💥 Another terrific video of your Honduras adventures doing Gods work. Really enjoy this series. Nice box blade work Tim. Great camera and editing work Christy. *Keep on tractoring!*
Tim and Christy your work in service to those in need are refreshing especially during these trying times. Shinning a light on the mission in Honduras are much needed.
My wife and I went to Honduras with Happy Feet Missions group several years ago to wash feet, give the new socks/shoes and share the gospel with children at schools in the high country. Thank you for sharing this video on UA-cam! What a great way to help and share the gospel with the Honduras people! Thank you and God Bless!
box blades are awesome one of my favorite attachments. having a top and tilt will really speed up the learning curve. set up is key! you have to have a solid starting point. my video setting up a boxblade will really help speed up the learning curve. its awesome to see you all over there being a blessing to Gods people.
Help a little? Poppycock! It was a huge help, in both farms, for all the guys, the roads, the tractor and Gator, it was a huge blessing and will benefit all of us for years to come!
This has been a great series. It has really showcased just how much work one of these tiny tractors can do. And yes, a bigger tractor would do most of these jobs faster...in the places where the bigger tractor could fit. But y'all have been putting this tractor into some tight spots where the bigger tractors just won't go to showcase that value and then using it to tackle the typical big tractor jobs as well.
Hey Tim: The true definition of an expert: EX is a has been.... and a SPIRT is a drip under pressure. Always worked like that in the auto industry. Great series. Thanks.
Christy and Tim really spoiled us with this adventurous series. Next time, I expect to see Sherpas on a turbo 1038X hauling supplies to Everest Basecamp.
Okay! Okay! I just ordered the hooks/clevis combo, shackles, drill bit and deburr tool for my 25R. And I used TTWT at checkout. I've been meaning to do this for months so thanks for the nudge. 👍
Nice to see you finally become a box blade convert. It will also be interesting to see what the folks down there do with the road now that they've seen what can be done with Bombin and a box blade. Hopefully they'll send you some updates.
"Mucho bueno" ha ha! It really is great to see you gaining appreciation for the box blade. I have found mine to be very forgiving and flexible, and there are MANY things I can do with it that I can not do as quickly or as easily with a front-end loader.
Love these series. These people know how to get the job done with what they have. I am so spoiled. Thanks to Christy for the camera work and putting all together to tell this story. I just didn’t hear Kenton laughing enough.
one of the first add ons i got for my tractor. i watched an episode years ago where you showed them. one of the best investment modifications you can do. Got a stepper bit too, made it really easy.
I work a steep road on a 70 foot drop off with my tractor. The first thing I do is fasten my seat belt! I am also very cautious with the tractor brakes. If one side grabs you can find yourself in a deadly situation. I was holding my breath watching Tim relying on the tractor brakes to prevent him from going over the side. Crazy!
Ding Ding! That is even Biblical, right? "A prophet is without honor in his hometown". I guess Honduras is more than 50 miles, so we're good on this one!
Tim. You get considerably more upward pulling force with the 3 point hitch. I often have used a strap and pulled up posts with the hook on the quick hitch.
Glad to see you starting to appreciate the box blade Tim. Honestly I think the tool you need for that job would be a good rear scrape blade. I think in general a good rear blade is underappreciated. For your scenario a blade would be the best tool. You could pitch the one corner down and angle it out to dig your ditch and windrow the dirt to the low side. However doing good with what you have 👍
I've used deburing tools before. Different brands but, all did the same thing. They are a huge time saver and can be a life saver if you've ever seen a bad bur cut get ignored.
Oh nice, just learned your a software guy like me that loves tractors! I don’t have a box blade but I have a buddy that needs to use one so I might pick one up to practice
Tim I stumbled upon your channel comparing tractors bc I am searching for perfect work horse. I hated John Deere mainly bc they had all this proprietary items and made you go to the dealership for everything, wouldn’t let farmers work on their own equipment or anything but now I’m finding it hard for other companies to compete . I’m in love with the 1025R 😂 you and all your dang reasoning and logic .! 😅. Thank you for all your information! I work 11 hours a day. I have my ear buds in listening to your video 98% of the time. There were a few moments where I was like oh hey wait I wana see so sneek my phone out to peek 😂.
