One of the most balanced harvesters CaseIH ever made. Appreciate the farmers dynamic of dedicated harvesters for corn/beans. That's the flexibility of cheaper, older, and quality màchinery.
Love these cab rides. It's interesting for us non-farmers to hear farmers like this reflect on the evolution of their family farm's equipment over the years. Thanks!
Great video Jason. I really enjoy it when the driver engages in the interview like this one. I understand some are shy around the camera, or are busy driving. It is certainly great for them to let you ride along, regardless of their interview prowess. It also goes to show not everyone ones has a new combines and doing just fine!
Great video Jason, Farmer act like he was really glad you stopped by, my dad has always liked a slower combine operator like this, he says when they operate slower it keeps the reel from shattering the beans, hope Garnett farms didn’t get much damage from the storms, lord bless everyone that did, thanks for the video!!!
First self propelled combine I ever ran was a IH 205 Dad bought with a 13' grain head. Great video Jason. The farmer really helps make the video for sure. Just adds something to it I feel. These are my favorite when you interview the farmer. Thank you!
I see a few people being a bit critical of using a seemingly oversized head for this combine. I would just like to point out that the slower you drive, the less beans will be shattered at the header, which means more beans in the hopper and ultimately marketable beans, as well as less wear and tear on the header saving on maintenance costs. The other thing to consider is that rotary combines are best at threshing the crop when the rotor is loaded to capacity, meaning less crop loss out the back of the combine. On the farm that I work for we have a 40 ft head on our class 7 John Deere and a 45 ft on our class 8. You might say that the headers are a size too big for the combines, but consider that our combines can now operate at a slower ground speed and accomplish the same (or more) acres per hour. In a poor crop we can still keep our combines running at capacity, while in excellent crop we simply reduce ground speed. It’s a win-win.
That's pretty cool that they have had that one farm in the family that long. Thanks to the farmer for having you out to film there.I noticed he has some over sized back tires on his 2388, which I assume was to help with flotation on his particular properties.
I wonder if the people commenting on the 35’ Draper being too big for that machine have ever run one. Running slower in beans helps with shatter loss, and they feed so much more consistently that the combine actually runs smoother and at capacity like it was designed to do.
I wonder how much weight was added to the rear to keep the combine from doing a nose dive. It must have the optional 3 lift cylinders. Out by me a large head like that wouldn't work..to many hills
Another great video Jason! Good to see that pretty red paint I come from a multi-generational red paint family and we run everything here from a 1941 bn to a 2017 75c Case IH those red tractors have been good to us I do have to say I run a gleaner combine mainly because I wanted to conventional Shaker machine in order to preserve the straw thanks anyway and if I don't get to talk to you again before the holidays have a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year and we'll be watching for more videos!
Jason, Great video! Did you get hit by all of the recent bad weather? How did the Garnett Farms fare during the bad weather? 🙏🏼ing for everyone in the hard hit states.
Thank you. It is very very bad. The town I live in was a near miss by two tornados. Every town around me was a direct hit and just wrecked. The Garnett farm is fine but it was 3 miles from a big tornado that hit a near by town directly. Prayers are needed.
Thank you. It is very very bad. The town I live in was a near miss by two tornados. Every town around me was a direct hit and just wrecked. Prayers are needed.
Awesome video. I saw you put up the preview on Instagram. Seeing a 2388 push a 35’ draper header is super unique. Hope everything is good up your way with the tornadoes.
Auger wagon… I’ve never heard it called that before but that’s the most accurate description I’ve heard! So your name is Jason. Nice to finally know that
Put many hours on a 2388. They were some great combines we mainly pulled corn and cut wheat. We did cut some soybeans whenever the deer didn't wreck our crops.
Salu2 en tas fiestas amigo hoy 12 diciembre festegando la Guadalupe aki en todo Mexico......Exelente tus videos eres una inciclopedia dela Maquinaria ..
Ooo! I love the J & M 875 grain cart in case red being pulled by the 2 Wheel Dr. 8930 boxcar magnum tractor! The farm where I help out has a green J & M8 75 grain cart
We used a 2366 axieflow header before the roata broke down and in New South Wales, Australia we harvest wheat, barley, oats and canola are the most popular
My friend had a 2388 this combines It was one of the best combines for the years 2000 sory my english no is good i am from Argentina I had got a newholand tc59 and johndeere 1450 Saludos desde tucuman Argentina
Love your content mate I used to run a 1460 with a 1010 22.5ft front just sold the combine for a 2004 2388 similar to this setup unreal headers. Was sad to sell the 1460 but won't mind the cab comforts of a 23 series.
