An absolute pleasure to watch Jason. Those 9650's with the mudder/flotation tires are some of the best looking combines. Great to see from start to finish!!!
You should take one for a ride! It’s a goofy thing to drive as the cab is way ahead of the front steering wheels! On some country roads the cab is in the ditch as you’re steering around an intersection. The first self propelled bale wagons came out with a V8 gas engine and most of them burnt as the engine was underneath the second table. Straw was for ever showing onto a very hot gas engine. They then came out with diesel engines and that was much better!
I always love to see equipment from around my area. I don't see stack cruisers much around here but I spotted on at my Local Surefine a few weeks ago. Always loved and wanted one instead of kicker wagons.
@@bigtractorpower thank you very much, that one is from a farmer I know very well. It is extremely low hour and always in the shed. Hope to run it sometime!
We grew oats for the animals on the farm. Our neighbor would come over with his forage chopper and wagons. Oat seed for animal food and straw for bedding. I enjoyed the days hauling the forage wagons from the field to the barn.
great video...just love those 9650s with the mudders! They've taken great care of these older machines. Is it Steins? I think it's neat they kept these 2 walker combines just to make nice long-stemmed straw.
It is Steins. The 9650s belong to Corcoran Custom harvesting. They help Steins each wheat season. Steins currently have a 9660STS and S680. I have footage of those as well and the Lexion they had before S680.
❤😊MY OLD FRIEND THAT LIVES BY ALBANY MN USES AN OLD IH 403 COMBINE AND A IH 46 BALER AND A FARMALL 400 DIESEL TO BALE HAY AND STRAW !!! THEN PICKS UP THE BALES WITH THE FARMALL 460 AND A NEW HOLLAND 1010 BALE STACKER❤😊 !!!❤😊
I like seeing those New Holland self propelled stack cruisers and the John Deere tractors, balers and combines Jason. Surprised this farm didn’t have a tractor pulling a grain cart.
I used to be a Mechanic at a New Holland dealership and back when small square bales were still popular around here I PDI’ed and worked on lots of bale wagons like the ones in your video and also the pull type models. Now no one uses them as it’s either round or big square bales.
want a little bit of baler with your tractor? lol, and i thought it was overkill when we ran our old john deere 348 baler with our john deere 7800 tractor....this is a whole new level of overkill lol! awesome to see the whole operation in action though. thanks B.T.P. :)
Very nice video showing the whole process. That’s some serious horsepower on those balers. Each of them could easily pull three, if not four balers from a power availability point of view! With some GPS steering on the combines, they could likely use a tandem hitch and pull two balers with one tractor. Just a thought.
Do you ever make it out to California/Arizona to check out the Cotton, Tomato, Dry Bean, Almond, Rice and whatever I can't think of at the moment harvest? I love the midwest harvest btw.
We harvest our grain with a 2388 that we bought this spring, and then we bale our straw with a new Holland 7610, and new Holland 570 square baler, and then we use a 1068 bale wagon to pick up 95% of the bales, the other 5% we pick up by hand
With all the squeaks, metal rubbing on metal, and overall noise, I do not think I could be a farmer, even if I love it. My OCD would make me chase down every single squeak, rattle, and scraping noise until I find it. That is not good for productivity. Also, I can not stand buildup on machines, either chaff, hay, or straw, so I would most likely lose a finger or two. Still, I wish I grew up on a farm. I love these machines, and the work it takes to get food from the field to the table. Only fools believe food comes from a store, and not the farm, or the hard working farmers.
The smaller headers feed the balers. The 9650 could run a 30ft head but the windrow left by a 30ft head will not fit into the baler. The baler would leave straw behind. The 20ft head fits a perfect windrow into the baler.
Just trying something different for a few videos. A lot of people have asked to see if Field harvested from the start to finish starting with the machinery, pulling in taking the headlights off and showing the process. Just a variation video.
An absolute pleasure to watch Jason. Those 9650's with the mudder/flotation tires are some of the best looking combines. Great to see from start to finish!!!