Thanks for listening! Hope you can ‘watch’ more in the future, as the visual of these machines working is even more addicting! Glad to see you have moved beyond the rhetoric to see the REAL functionality and practicality of the 1025r.
A crew cab long bed super duty is like driving a school bus sometimes (trust me, I know!) - not a great turning radius. Great of you to lend a hand and some expertise.
Great video Tim and Christy! Awesome work showing them how a 1025r can help in their work. Tim do you think a ventrec would do just as good a job or would it be limited in some situations there?
Great video I have a question I need a post hole augar for a jd1023e, will the 650 tractor supply cat 1 work or do I have to use the tractor supply 400 model for cat 0 Thanks.
Watching you install both the hooks and the bolt on hitch - you did not tighten the bolts to nearly a high enough toque. Bolts do not carry load in shear, they clamp the surfaces together and carry the load through friction. Your ratchet handle isn't nearly long enough for the size of hardware used, even if it weren't Grade 8. If you want the hardware to last you need to look up the torque spec and use it. If you cannot find a proper torque wrench you can estimate - 100 ft-lbs of torque would be 50 pounds of pull on a 2 foot handle. If you have the crew go back with a breaker bar and a piece of pipe you will greatly extend the life of the new parts. It might make an interesting segment when you are home - tighten some larger capscrews (1/2, 5/8, Grade 5) by hand. Then use a torque wrench and see how much more force is needed.
I would be interested in hearing if this was delivered from the US, or if money was sent so it could be bought locally? If exported to Honduras, what was that process like?
Tim I just saw your video I have some ideas that you should try you need to cry to use the Box blade in reverse and use it like a dozer You will end up breaking your scarf fires off the very light duty, The reverse action that I explained earlier Putting it in reverse Putting it in reverse Pushing the dirt Using Johnny as the weight and the molettum you can move a lot of dirt
you need rock base like class 2 or it will allllllll wash away in the first good heavy rain. lessons learned from cutting paths thru forrest with similar soil type along the mississippi river. if you dig it about 6" down into the hill with trench sides it will hold up better, but there is still the wash out problem, but it's easier to repair bringing all the material back up the road, rather than losing it down the side of the slope. losing it on the slope some one will try and push their luck and end up going down the slope in a vehicle and alot of those slopes are lethal before they can recover from their mistake if they don't get hung up at a slow speed first.
yep. mentioned in the first episode. threads are stripped, and it has been 'wallered out' such that there is not an easy way to fix it. Ideas....that would work in Honduras?
@@TractorTimewithTim have a broken tape measure? Take small part and place in hole like a role pin then force thread the bolt on/in. It will ruin the threads but I'm guessing they already are on both sides.
Good coffee must be grown at high elevations. The soil on the side of these mountains is amazing. I don’t see how it stays on the side of the mountain without sliding off. Watch the first and second episodes of this series to see what I am discussing.