I love seeing the american flag on the combine. We had the other red Combine back when i was a kid. it was a Massey Furguson 410 with a cab an a 6 cylinder gas engine. Dad bought from a Former Farmer Neighbor few miles down the road for 150.00 dollars. Neeed some bugs worked out. an got it running decent.
I run a 1460 ih with a 20ft 1020 head for beans and also have a 6 row 1063 corn head. The 1460 is a model year 1983, it has updated cage to a 1660 model.
Combines are a "modern marvel" to me. The technology was years ahead of its time. The timing and synchronization of all the mechanism is just as if not more complex than any old brain box.......and much more reliable at a fraction of the cost. You know what they say about opinions ....but that's mine and it ain't likely to change. I'm sure you don't want to know why but I'll tell you anyway what has led me to this point in my life. The more "Hi tech" everything gets the more people turn into a bunch of candy asses that won't work and all they do is complain. I drove tough operating mechanical cars, pick-ups and big trucks for 50 years and did most of my own repairs. You can't do that with the stuff they're building today. They build it where you have to have a college degree to dig a ditch. There's always going to physically hard jobs to do and who's going to do them when everybodies a candy ass?
We farmed from 1952 to sometime in the 80s we farmed cotton and soybeans we never owned a combine somebody custom cut for us cotton we did by hand but we farmed with mules until we bought a brand new 1962 Farmall 404 then a few years later we bought another 404 with a picker on top and used it for one year the head cracked and we sold it for scrap we have thought seriously about going back into farming one day but for now a garden food plots and a bird field is enough
Thank you. It is very very bad. The town I live in was a near miss by two tornados. Every town around me was a direct hit and just wrecked. Prayers are needed.
Combine history: Massy 300; John Deere 7700 gas, John Deere 7700 diesel, IH 1480, 2188, now 8010 with John Deere 635 Hydraflex raising corn soybeans in eastern Iowa.
Have you ever come across an engine that had clearFlame Technology? They pride themselves on being able use ethanol in their technology for diesel engines. E98 or higher but in a diesel. I noticed even JD is looking at it.
Thank you. It is very very bad. The town I live in was a near miss by two tornados. Every town around me was a direct hit and just wrecked. Prayers are needed.
It feeds better going slow in soybeans so if you’re going so slow it’s better to have a bigger header and you couldn’t get a draper back then so this newer bigger draper is better
We run a 1640 cih with a speciality rotor in beans and corn we run a 15 foot 1020 flex and a 946 corn head. Love the machine but sometimes wish it was bigger
The man who I help Farm has a 1020 rigid auger sickle bar grain header and a 3208 8 row corn head also on a case I H 2588 combine with front duals And large rear tires Harvesting about 1200 acres of corn and soy beans
Thank you. It is very very bad. The town I live in was a near miss by two tornados. Every town around me was a direct hit and just wrecked. Prayers are needed.
It is going a bit faster than that. This was filmed at sunset and dew was setting in. The farmer was nice to run so I could get the filming done. The combo works well.
One of the most balanced harvesters CaseIH ever made. Appreciate the farmers dynamic of dedicated harvesters for corn/beans. That's the flexibility of cheaper, older, and quality màchinery.
Best looking combines ever built imo
Love these cab rides. It's interesting for us non-farmers to hear farmers like this reflect on the evolution of their family farm's equipment over the years. Thanks!
Great video Jason. I really enjoy it when the driver engages in the interview like this one. I understand some are shy around the camera, or are busy driving. It is certainly great for them to let you ride along, regardless of their interview prowess. It also goes to show not everyone ones has a new combines and doing just fine!
I enjoy the ride alongs. The farmer can tell us about it better than I can from sales brochures.
Great video Jason, Farmer act like he was really glad you stopped by, my dad has always liked a slower combine operator like this, he says when they operate slower it keeps the reel from shattering the beans, hope Garnett farms didn’t get much damage from the storms, lord bless everyone that did, thanks for the video!!!
First self propelled combine I ever ran was a IH 205 Dad bought with a 13' grain head. Great video Jason. The farmer really helps make the video for sure. Just adds something to it I feel. These are my favorite when you interview the farmer. Thank you!
