It makes me wonder just how proud they were when they got that awesome machine brand new on the farm. The whole family, neighbors and all the children come over to see and watch it working the first time. Can you imagine all the excitement that was going around that day. Thanks for sharing today
My dad and grandpa had 45 round backs. In the summer I used to love riding with my dad as he cut the wheat. How I wish I could ride with him just one more time. Thank you for posting this video. It brings back some of the happiest times of my life.
I’m 67 and grew up on a small farm in Oregon. I did most of the combine work with a JD45 w/10’ head. Dad started sending me to do custom work and e we would do several hundred acres with this for several years! We had some 100 degree summers and it was hot on the open station! I still would love to have those years back again! Thanks for sharing the video👍😄
The first combine I had was a 40 combine which did an excellent job in oats. Then I bought an International Harvester 315 and now I have an International Harvester 82 pull type. All did an excellent job overall. Thanks for the trip down memory lane with watching the 40 work. Keep up the great work
@Thewaywefarm I have a video of it and I'll try to figure out how to send it to you. It has the scour- kleen system which is why I enjoy it. I hope you have a successful and safe Fall harvest
I love watching the old machines at work. Back when we ran that stuff we could make a living farming with the family! I started out with a round back 55 that I paid less than 1K, turn key ready!
We had the exact same one. Grew up on a dairy farm and we bled green mostly. JD 4020 a 2510 and not a Deere but an Oliver 77 row crop my favorite of all! we had tractors every where, Farmalls H and a B that thing was neat. it had the long offset rear axle. and a couple super A's When I seen your 40 it instantly took me back to a much better part of my life and time. Thanks! ps. the 40 looked a lot bigger when I was a kid!
Glad you shared your memories with us! I grew up on a small dairy farm as well, didn’t realize at the time how great it was growing up that way. Thanks for watching. More videos of the little combine coming mid summer.
I loved my ollie 77 but I moved and nowhere to keep it so I gave it to my friend, he will let me have it back if I get a place to keep it and can move it.
Wow! How freaking cool is that! That old thing was moving right along in a pretty nice stand of wheat. The old pitman just a'hammering away. That is so cool! I was just watching a video of Case AF11. My how things have changed. I hope somehow, somewhere, people will always keep some of that old machinery running and bring it out for people to see.
@@JulianKeller-om6wz Thank you! I love our more modern equipment, however I get more excited to play with our old stuff! Thanks for watching and the comments.
My uncle had a Massey 310 combine - fall of 76 I helped him with his corn crop . He milked cows so we put high moisture shelled corn in a Harvestore silo . The 310 had a Chrysler slant 6 and a 2 row corn head - plenty of power and plenty of fresh air ! She was a open platform machine .
There’s a lot of good cheap equipment out there. I’d rather have a paid for open station older tractor than debt. This season I will be doing a construction project and I can’t grow anything - so I’m parking my paid for stuff. Debt kills farms.
Enjoyed your video as a kid my dad had a 141 round back international later date had a 303 he ran alongside my uncles 203 on my first farm I had a 403 international and I first Johndeere was a 4400 I will remember and enjoyed John Deere combines that friends have had clear up to the 105 edible been As I got along in life I had leased two different 4420s then I bought a 6620 in my last combine before I retired was an 8820 Tytan two with rear wheel assist enjoyed your video very much so thanks for sharing
That’s quite the history of combines! We had an 8820 Titian ll with rear wheel assist too, very good machine. Thanks for watching and sharing your farms history.
That’s so nice to see it run, my dad had two ‘55s I can remember riding with him a little when I was a kid, his had cabs on them but no heat or air as well as I can remember.
great video Tom! My father always talks about his first memory of my grandfather getting a new combine from Halpin's and it was a JD 40...not sure if it was a round or square...but he still remembers Teddy Halpin riding around one of our fields showing my grandfather how to run it.
Can you imagine how exciting that would have been replacing some old pull type with a 40 self propelled! Be a long day trying to beat the weather with a little 40
I Was 80 last October and I remember an old Alice Chalmers with a canvas apron and the wooden slats across it. Had a platform on the side where and stood and filled two bags. You filled one bag and then switched to the other bag... and droped the bag to the ground after you tied it closed with a Miller's knot I remember that just like it was yesterday.
Now that’s some good memories! It’s amazing how things have changed in your lifetime. My Dad is 79 and he remembers the neighbors thrashing in his barn when he was a little boy. He thought the Allis All Crop was a great improvement over thrashing. I learned to tie a Millers knot as a little boy, luckily it was bagging dairy feed not riding on a dusty combine. Thanks for the great comments.