They could make concrete wheel weights by simply pouring them in-situ in the wheels. ua-cam.com/video/WJjSMR51Ntw/v-deo.html ua-cam.com/video/WJjSMR51Ntw/v-deo.html
Hello Tim and family…I made my own bolt on hooks for my gc2310 . The only thing I set up different is I put a 3rd hook in the center..as well as a D ring inside the bucket that lines up with the bolt pattern of the upper hook . Lifting heavy stuff dead center makes the stress equal on the loader arms and keeps the tractor more stable when lifting…less chance of lifting up a rear tire as you experienced in your video . I use the D ring often as well…especially when using ratchet straps…as the hooks on the strap connect to the ring . And tho it hasn’t happened (yet lol) should a strap break…under force…it’s more likely to aim inside the bucket like a catchers mitt . Just food for thought
@@TractorTimewithTim you are correct to an extent…the lifting capabilities of these subcompact tractors does not exceed the strength or construction of the bucket . I’ve used the center hook for the majority of all my lifting going on 5 years…there is zero fatigue or trace of bending whatsoever…and I have more than exceeded its design . When you lift off center it causes the loader arms to flex and twist…eventually you will end up with cracks where the welds are…uneven loader arms or a bucket that no longer sits flat on the ground
@@chrissterling3225 I used the two holes already in my bucket. I used those for the inside hole in each of my bolt on hooks and drilled a new hole for the outside of the hook mount. That way I can loop my chain around the two hooks with the chain grab hook positioned in the center of the loop. That way I get an even pull but the narrow loop does not put much side force on the hooks.
Another great video from Honduras! We are very happy to see the stuff we sent will be helpful to all the workers there.
Thanks again, great stuff that will help us for a long time to come!
💥 Another terrific video of your Honduras adventures doing Gods work. Really enjoy this series. Nice box blade work Tim. Great camera and editing work Christy.
*Keep on tractoring!*
Tim and Christy your work in service to those in need are refreshing especially during these trying times. Shinning a light on the mission in Honduras are much needed.
My wife and I went to Honduras with Happy Feet Missions group several years ago to wash feet, give the new socks/shoes and share the gospel with children at schools in the high country. Thank you for sharing this video on UA-cam! What a great way to help and share the gospel with the Honduras people! Thank you and God Bless!
Hope you were able to catch all 4 episodes!
@@TractorTimewithTim I will watch them all. And I will buy some coffee from there 😃
box blades are awesome one of my favorite attachments. having a top and tilt will really speed up the learning curve. set up is key! you have to have a solid starting point. my video setting up a boxblade will really help speed up the learning curve. its awesome to see you all over there being a blessing to Gods people.
Hey Dave!
@@TractorTimewithTim love you guys! so proud of your achievements!
Y’all are doing a great work for the Lord. Thank y’all.
Help a little? Poppycock! It was a huge help, in both farms, for all the guys, the roads, the tractor and Gator, it was a huge blessing and will benefit all of us for years to come!
Get ready for that livestream! Tuesday Feb 7 @7pm! Get your makeup on! :-)
This has been a great series. It has really showcased just how much work one of these tiny tractors can do. And yes, a bigger tractor would do most of these jobs faster...in the places where the bigger tractor could fit. But y'all have been putting this tractor into some tight spots where the bigger tractors just won't go to showcase that value and then using it to tackle the typical big tractor jobs as well.
Hey Tim:
The true definition of an expert: EX is a has been.... and a SPIRT is a drip under pressure. Always worked like that in the auto industry. Great series. Thanks.
Christy and Tim really spoiled us with this adventurous series. Next time, I expect to see Sherpas on a turbo 1038X hauling supplies to Everest Basecamp.
Ha! Thanks Tom!
LETS GET STARTED . Thanks Tim for another video
Okay! Okay! I just ordered the hooks/clevis combo, shackles, drill bit and deburr tool for my 25R. And I used TTWT at checkout. I've been meaning to do this for months so thanks for the nudge. 👍
Thanks Bert! We appreciate it!
What a wonderful adventure filled with friends, family, fun, and service to the glory of the Lord! Blessings to all!
Nice to see you finally become a box blade convert. It will also be interesting to see what the folks down there do with the road now that they've seen what can be done with Bombin and a box blade. Hopefully they'll send you some updates.
"Mucho bueno" ha ha!
It really is great to see you gaining appreciation for the box blade. I have found mine to be very forgiving and flexible, and there are MANY things I can do with it that I can not do as quickly or as easily with a front-end loader.
Love these series. These people know how to get the job done with what they have. I am so spoiled. Thanks to Christy for the camera work and putting all together to tell this story. I just didn’t hear Kenton laughing enough.