Thanks Jason 👍. I always enjoy hearing the farmers perspective and history. 😁👌
😁👍👍
I see a few people being a bit critical of using a seemingly oversized head for this combine. I would just like to point out that the slower you drive, the less beans will be shattered at the header, which means more beans in the hopper and ultimately marketable beans, as well as less wear and tear on the header saving on maintenance costs. The other thing to consider is that rotary combines are best at threshing the crop when the rotor is loaded to capacity, meaning less crop loss out the back of the combine. On the farm that I work for we have a 40 ft head on our class 7 John Deere and a 45 ft on our class 8. You might say that the headers are a size too big for the combines, but consider that our combines can now operate at a slower ground speed and accomplish the same (or more) acres per hour. In a poor crop we can still keep our combines running at capacity, while in excellent crop we simply reduce ground speed. It’s a win-win.
That's pretty cool that they have had that one farm in the family that long. Thanks to the farmer for having you out to film there.I noticed he has some over sized back tires on his 2388, which I assume was to help with flotation on his particular properties.
I wonder if the people commenting on the 35’ Draper being too big for that machine have ever run one. Running slower in beans helps with shatter loss, and they feed so much more consistently that the combine actually runs smoother and at capacity like it was designed to do.
We have a 30 on ours and in clean dry beans it will do 3.5 or so without losing too much. Reel speed makes a big difference with the header loss too
I wonder how much weight was added to the rear to keep the combine from doing a nose dive. It must have the optional 3 lift cylinders. Out by me a large head like that wouldn't work..to many hills
Another great video Jason! Good to see that pretty red paint I come from a multi-generational red paint family and we run everything here from a 1941 bn to a 2017 75c Case IH those red tractors have been good to us I do have to say I run a gleaner combine mainly because I wanted to conventional Shaker machine in order to preserve the straw thanks anyway and if I don't get to talk to you again before the holidays have a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year and we'll be watching for more videos!
Love to see the old(er) iron in your videos!! And love that flag flying!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Thank you for watching.
Prayers and a donation sent to Kentucky.
Jason, Great video! Did you get hit by all of the recent bad weather? How did the Garnett Farms fare during the bad weather? 🙏🏼ing for everyone in the hard hit states.
Thank you. It is very very bad. The town I live in was a near miss by two tornados. Every town around me was a direct hit and just wrecked. The Garnett farm is fine but it was 3 miles from a big tornado that hit a near by town directly. Prayers are needed.
🙏🙏🙏
Thank you for the up date. There heading your way!.....TYL!!!
Jason , Hope you got through the bad weather in western Kentucky ok. Blessings to all in that area.
Thank you. It is very very bad. The town I live in was a near miss by two tornados. Every town around me was a direct hit and just wrecked. Prayers are needed.
Awesome video. I saw you put up the preview on Instagram. Seeing a 2388 push a 35’ draper header is super unique. Hope everything is good up your way with the tornadoes.
Big red combine flying the flag! 🇺🇸
👍👍
Nice farm , nice equipment. Looks like a one man operation. Perfect!
Love seeing these combines out in the field. We have a 2388 with a 30 ft 2020 head and 8 row corn head. Fun operaing
Very nice. 👍👍
Auger wagon… I’ve never heard it called that before but that’s the most accurate description I’ve heard! So your name is Jason. Nice to finally know that
Wes is a good guy! Know him well.
The axial flow is a nice looking machine😉👍 cool to hear what the farmer has to say about his combine👍😁
Great video👍👍
Prayers to your area Jason!!
Put many hours on a 2388. They were some great combines we mainly pulled corn and cut wheat. We did cut some soybeans whenever the deer didn't wreck our crops.
🇧🇴 👍 Excelente saludos cordiales desde Sudamérica Santa Cruz bolivia 🇧🇴 👍
Wow! Awesome story! Can’t imagine going from the 403 to the 1460!! That would of been something to see!!! 8930 is Sharp!!!!!
The 8930 was very cool to see. I hope to get a chance to film it for a full video sometime.
Gotta love them 03 series combines
Отличный комбайн 👍
Enjoyed the video. I like the farmer interviews. I hope everyone is ok where you live from the tornadoes. Praying for y’all there in Kentucky.