Great set up for sure. Stand out tires.
@@bigtractorpowerThose are LSW tires! Lots of them being sound around these parts! The Big Bud 747 with 1100 hp has dual LSW 1400 tires on it.
The square baler collects straw so powerfully and smoothly. I would love to sit on it and operate it.
@@DreamFarmUS the 348 is a good one. Deere has built the 348 since 1987.
@@DreamFarmUS It’s a very interesting machine to operate! You are very busy in that cab!
Those stack cruisers are always impressive to watch and certainly real time savers.
You should take one for a ride! It’s a goofy thing to drive as the cab is way ahead of the front steering wheels! On some country roads the cab is in the ditch as you’re steering around an intersection. The first self propelled bale wagons came out with a V8 gas engine and most of them burnt as the engine was underneath the second table. Straw was for ever showing onto a very hot gas engine. They then came out with diesel engines and that was much better!
Really enjoyed this, very interesting to see the entire process. Thanks for the upload 🚜🚜🚜
The stack cruisers are cool machines😁👍 thank you for showing us the whole process of wheat and straw harvest👍😄
I thought some start to finish videos might interest viewers.
I always love to see equipment from around my area. I don't see stack cruisers much around here but I spotted on at my Local Surefine a few weeks ago. Always loved and wanted one instead of kicker wagons.
If it werent for New York City the state of New York would be a down right nice state! Never knew there was so much farming there!
It’s neat to see a video of the full process 👍
Thank you for watching. Nice 8120 find on IG
@@bigtractorpower thank you very much, that one is from a farmer I know very well. It is extremely low hour and always in the shed. Hope to run it sometime!
Good video brother ❤
We grew oats for the animals on the farm. Our neighbor would come over with his forage chopper and wagons. Oat seed for animal food and straw for bedding. I enjoyed the days hauling the forage wagons from the field to the barn.
Always wanted one of those bale self loading wagons but my grandfather wouldn't get one , we had to unload and stack the old way lol
My first job was unloading kick bale wagons. Good job but I kept thinking automatic bale wagons are the way to go.
@@bigtractorpower yeah my gramps and uncle went to a kick baler and wagons in the early 80's
Even with the green power, this gets a thumbs up! The Stackcruisers & Stackliners are still the coolest thing since sliced bread!!
They are a my favorite farm machine.
great video...just love those 9650s with the mudders! They've taken great care of these older machines. Is it Steins? I think it's neat they kept these 2 walker combines just to make nice long-stemmed straw.
It is Steins. The 9650s belong to Corcoran Custom harvesting. They help Steins each wheat season. Steins currently have a 9660STS and S680. I have footage of those as well and the Lexion they had before S680.
@@bigtractorpowervery cool! Thank you.
That's pretty cool
❤😊MY OLD FRIEND THAT LIVES BY ALBANY MN USES AN OLD IH 403 COMBINE AND A IH 46 BALER AND A FARMALL 400 DIESEL TO BALE HAY AND STRAW !!! THEN PICKS UP THE BALES WITH THE FARMALL 460 AND A NEW HOLLAND 1010 BALE STACKER❤😊 !!!❤😊
I like seeing those New Holland self propelled stack cruisers and the John Deere tractors, balers and combines Jason. Surprised this farm didn’t have a tractor pulling a grain cart.
The have an STX450 Quad on the cart in another field supporting two other combines not shown in this video.
I like the old deere balers they are simple to work on and dependable.
The 348 is a good one. Deere has been making the 348 since 1987.
I don’t farm, but I sure would like to run one of those machines that looks like that would be a blast
Great video!
Excellent video big T 👍👍👍
Loving the videos that show the whole process. Gotta love them stackers, so cool...