Thanks Tim. I was having too much fun!. Ja ja ja ja ja! (That’s ha ha ha ha in Spanish😂 )
Love my bolt on hooks. I keep a chain on my ROPS at all times, and it comes in handy all the time.
one of the first add ons i got for my tractor. i watched an episode years ago where you showed them. one of the best investment modifications you can do. Got a stepper bit too, made it really easy.
Enjoying this series. Just ordered some coffee and a mug. 😁
Thanks!
Enjoyed seeing you all doing God's work. Everyone is doing a great job working together. Praying for you all. Hope you all have a blessed week
I work a steep road on a 70 foot drop off with my tractor. The first thing I do is fasten my seat belt! I am also very cautious with the tractor brakes. If one side grabs you can find yourself in a deadly situation. I was holding my breath watching Tim relying on the tractor brakes to prevent him from going over the side. Crazy!
Tim, I was always told to be a expert you had to be 50 miles from home.
Good job, nice video
Ding Ding! That is even Biblical, right? "A prophet is without honor in his hometown". I guess Honduras is more than 50 miles, so we're good on this one!
I’m so impressed with this organization and how much you have helped! Please share how we can donate!
Tim. You get considerably more upward pulling force with the 3 point hitch. I often have used a strap and pulled up posts with the hook on the quick hitch.
Tim and Christy I have really enjoyed these series of videos great job guys.👍🙂
Great mission Tim! Just bought some coffee to support!
God bless
And buy a box blade fir Johnny! Go west coast!
Nice work. Handy implement the box blade. Thank you
BB has been my tool of choice. It is on every tractor almost exclusively. Works great as ballast too
The official definition of an expert is a has been drip under pressure! 🤣 Ex = has been, spurt = drip under pressure.....
Spreading the gospel. That's awesome !
Glad to see you starting to appreciate the box blade Tim. Honestly I think the tool you need for that job would be a good rear scrape blade. I think in general a good rear blade is underappreciated. For your scenario a blade would be the best tool. You could pitch the one corner down and angle it out to dig your ditch and windrow the dirt to the low side. However doing good with what you have 👍
Great video, great ideas. We always enjoy your channel!
Always enjoy your channel!
Great job guys. I know the coffee is great!
I've used deburing tools before. Different brands but, all did the same thing. They are a huge time saver and can be a life saver if you've ever seen a bad bur cut get ignored.
Awesome job!
Great series! You've helped and taught them a lot!
Hey Tim, could the box blade be angled down on the high side to help cut down faster? Does that small tractor have the capability?
Oh nice, just learned your a software guy like me that loves tractors! I don’t have a box blade but I have a buddy that needs to use one so I might pick one up to practice
BOXBLADE with Tim 😂
Tim I stumbled upon your channel comparing tractors bc I am searching for perfect work horse. I hated John Deere mainly bc they had all this proprietary items and made you go to the dealership for everything, wouldn’t let farmers work on their own equipment or anything but now I’m finding it hard for other companies to compete . I’m in love with the 1025R 😂 you and all your dang reasoning and logic .! 😅. Thank you for all your information! I work 11 hours a day. I have my ear buds in listening to your video 98% of the time. There were a few moments where I was like oh hey wait I wana see so sneek my phone out to peek 😂.
Thanks for listening! Hope you can ‘watch’ more in the future, as the visual of these machines working is even more addicting!
Glad to see you have moved beyond the rhetoric to see the REAL functionality and practicality of the 1025r.
Great series helping out 👍
Really enjoying the content!
Thanks Chad! You’ve got an amazing family!
sharing the love of Christ by showing the love of Christ .......exactly the way God instructed us to do it !!!!
and great tractor use as well 😀😀😀
We really enjoyed this trip, Don. Would be hard for us to find a mission opportunity more suited to our skills/passions.
@@TractorTimewithTim there really is joy in serving Jesus 😄😄
lol...I'm a sys admin in a fairly complex IT environment. I mostly support Rhel based servers. Your take on "expert" is so true!