Salu2 en tas fiestas amigo hoy 12 diciembre festegando la Guadalupe aki en todo Mexico......Exelente tus videos eres una inciclopedia dela Maquinaria ..
We currently run a 2388, but Dad is looking at a 7130 tomorrow. We've run a 615, 815, 1440 (still use it for oats) and a 1460 in the past.
Ooo! I love the J & M 875 grain cart in case red being pulled by the 2 Wheel Dr. 8930 boxcar magnum tractor! The farm where I help out has a green J & M8 75 grain cart
As always mate thank you for the video. I’m using it research to buy a 4wd 2388 as a backup
I like how slow he’s going and I like the bigger rear wheels and tires on the combine
We used a 2366 axieflow header before the roata broke down and in New South Wales, Australia we harvest wheat, barley, oats and canola are the most popular
Same mate we used to have a 2366 but now have a 2166 along side a 2377 and 2388. We farm just south in Victoria in the Wimmera mallee
My friend had a 2388 this combines
It was one of the best combines for the years 2000 sory my english no is good i am from Argentina
I had got a newholand tc59 and johndeere 1450
Saludos desde tucuman Argentina
Hi BTP, very good as allways. Still missing Claas videos in 2021 🇵🇹🇵🇹
rare case! good job man!
It was neat to see a late model 2388.
Good video brother
Love your content mate I used to run a 1460 with a 1010 22.5ft front just sold the combine for a 2004 2388 similar to this setup unreal headers. Was sad to sell the 1460 but won't mind the cab comforts of a 23 series.
We run an IH 1420 axial flow with 15' 1020 header for soybeans and wheat and 845 head in corn. We like the machine.
Very cool. I got to feature a 1420 last year. I hope to locate a 1620 to film.
Yes on our farm up here in Montana my grandparents had the exact same combines this farmer had. Although we do mostly cereals and some peas.
Very cool.
Great video would love to see more thanks
Thank you for watching.
I love seeing the american flag on the combine. We had the other red Combine back when i was a kid. it was a Massey Furguson 410 with a cab an a 6 cylinder gas engine. Dad bought from a Former Farmer Neighbor few miles down the road for 150.00 dollars. Neeed some bugs worked out. an got it running decent.
I run a 1460 ih with a 20ft 1020 head for beans and also have a 6 row 1063 corn head. The 1460 is a model year 1983, it has updated cage to a 1660 model.
Great story perfect vudeo on a perfect combine
Thank you for watching.
Combines are a "modern marvel" to me. The technology was years ahead of its time. The timing and synchronization of all the mechanism is just as if not more complex than any old brain box.......and much more reliable at a fraction of the cost. You know what they say about opinions ....but that's mine and it ain't likely to change. I'm sure you don't want to know why but I'll tell you anyway what has led me to this point in my life. The more "Hi tech" everything gets the more people turn into a bunch of candy asses that won't work and all they do is complain. I drove tough operating mechanical cars, pick-ups and big trucks for 50 years and did most of my own repairs. You can't do that with the stuff they're building today. They build it where you have to have a college degree to dig a ditch. There's always going to physically hard jobs to do and who's going to do them when everybodies a candy ass?
You should explain all the computer stuff / grain monitor. All the cool little buttons.. lol
I will talk to the farmer about them next time I ride along.
Nice👍
Good looking machine👍
At last..... an operator with the reel speed set to match ground speed.
Great Video
Thank you for watching.
@@bigtractorpower
You're Welcome
We had a 91,715 and now a 1440 with a 1020 for spring grains wheat and soys. Have not ventured into grain corn yet.
We farmed from 1952 to sometime in the 80s we farmed cotton and soybeans we never owned a combine somebody custom cut for us cotton we did by hand but we farmed with mules until we bought a brand new 1962 Farmall 404 then a few years later we bought another 404 with a picker on top and used it for one year the head cracked and we sold it for scrap we have thought seriously about going back into farming one day but for now a garden food plots and a bird field is enough
What town is the farmer close to. I live in east central illinois. He seemed like a good guy. thanks for the videos
Great video I love the axial flow combine use 1460 0n the farm I work for in central iIllinois
Very cool. I have a 1460 video on the way.
That was my first self propelled combine, the 101! All that tells you is how old I am.
Wow very cool. I think I have filmed a 101 at the Half Century of progress show.
i love the videos of the harvest have you seen dirt grain and steel's gleaner l2 with steel tracks
Wow that’s a cool L2. I have only seen that set up in a Gleaner Rice sales brochure.
