@@lrruschfarms6352 WE GOT WATER HEMP EVERYWHERE TOO AND THE GUY HAS SPRAYED 4 TIMES AND IT WILL NOT KILL THE WATER HEMP SO ANNOYING AND EVERY STATE EAST OF THE ROCKIES HAS WATER HEMP ACCORING THE MAP I SEEN LOOKING IT UP ON GOGLE. TAKE CARE THANKS FOR THE VIDEOS I NEED THEM BEEN DEPRESSION THIS YEAR ESP THE LAST 2 MONTHS ESP AFTER WE HAD A CAR CRASH IN MY VALLEY THAT TOOK A LIFE OF A 16 YEAR OLD WHO I KNEW HIS DAD PRETTY WELL AND IT WAS ROUGH FOR ME AND MY MOM. STAY SAFE DURING HARVEST 24
Hope your harvest goes good, we are going to start cutting beans Friday, our beans didn’t seem like they didn’t ripen right with a lot of green stems. Our Massey combine was really eating the green stems, water hemp was a major problem and Liberty didn’t keep them down
@@lrruschfarms6352Thanks for your excellent video and I am a subscriber. If corn silage, potatoes, sugar beet etc can be dumped into a truck while the harvester keeps going, there is no reason why soybeans or wheat cant be dumped into a semi while the combine continues to harvest the beans or wheat. By eliminating the tractor and cart it means less augering of the grain which means less fines in the grain, less diesel used, less wear on machinery, less manpower required, less soil compaction of the soil since a tractor and cart dont have to drive back and forth between the combine and truck. This will mean higher profits.
Hey Alex, I appreciate the info. Happy all is going well. How many combines are you running? Your 2 X9's, one is an 1100 & 1000 correct? Be safe this fall.
I understand Mike Mitchell has had the chopper update done to his two X9’s & still is having problems plugging the back end. Plugging doesn’t appear to be an issue on his fleet of S Series combines.
@@lrruschfarms6352 You are lucky you don't grow Barley because if you had to deal with the itchyness of barley dust you would be parking the combine while you went home for a shower & clothing change after every time you unplugged the combine. Shovelling out the bottom of a flat bottomed barley bin was an initiation for new farm hands on a hot day.
@@gavinperry7237 then again look at the crops Mike harvests... most combines are tested with soybeans and corn. Try going through lentils, flax, or a tough crop and find out how it does; some crops can be very unforgiving in certain conditions.
Been waiting on this video, with huge opportunity comes huge issues. You're doing a great job. Thanks for the update!
Thank you for watching
@@lrruschfarms6352 WE GOT WATER HEMP EVERYWHERE TOO AND THE GUY HAS SPRAYED 4 TIMES AND IT WILL NOT KILL THE WATER HEMP SO ANNOYING AND EVERY STATE EAST OF THE ROCKIES HAS WATER HEMP ACCORING THE MAP I SEEN LOOKING IT UP ON GOGLE. TAKE CARE THANKS FOR THE VIDEOS I NEED THEM BEEN DEPRESSION THIS YEAR ESP THE LAST 2 MONTHS ESP AFTER WE HAD A CAR CRASH IN MY VALLEY THAT TOOK A LIFE OF A 16 YEAR OLD WHO I KNEW HIS DAD PRETTY WELL AND IT WAS ROUGH FOR ME AND MY MOM. STAY SAFE DURING HARVEST 24
Great start to harvest. Continued good luck and stay safe.
🔥hell ya guyzz.. that is one beautiful combine. Need more videos 🔥👊🔥🏍🔨⚙️🚜
Great video Alex
Hope your harvest goes good, we are going to start cutting beans Friday, our beans didn’t seem like they didn’t ripen right with a lot of green stems. Our Massey combine was really eating the green stems, water hemp was a major problem and Liberty didn’t keep them down
Been fighting the same thing here
Looking great y’all! Wow!💪🏻 Hope everyone is doing well!!!
So far so good
@@lrruschfarms6352Thanks for your excellent video and I am a subscriber.
If corn silage, potatoes, sugar beet etc can be dumped into a truck while the harvester keeps going, there is no reason why soybeans or wheat cant be dumped into a semi while the combine continues to harvest the beans or wheat.
By eliminating the tractor and cart it means less augering of the grain which means less fines in the grain, less diesel used, less wear on machinery, less manpower required, less soil compaction of the soil since a tractor and cart dont have to drive back and forth between the combine and truck. This will mean higher profits.
Thank you thank you Alex🇺🇸💯%
Thank you
Hey Alex, I appreciate the info. Happy all is going well. How many combines are you running? Your 2 X9's, one is an 1100 & 1000 correct? Be safe this fall.
Yes just the two and you hit the nail on the head there
Do you think you have anything for the case A10? I would like to see head to head competition between red and green.
I understand Mike Mitchell has had the chopper update done to his two X9’s & still is having problems plugging the back end. Plugging doesn’t appear to be an issue on his fleet of S Series combines.
Been a very big concern of mine hopefully this update kit helps
@@lrruschfarms6352 You are lucky you don't grow Barley because if you had to deal with the itchyness of barley dust you would be parking the combine while you went home for a shower & clothing change after every time you unplugged the combine.
Shovelling out the bottom of a flat bottomed barley bin was an initiation for new farm hands on a hot day.
@@gavinperry7237 then again look at the crops Mike harvests... most combines are tested with soybeans and corn. Try going through lentils, flax, or a tough crop and find out how it does; some crops can be very unforgiving in certain conditions.
Good luck combining your 2024 crops
Thank you
Hello. my son see your video and he want to ask you. Is this harvester expensive?
We need ross cam
Anyone who can't adjust gets rust and then bite's the dust Imma Kid Rock got more money then Matchbox 20 I get more ass then mark McGrath
Just call your buddy Ron with Hartung farms he’s the X-9 expert