is shit a good fertilizer?😂😂😂😂😂😂
Never saw a oskosh manure truck,when I saw it I was thinking concrete truck
Yeah, that’s what I was thinking too, front discharging cement trucks where the discharge chute is at the front and the engine compartment is in the rear of the machine which are fairly common down here in the state of Florida comes to mind
That’s is exactly what it is. It is a customized cement truck fitted with a Diller spreader.
👍👍👍
Thank you for watching.
That 9560 looks familiar with that happen to be Horgan’s Family dairy nice video
No that’s not Andys
It is not. This 9560R is in Western New York about 80-90 miles from Andy.
Thats 9520R
The Meyer crop max is manufactured about 5 miles from me.
Very cool.
My uncle and cousin have a New Holland Manure Speader they use to spread on some fields.
Very nice. New Holland box spreaders are my favorite line.
@@bigtractorpower any 3 or 4 of their tractors can pull it. Usually depending on the day they'll use one of the 3 or 4.
Hey i worked on that nuhn tanker behind the D😂😂eere
Check out the old water tanker/concrete truck spreader👍👍
The Oshkosh cement truck is a cool rebuild with the Diller spreader. .
Sure was some big hp there makes my new Holland 185 look small
New Holland box spreaders are my favorite. I got to film a 195 in action on a TW35 Ford in 2021.
🙏👍🙏✌🙏 JASON , THANK YOU ............ 🤎🤎🤎 💚💚💚 💙💙💙 💝💓💖 💜💜💜
Thank you for watching.
“Manure, I hate Manure!!”
Biff Tannen
That old cement truck was a sweet find. What area was that in? Great video
The Oshkosh is on a farm in Northern New York State.
@@bigtractorpower great find.. I’d like to see how they set that up
Spreading manure sure is a shitty job ! 😁👍
We use solid and liquid manure for liquid manure we use Briri tanker and Zetor 1645 and for solid Sip Orion spreader and Zetor 7341 tractor
Very nice. Zetor tractors are a brand I see occasionally here in the U.S. Thank you for sharing.
Abono natural
How deep is the manure injected and do they follow the A-B line like a strip-till operation?
The first tractor is a 9520R.THe 9560R has the muffler & air cleaner on the rightside while this one does not
Yes unfortunately it was miss labeled.
Biggest tractor iv ever driven was thst john deere only for a few minutes to move it out of my way when I was loading my b trains out in alberta for back home crazy big
We actually have 1 John Deere 9620 with a 40 foot pig poop applicator and use 6 37ft spreaders and we team up with people that we know and put pig poop down if the have pig barns close
Thank you for sharing. The 9620 is a very cool tractor.
@@bigtractorpower yeah
You shold see my dads setup he has 5 tractors over 400 hp pulling 2 9500 tanks and 3 10500 tanks
Sounds very cool. 👍👍
Custom manure applicator here. Curious to know what areas of the country you found all that footage? And do you happen to know what tons per acre the dry spreaders were putting down? Some of those spread patterns were better than others. Thanks!
@DanEichorn : Great questions! When applying, do different types of liquid manure/bedding combinations require different handiling/application techniques? Do you apply at a heavier rate if there is substantial bedding material suspended in the slurry?
I do not know the spread rates. The Kuhn, Jamesway and Diller spreaders were filmed in NY. The Meyer Spreaders, Bunning and Manure Plow were filmed In KY.
@@khoughton411 Yes, depending on the consistency of the material being spread and the rate at which it is being spread does require different equipment. However a lot of application equipment in today's market allows for versatility in different attachments that can be switched on the same piece of machinery.
As far as how much can be spread at one time, I work in the Great Lakes region of the country and we have government mandates that determine how much can be applied to a given field. It all starts with getting nutrient samples of the manure to be spread. That way the levels of mainly Phosphorus, along with Nitrogen and Potassium etc, do not exceed the need for the next crop.
@@daneichorn3558 Thank you for your response. Good luck.
Powe deng mag aplay
I'm interested to know what manure was being applied. Bovine, Porcine, etc.
The liquid manure is from Holstein dairy cows. The Bunning and Meyer Spreaders are applying Chicken Litter.
@@bigtractorpower Great video (as usual)! Thank you for your response.
Dragline driving would have to be one of most boring of all driving jobs !
Very slow process
i don't own a manure spreader, the company won't stand behind them
I’m sure all those clips must have been really difficult to film due to the stench of all that manure being applied being absolutely awful, unless that’s not an issue once it gets slowly and completely absorbed through the ground.
The spreaders with the injectors are not too bad. Most of the smell is Monti gated in the soil. The box spreaders in this video are applying chicken manure. Chicken litter has a powerful ammonia smell. It soaks into everything. I take a change of clothes to drive home in after filming.
As I watch this manure spreading video, to me that is what comes out of the mouths of the mainstream media. Yea that is you CNN.
industrial farming vs nature.......not ideal.
What do you think organic farms use for fertilizer?
holy shit👍🤭
That Oshkosh rules. Man, that’s cool. Is that as fast as draglines go? Seems like I’ve seen another going faster than that. It looks horribly inefficient, fuel-wise and time-wise.
The Oshkosh is a cool set up. The drag line is slow but it maintains a constant pressure and application rate. When you are applying with a tanker you run an acre and you are empty. Then it’s time to run back for a refill. Refilling takes 5 minutes on a 9,000 gallon tanker. They you run back to where you left off and empty in 2 minutes. This repeats all day long. All the travel from the application acres to the refill point compacts the soil. Plus you have a fleet of trucks and drivers running back and forth to fill the tanker. With the drag line you have one operator and constant application with no compaction, no refill time and less labor.
The blue truck spreader is that somewhere outside the United States? Thanks
No that is in Northern New York State. It is a concerted Oshkosh S Series Cement truck with a Diller tank.
@@bigtractorpower OH wow I didn't think you could spread liquid manure on top anymore, I thought it had to be knifed in now days guess I was wrong🤷♂️ Thanks🙂
👍👍
😁👍