You should come out to ohio during planting and see some of the stuff we got. The farm is Bryant ag enterprise, it is the 3rd largest in ohio
Thanks for the video,how bad were the tornado s around your neck of the woods?
Thank you. It is very very bad. The town I live in was a near miss by two tornados. Every town around me was a direct hit and just wrecked. Prayers are needed.
@@bigtractorpower prayers sent
Combine history: Massy 300; John Deere 7700 gas, John Deere 7700 diesel, IH 1480, 2188, now 8010 with John Deere 635 Hydraflex raising corn soybeans in eastern Iowa.
Have you ever come across an engine that had clearFlame Technology? They pride themselves on being able use ethanol in their technology for diesel engines. E98 or higher but in a diesel. I noticed even JD is looking at it.
I wonder what size of tires he had on the rear
Great video! Hope all is ok with you Jason and the farms you visit in Kentucky?
Thank you. It is very very bad. The town I live in was a near miss by two tornados. Every town around me was a direct hit and just wrecked. Prayers are needed.
Jason I see you survived the tornados man I was worried about you all
The farmer that we help runs a 2377 with a 6 row corn head and a 25ft bean head and we do corn, beans, and wheat
The 2377 is a cool combine. It was new for 2005 and replaced by the 2577 in 2007.
Why is the reel speed so low?
Is just me or is driving slower than normal due to the size of the header?😎
It feeds better going slow in soybeans so if you’re going so slow it’s better to have a bigger header and you couldn’t get a draper back then so this newer bigger draper is better
Hello! It has been a while since the last video! I hope it`s all fine with you. God bless.
Every thing is good. Thank you for watching so many BTP videos.
I have a 2388 with 20’1020 and six row 1063 for corn and soybeans
We run a 1640 cih with a speciality rotor in beans and corn we run a 15 foot 1020 flex and a 946 corn head. Love the machine but sometimes wish it was bigger
The 1640 is a nice combine. 👍👍
Could you do a video on the case 2366 combine if possible. Thanks😊
I sure would like too. It’s on my wish list to film.
What size tires are on the rear?
The man who I help Farm has a 1020 rigid auger sickle bar grain header and a 3208 8 row corn head also on a case I H 2588 combine with front duals And large rear tires Harvesting about 1200 acres of corn and soy beans
At 11:15 there is a spark that shoots out in front of the rear tire
Hopefully you are okey in Kentucky these days
Thank you. It is very very bad. The town I live in was a near miss by two tornados. Every town around me was a direct hit and just wrecked. Prayers are needed.
@@bigtractorpower I vae seen the vids, This is really bad. Take care of your family and the loved ones. Prays from Swedem
Combine history, John Deere 55, Jd 6600, Jd 7720 x2, Jd 9500 x2, jd 9650, Jd 9750, Jd 9760, cat legion 590 Jd s680 x3, claas 740 x2, claas 7500
Never understood why someone slams a draper that is too big for the combine.
In Austraila a 36ft is pretty standard on a 2388. Just go abit slower, not bashing around quick in a poor year
i assume the lower trash must have been chewy as he's running the reel so low n slow
Do you have any farm toys links for us none farmers?
Toy Tractor Times UA-cam has 500 farm display videos.
I can promise you that the fuel pump on this machine isn’t set at factory settings 😂😂😂
I have a few 1460 and 1480 s
Very cool. Great combines. I really want to do a feature on the 1480. They are hard to find these days.
👏👏👏👍👍👍🇧🇷🇧🇷🚜🚜🚜
✌️🇧🇷✌️
😁👍
UA-cam is a bit weird sometime no cries but 4 likes like wut.
It’s hard to tell what’s happening sometimes as the video just gets posted.
That header is overkill, moving at a merely 1 mph
It is going a bit faster than that. This was filmed at sunset and dew was setting in. The farmer was nice to run so I could get the filming done. The combo works well.
Your not as smart as the guy going slow. He's getting all the beans. Which equals more. 💰
For God’s sake clean the bean stalks out of the reel!
It was getting wet with dew. He was running so I could film. They just clumped up.
1
😁👍
Not much of a crop huh ?
This field was flooded a few weeks after planting. It took a ding from the water sitting on it.
अनिल के
Great video