I-84 I started running combine in 1951 a Moline 69 harvester my boys have three big John Deere rotary combines my first combine was a Moline W-4 self-propelled on a uni tractor
I farm in south eastern Minnesota. I swath and combine a good amount of oats mine and custom. I averaged about 180 to 200 acres per year and I do it all with an 800 ten foot John Deere swather and an f2 gleaner combine. Great vid
My dad had a john deere 55 and my neighbor growing up had a john deere 45. The neighbor did wheat and oats with it. We bought his straw off the field for bedding.
The first harvest that I was a full time combine driver was on an old C Gleaner. Good old machine. Only put one bearing in all of harvest, on a straw spreder.
I can remember as a kid, my uncle and granfather running an Allis Chalmers All Crop with a farmall 450 doing oats and a neighbor doing oats and corn with a Gleaner F.
We had a JD40 ran it several years back in 1970s. I thought it was a big improvement over TheJD 30 pull type sack tie combine. I eat and breathe a lot of dust back in the days. I don’t think I could stand it today at 71 years old. How are we still living after all that dusty conditions we were working in back then.
My Dad is 79 and still working with my brother every day, can’t imagine all the dust he’s consumed in all those years of dairy farming! Thanks for watching.
We had a gleaner e open station, worked great. We also had a 2 row corn head for it. We left it parked in the shed for a couple of years when we had too many acres and a bigger combine was hired, A few years turned in to 20 or so years and the shed was not big enough for everything so something had to go. Now that the farm is smaller again, I miss the little combine. You should be wearing a mask. Take care 👍🇨🇦🚜❤️
Sorry your Gleaner is gone, I wish I could save them all! We would be wearing a dust mask but we were only doing one bin full. Already excited for harvest 2024.
I grew up around IH combines. Starting with a 121 and the last one was a 403. These new machines are amazing but it's ironic that they can't cut when the computor quits, lol.
Cant beat the older machinery. Simple and reliable. Bit like people nowadays. Bought a Massey 860 this year and doing great. Same quality sample as the neighbors Lexion for a fraction of the price
MH 90 Special, MH82, JD 55 High Tank, and JD55 Low Tank Square Back with adjustable reel speed and best machine of the bunch. A guy wanted a 55, came to check it out, we took it to the field ahead of a rain, started raining on a half-mile stretch, kept sprinkling, mudded through various wet spots with weeds coming up (really wet Kansas June harvest) we made it out and on way back to barn he asked if I'd take $500 less than I was asking. I replied that "you just saw what it can do.......waited.....he said he'd take it) Ah the good old days.
We had a Arbos combine. It was built in Italy. Had a Ford 6 cil diesel. Grandpa bought it new in 1967? Arbos was taken over by White but went bankrupt. A few years ago the Chinese started building tractors under the Arbos name
Please pardon my ignorance, honestly learning about farming. In the section where you have multiple combines going: I see 2 large combines harvesting corn. What looks like a 4020 pulling a single row corn combine. What's the JD 40 doing in front with what looks like a grain header?
The 40 was combining soybeans, it was just to make a cool video. Normally we use the biggest combine for soybeans but that day the soybeans were too wet to cut too many. Thanks for the questions.
I got a little Gleaner T3 made in 1954 I restored a few years ago. I'd love to put it up against your 40 in any crop! Mines got a 10 foot header an a FORD 172 Red Tiger Engine on her.
Very little on the web about them. Little over 500 T3’s an T2’s were built by the Gleaner Baldwin Harvest Corporation in 1954 and that was it. Allis Chalmers bought Gleaner in 1955 an shut it down. The T’s were the competition to the Allis “All-Crop 100” and Allis had too much invested to shut the All-Crops down. Once Allis shut down the All-Crops 10 years later they brought back the Gleaner T into production and changed its name to the model E. The Gleaner T was ten times better machine then the All-Crop 100.
Before Allis bought Gleaner Gleaners were painted in Ford Red an sold through Ford tractor dealers. That is why Gleaner T combines were outfitted with the same engines as the Ford Jubilee tractors at the time. Some Ford representatives were actually headed to go buy Gleaner but they had blown a tire on the way there and the Allis Reps past them. If it wasn’t for the blown tire Gleaner were be under New Holland today not AGCO.
It makes me wonder just how proud they were when they got that awesome machine brand new on the farm. The whole family, neighbors and all the children come over to see and watch it working the first time. Can you imagine all the excitement that was going around that day. Thanks for sharing today
It had to be a celebration! We will probably say the same someday about our current equipment. Thanks for watching.