I like your videos
I used to be a Mechanic at a New Holland dealership and back when small square bales were still popular around here I PDI’ed and worked on lots of bale wagons like the ones in your video and also the pull type models. Now no one uses them as it’s either round or big square bales.
want a little bit of baler with your tractor? lol, and i thought it was overkill when we ran our old john deere 348 baler with our john deere 7800 tractor....this is a whole new level of overkill lol! awesome to see the whole operation in action though. thanks B.T.P. :)
Great video. Was wondering how the unload worked for those small bales.
Enjoyed the video, liked watching the whole process 👍 Regards from Down Under.
Very nice video showing the whole process.
That’s some serious horsepower on those balers. Each of them could easily pull three, if not four balers from a power availability point of view! With some GPS steering on the combines, they could likely use a tandem hitch and pull two balers with one tractor. Just a thought.
Do you ever make it out to California/Arizona to check out the Cotton, Tomato, Dry Bean, Almond, Rice and whatever I can't think of at the moment harvest? I love the midwest harvest btw.
We run a 9650 with a 30ft head, bale with two 348’s, one marcrest bale baron. We do about 55-60,000 small squares of straw a year.
Parabens eu sou seu fã amo seu canal e seus vídeos sucesso sempre 👏👏👍👍👌👌🚜🚜🇧🇷
Thank you Paulo.
I like them bale wagons they’re pretty cool
One of my very favorite farm machines.
Love the 9650s and 8300
😁👍👍
Got that baler working good.
Dialed and full speed ahead.
Love the older straight nose JD fwa on the No.2 baler
The farm purchased that 8300 new in 1996. It’s baked every year since.
@@bigtractorpower That era of the big 3 really was the last "Hay Day" of mechanical machines
Good video.
Thank you for watching Frank.
Now that’s really neat 👍
Quick way to move through the harvest.
@@bigtractorpower for sure
We harvest our grain with a 2388 that we bought this spring, and then we bale our straw with a new Holland 7610, and new Holland 570 square baler, and then we use a 1068 bale wagon to pick up 95% of the bales, the other 5% we pick up by hand
Very nice harvest team. Thank you for sharing.
That's getting it!
Fast way to collect straw.
beautiful
Thank you for watching.
Cool I have never seen one in North Carolina
New Holland stack cruiser?
Yes
With all the squeaks, metal rubbing on metal, and overall noise, I do not think I could be a farmer, even if I love it. My OCD would make me chase down every single squeak, rattle, and scraping noise until I find it. That is not good for productivity. Also, I can not stand buildup on machines, either chaff, hay, or straw, so I would most likely lose a finger or two. Still, I wish I grew up on a farm. I love these machines, and the work it takes to get food from the field to the table.
Only fools believe food comes from a store, and not the farm, or the hard working farmers.
Baler #2 is string.
I sure would like to know the bale configuration to get 161 bales per load.
Alot of dairies in SE Wisconsin round bale it or the easier big square and haul it in same trucks that haul silage and grain....
I have from Wisconsin on the way with straw chipping with a fox forage harvester.
@@bigtractorpower to me chopping it the easiest way since most dairies don't do much with a baler all year round
What is the ceiling height in the barns where they are storing the hay and straw?
Judging by the horsepower on the 348s, they must run some alfalfa as well?
This farm does raise alfalfa.
Do you know what yr this video was taken with the bailers at the 16:22 min mark?
What kind of animal makes noise at 3.44?
Definitely got some money tied up with 3 bale pickers must be a dairy farm
Are those wire balers? Baler #3 is wire.
Majority of them run twine although they can run wire if I recall
Everything is bigger in New York except their baby headers
The smaller headers feed the balers. The 9650 could run a 30ft head but the windrow left by a 30ft head will not fit into the baler. The baler would leave straw behind. The 20ft head fits a perfect windrow into the baler.
160 bales per load if they are 14"×16"
The Stack Wagons take 161. There is an extra bake that ties the stack together. The sales brochure states 161.
Where is the voice over?
Just trying something different for a few videos. A lot of people have asked to see if Field harvested from the start to finish starting with the machinery, pulling in taking the headlights off and showing the process. Just a variation video.