8820 maintenance begins!!

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  • Опубліковано 10 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 21

  • @danfike3016
    @danfike3016 6 років тому +3

    I didn't realize how big that cylinder was in that machine. I knew it was their big machine at on time. Keep the videos coming sir.

  • @allanjohnson2552
    @allanjohnson2552 5 років тому +1

    Thanks for your video. I just got an 8820 although old but decent. Mine has a nice tarp over the hopper. Sure saved from the nasty bottom of the auger rust. This is certainly helpful for me to remove the feeder house. Keep up the great work, thanks.

  • @countryshaner141
    @countryshaner141 5 місяців тому +1

    This is what I think of farmers. Not the celebrity farmers like the Karson’s and welkers and millennial farmer. All brand new equipment and etc. most farmers I know are laid back and don’t complain about not having a massaging seat or what not. They keep old machines alive and work on their own equipment. Also they have to work an outside job to pay the bills. You remind me of my uncle so much. He is a dairy farmer and a mechanic.

  • @jdhfarms3596
    @jdhfarms3596 4 роки тому

    i wish i would have seen your feederhouse removal earlier this year. I changed rasp bars on a 7720 with feederhouse on because i thought removing it would be a hassle. Never again! Thank you for showing a better way.

  • @scottjaecques7409
    @scottjaecques7409 2 роки тому +1

    Easiest way to take feeder house off is hook up to your corn head and leave it on corn head that's how we done every machine at dealership

    • @jonstevensmaplegrovefarms3754
      @jonstevensmaplegrovefarms3754  2 роки тому

      That's a good idea
      At the one dealership I was at they had a little L shaped frame that had a channel that went under the front of the feeder house and on the back the leg that stood upright had a little bottle jack. Roll it onto the feeder house set the feeder house front down on it use the rear to lift up some weight and there you just take everything off

  • @FarmallFanatic
    @FarmallFanatic 6 років тому +3

    Ohhhh the bearings and bevel gears lol. Lots of field fixes when i was too dumb to do pm work. My new bevel gears ran me 65 bucks a piece...worth every penny

  • @wieslawj.vonwalawender6763
    @wieslawj.vonwalawender6763 2 роки тому +1

    Thanks for the video: superb...hands on...

  • @scottjaecques7409
    @scottjaecques7409 2 роки тому +1

    I had an 8820 titan 2 mine had 35.5-32 rice tires on front and 18.4-26 on rear and was 4x4 we had tracks for when it got really muddy we ran 8 row corn head and a 930 flex head in soybeans

  • @sethe1333
    @sethe1333 6 років тому +1

    So many people put those 1/4" quick couplers on 3/8 hose and never fully realize the potential of their air tools.....or how lacking their compressor is haha

  • @davidholste7209
    @davidholste7209 6 років тому +1

    You need a nice indoor shop with all your mechanic skills.

  • @farmermatt629
    @farmermatt629 6 років тому +1

    We had a 7720 I think we probably re built thing 3 times over

  • @SilverGleaner
    @SilverGleaner 3 роки тому

    It would be a rarity to ever see a bent cylinder bar on any conventional Gleaner. They are much heavier bars and they have an automatic stone ejection door that won't let a rock in. In my 37 years of combining with Gleaner Conventionals I've never ever bent a cylinder bar. One of the benefits of a Gleaner. I can name drawbacks too just so you know I'm not picking on Deere..... but I do like to pick on Deere ;)

  • @kevinferguson4163
    @kevinferguson4163 6 років тому

    Could you please let me know model number or more information on impact. Where you got it keep up the good work on videos. Enjoy watching them. Thank you

  • @justingermanovich
    @justingermanovich 6 років тому +2

    Hello sir I have a video request. I was wondering if you can teach me a lil something on selling grain and the whole deal on contracts. I’m doin okaish now but I know I can do a lot better if I knew how to sell better if that makes sense. I’m only 17 and my family farmed in Ukraine but they moved here and I was born here so I started farming all on my own. So I was just wondering if you can help me out a lil, cause my dad can’t as much since marketing strategies are a lil different. We grow corn and beans as a lil background. Thx!