My dad and grandpa had 45 round backs. In the summer I used to love riding with my dad as he cut the wheat. How I wish I could ride with him just one more time. Thank you for posting this video. It brings back some of the happiest times of my life.
No doubt those were great summer days! Glad to bring back memories for you. Thanks for watching.
In 1958 i had the misfortune to break two JD 45 combines in one day , boss was proud of me !!
2 in one day, that’s impressive!
I’m 67 and grew up on a small farm in Oregon. I did most of the combine work with a JD45 w/10’ head. Dad started sending me to do custom work and e we would do several hundred acres with this for several years! We had some 100 degree summers and it was hot on the open station! I still would love to have those years back again! Thanks for sharing the video👍😄
You’re correct, I look back at some of those hard days when I was younger and would like to relive them! Thanks for watching and the comments!
The first combine I had was a 40 combine which did an excellent job in oats. Then I bought an International Harvester 315 and now I have an International Harvester 82 pull type. All did an excellent job overall. Thanks for the trip down memory lane with watching the 40 work. Keep up the great work
@@milandjurdjevich3046 Those are some great models, I would love to see your 82 running. Thanks for watching!
@Thewaywefarm I have a video of it and I'll try to figure out how to send it to you. It has the scour- kleen system which is why I enjoy it. I hope you have a successful and safe Fall harvest
@@milandjurdjevich3046 That would be great! Thanks and stay safe yourself!
I love watching the old machines at work. Back when we ran that stuff we could make a living farming with the family! I started out with a round back 55 that I paid less than 1K, turn key ready!
Thats great! Now every trip to the parts department is $1,000
Nice video we had 2 JD 45's then made a big jump to a JD 105 amazing machines.Thanks for your video.
105 would have been a huge jump!
We had the exact same one. Grew up on a dairy farm and we bled green mostly. JD 4020 a 2510 and not a Deere but an Oliver 77 row crop my favorite of all! we had tractors every where, Farmalls H and a B that thing was neat. it had the long offset rear axle. and a couple super A's When I seen your 40 it instantly took me back to a much better part of my life and time. Thanks! ps. the 40 looked a lot bigger when I was a kid!
Glad you shared your memories with us! I grew up on a small dairy farm as well, didn’t realize at the time how great it was growing up that way. Thanks for watching. More videos of the little combine coming mid summer.
I loved my ollie 77 but I moved and nowhere to keep it so I gave it to my friend, he will let me have it back if I get a place to keep it and can move it.
Wow! How freaking cool is that! That old thing was moving right along in a pretty nice stand of wheat. The old pitman just a'hammering away. That is so cool! I was just watching a video of Case AF11. My how things have changed. I hope somehow, somewhere, people will always keep some of that old machinery running and bring it out for people to see.
@@JulianKeller-om6wz Thank you! I love our more modern equipment, however I get more excited to play with our old stuff! Thanks for watching and the comments.
My uncle had a Massey 310 combine - fall of 76 I helped him with his corn crop . He milked cows so we put high moisture shelled corn in a Harvestore silo .
The 310 had a Chrysler slant 6 and a 2 row corn head - plenty of power and plenty of fresh air ! She was a open platform machine .
Those were the days! How fun would it be to shell a couple loads with that machine on a nice fall day.
People laugh because we gear every piece of equipment on this farm around the 4020s. Very cool combine. Enjoy my friend
We still love our 4020 but kinda out grew it. I love all our older equipment, thanks for watching.
There’s a lot of good cheap equipment out there. I’d rather have a paid for open station older tractor than debt. This season I will be doing a construction project and I can’t grow anything - so I’m parking my paid for stuff. Debt kills farms.
Enjoyed your video as a kid my dad had a 141 round back international later date had a 303 he ran alongside my uncles 203 on my first farm I had a 403 international and I first Johndeere was a 4400 I will remember and enjoyed John Deere combines that friends have had clear up to the 105 edible been As I got along in life I had leased two different 4420s then I bought a 6620 in my last combine before I retired was an 8820 Tytan two with rear wheel assist enjoyed your video very much so thanks for sharing
That’s quite the history of combines! We had an 8820 Titian ll with rear wheel assist too, very good machine. Thanks for watching and sharing your farms history.
Great video
@@Mike-rf3kl Thanks! We love our little 40 combine
That’s so nice to see it run, my dad had two ‘55s I can remember riding with him a little when I was a kid, his had cabs on them but no heat or air as well as I can remember.
55s are such great machines, I’d love to run one someday. Thanks for watching.
Just a Awesome small machine working away,
@@Mark-d1q4i Thank you
Oh the memories of being on an open station combine with my Grandpa during harvest time when I was a youngster on the farm
great video Tom! My father always talks about his first memory of my grandfather getting a new combine from Halpin's and it was a JD 40...not sure if it was a round or square...but he still remembers Teddy Halpin riding around one of our fields showing my grandfather how to run it.
Can you imagine how exciting that would have been replacing some old pull type with a 40 self propelled! Be a long day trying to beat the weather with a little 40
Boy I know!
I Was 80 last October and I remember an old Alice Chalmers with a canvas apron and the wooden slats across it. Had a platform on the side where and stood and filled two bags. You filled one bag and then switched to the other bag... and droped the bag to the ground after you tied it closed with a Miller's knot
I remember that just like it was yesterday.
Now that’s some good memories! It’s amazing how things have changed in your lifetime. My Dad is 79 and he remembers the neighbors thrashing in his barn when he was a little boy. He thought the Allis All Crop was a great improvement over thrashing. I learned to tie a Millers knot as a little boy, luckily it was bagging dairy feed not riding on a dusty combine. Thanks for the great comments.
Best way to preserve these old machines is to keep them working! 👍
I've got a 45 that hasn't been run in about 12 years. You're making me want to get it out again!
Please let me know if you do!
That john deere combine is an absolute beauty
Thank you!
I-84 I started running combine in 1951 a Moline 69 harvester my boys have three big John Deere rotary combines my first combine was a Moline W-4 self-propelled on a uni tractor
The one farm I worked on as a teenager had an early 70's Gleaner combine. It was fun to run and a lot simpler then the modern day combines!
Someday I’d like to own an old Gleaner, simple and I love the way they look!
I farm in south eastern Minnesota. I swath and combine a good amount of oats mine and custom. I averaged about 180 to 200 acres per year and I do it all with an 800 ten foot John Deere swather and an f2 gleaner combine. Great vid
That’s a lot of acres to cover with an F2! Thanks you.
I like the old stuff it works better than the new crap.
My dad had a john deere 55 and my neighbor growing up had a john deere 45. The neighbor did wheat and oats with it. We bought his straw off the field for bedding.
I love 55s, guy used to custom combine for my Dad with a 55 corn special. Thanks for watching and sharing.
The first harvest that I was a full time combine driver was on an old C Gleaner. Good old machine. Only put one bearing in all of harvest, on a straw spreder.
We have some neighbors that want to bring a few Gleaners this summer to cut wheat with us. Gleaners are great machines, I love the old ones!
Cool machine something you don't see everyday
Thank you!
I can remember as a kid, my uncle and granfather running an Allis Chalmers All Crop with a farmall 450 doing oats and a neighbor doing oats and corn with a Gleaner F.
My Dad and father in law both had all crops back before I can remember.
we had two john deere 45's over the years of farming. I shelled a lot of corn two rows at a time!
I love 45s, wish our neighbor never sold his. 2 row shelling beat handling ear corn I’m sure.
@@Thewaywefarm we picked A LOT also. mainly used the combine to open up fields and then picked with an old cockshutt 40 and new idea one row!
@@Thewaywefarm thank you for subscribing! im still trying to figure out how to upload videos so it might be a bit
@@soggybottom23 I still have a one row New Idea, pick a little every year with it.
Hello everyone great vidéo Tom
Thank you for being a loyal follower!
Не комбайн а мечта!👍👍👍
We had a JD40 ran it several years back in 1970s. I thought it was a big improvement over TheJD 30 pull type sack tie combine. I eat and breathe a lot of dust back in the days. I don’t think I could stand it today at 71 years old. How are we still living after all that dusty conditions we were working in back then.
My Dad is 79 and still working with my brother every day, can’t imagine all the dust he’s consumed in all those years of dairy farming! Thanks for watching.
We had a gleaner e open station, worked great. We also had a 2 row corn head for it. We left it parked in the shed for a couple of years when we had too many acres and a bigger combine was hired, A few years turned in to 20 or so years and the shed was not big enough for everything so something had to go. Now that the farm is smaller again, I miss the little combine. You should be wearing a mask. Take care 👍🇨🇦🚜❤️
Sorry your Gleaner is gone, I wish I could save them all! We would be wearing a dust mask but we were only doing one bin full. Already excited for harvest 2024.
I grew up around IH combines. Starting with a 121 and the last one was a 403. These new machines are amazing but it's ironic that they can't cut when the computor quits, lol.
@@joesharp4547 Those old IH combines are very cool. You are correct, one sensor fails and you are done for the day!
My first combining job was at age 13 in 1977 on my grandfather's round back JD 95 with a 16' head in Arriba, CO.
I bet you were the coolest kid in your class, I would have been!
We had a 1954 CCIL in Saskatchewan. Used it for at least 12 years. It is now in the Western Development Museum in Saskatoon
That is great it’s in a museum!
I had a John Deere model 42 pull type combine. Used it for wheat, soybeans , and sunflowers in southern Maryland
I’ve always wanted a 42 pull type! I’ve never cut sunflowers. Thanks for watching and the comments.
I remember this being used in the fields.
We used to go around the corn field twice with the grain drill so we could combine the oats off and open the corn field.
That’s a great idea, never seen that done around here. Thanks for sharing.
Cant beat the older machinery. Simple and reliable. Bit like people nowadays.
Bought a Massey 860 this year and doing great. Same quality sample as the neighbors Lexion for a fraction of the price
I agree, hard to beat good older equipment! Continued success!
MH 90 Special, MH82, JD 55 High Tank, and JD55 Low Tank Square Back with adjustable reel speed and best machine of the bunch. A guy wanted a 55, came to check it out, we took it to the field ahead of a rain, started raining on a half-mile stretch, kept sprinkling, mudded through various wet spots with weeds coming up (really wet Kansas June harvest) we made it out and on way back to barn he asked if I'd take $500 less than I was asking. I replied that "you just saw what it can do.......waited.....he said he'd take it) Ah the good old days.
That’s a great story! Those were some classic machines! Thanks for the comments.
We had a Arbos combine. It was built in Italy. Had a Ford 6 cil diesel. Grandpa bought it new in 1967? Arbos was taken over by White but went bankrupt. A few years ago the Chinese started building tractors under the Arbos name
I never heard of that brand. I might have to do a little research about them. Thanks for the comments!
i wish i had one like this here!...
I love this video ❤
Thanks for watching!
So nice, I would never sell it. Do you have any idea as to the year of manufacture? Thank you for allowing us the pleasure of seeing it.
It’s a 1960 model year, thanks for watching!
Morning I have one exactly like that sitting in the barn .
I would love to find a small combine like this.. very difficult to find in texas..
Please pardon my ignorance, honestly learning about farming.
In the section where you have multiple combines going:
I see 2 large combines harvesting corn. What looks like a 4020 pulling a single row corn combine.
What's the JD 40 doing in front with what looks like a grain header?
The 40 was combining soybeans, it was just to make a cool video. Normally we use the biggest combine for soybeans but that day the soybeans were too wet to cut too many. Thanks for the questions.
That's the way it should be easy to fix
Good morning, what state would that be in? We bought another one from Ohio but it’s kinda rough.
i ffinished wearing 3 '55's doing beans for neighbors. You coupd see the muffler glow orange at night.
That’s great! Love them combines!
I got a little Gleaner T3 made in 1954 I restored a few years ago. I'd love to put it up against your 40 in any crop! Mines got a 10 foot header an a FORD 172 Red Tiger Engine on her.
I’m not sure I’ve seen a T3 before, I’m going to check it out on the web! Thanks
Very little on the web about them. Little over 500 T3’s an T2’s were built by the Gleaner Baldwin Harvest Corporation in 1954 and that was it.
Allis Chalmers bought Gleaner in 1955 an shut it down. The T’s were the competition to the Allis “All-Crop 100” and Allis had too much invested to shut the All-Crops down. Once Allis shut down the All-Crops 10 years later they brought back the Gleaner T into production and changed its name to the model E. The Gleaner T was ten times better machine then the All-Crop 100.
Before Allis bought Gleaner Gleaners were painted in Ford Red an sold through Ford tractor dealers. That is why Gleaner T combines were outfitted with the same engines as the Ford Jubilee tractors at the time. Some Ford representatives were actually headed to go buy Gleaner but they had blown a tire on the way there and the Allis Reps past them. If it wasn’t for the blown tire Gleaner were be under New Holland today not AGCO.
@@MrTGleaner Thanks for that information, very interesting.
Had a Massey Ferguson 410 combine
There weren’t very many Massey Ferguson combines around here. Thanks for sharing.
I have a square back 40 combine!
That’s great! I’ve only seen 2 square back 40s. What state are you in?
hola, donde es? en que pais es? Hello were is it? in wat conutry?
USA 🇺🇸
@@Thewaywefarm thank you
Round back John Deere 45 forgot the year
@@DS75921 Great combines, love the round backs!
Good old wheat. Makesxa few bucks. Just not enough.
So true, especially this year!
Grow up with a 40 my dad bought new
503 IH Diesel
Cut my teeth on a 95 John Deere
Not as homely as the x9
I agree, the 40 is kinda cute.
amassey 788 allis gleaner super a