Not big on live streams but I have enjoyed this series. May try to tune in for this one
Always heard on double wall bucket it’s best to weld , drilling can allow moisture inside and start rusting.
I put one of those heavy hitch 2" hitches on my BX1880 and really helped.
A crew cab long bed super duty is like driving a school bus sometimes (trust me, I know!) - not a great turning radius. Great of you to lend a hand and some expertise.
Great video Tim and Christy! Awesome work showing them how a 1025r can help in their work. Tim do you think a ventrec would do just as good a job or would it be limited in some situations there?
Hard to say. Would be much better on the hills, but they don’t need some of the functionality that Ventrac specializes in. ..like mowing.
@@TractorTimewithTim yeah. I was thinking more of the power rake and bucket and a box blade for the back.
A steering wheel spinner would be a great tool to send them. I'd hate to not have mine.
Great video I have a question I need a post hole augar for a jd1023e, will the 650 tractor supply cat 1 work or do I have to use the tractor supply 400 model for cat 0
Thanks.
My coffee arrived today
As Kenton would say: “Cool Beans!”
I hope you enjoy it!
Very Good
Take more of the top side out for the turn so they can turn right some and then hard left.
Fyi I'm not getting notifications grim y'all anymore. I did have the bell rung lol. Not sure what you can do but I do want to let you know. God bless
Double check the bell is clicked. That’s all we k is to so. Sorry.
Will you be naming that road after their tractor? Maybe, Little Bombean Hill?
I’m still enjoying this series, but did I just watch you bury a work glove at the 12:15 mark? 😂
Hmm. I dunno. I can’t tell on my phone.
Dave had work gloves…this was the last day. I’ll have to ask if he lost one!
Watching you install both the hooks and the bolt on hitch - you did not tighten the bolts to nearly a high enough toque. Bolts do not carry load in shear, they clamp the surfaces together and carry the load through friction. Your ratchet handle isn't nearly long enough for the size of hardware used, even if it weren't Grade 8. If you want the hardware to last you need to look up the torque spec and use it. If you cannot find a proper torque wrench you can estimate - 100 ft-lbs of torque would be 50 pounds of pull on a 2 foot handle. If you have the crew go back with a breaker bar and a piece of pipe you will greatly extend the life of the new parts. It might make an interesting segment when you are home - tighten some larger capscrews (1/2, 5/8, Grade 5) by hand. Then use a torque wrench and see how much more force is needed.
I would be interested in hearing if this was delivered from the US, or if money was sent so it could be bought locally? If exported to Honduras, what was that process like?
Was shipped in a container from Indiana. I do not know the details. Tune into our live stream Tue Feb 7 7pm EST. We can ask Felipe then. Ok?
@@TractorTimewithTim Sounds like fun! Link on your channel page?
We’ll publish a link closer to the time.
Tim I just saw your video I have some ideas that you should try you need to cry to use the Box blade in reverse and use it like a dozer You will end up breaking your scarf fires off the very light duty, The reverse action that I explained earlier Putting it in reverse Putting it in reverse Pushing the dirt Using Johnny as the weight and the molettum you can move a lot of dirt
you need rock base like class 2 or it will allllllll wash away in the first good heavy rain. lessons learned from cutting paths thru forrest with similar soil type along the mississippi river.
if you dig it about 6" down into the hill with trench sides it will hold up better, but there is still the wash out problem, but it's easier to repair bringing all the material back up the road, rather than losing it down the side of the slope. losing it on the slope some one will try and push their luck and end up going down the slope in a vehicle and alot of those slopes are lethal before they can recover from their mistake if they don't get hung up at a slow speed first.
Do they have anything like RimGuard in Honduras? It would be beneficial for them given the terrain.
This tractor has rimguard in the rears. Got it while still in Indiana.
Do you think you could start a go fund me and see if we all can raise enough to get them a set of pallet forks!!?
Any liquid can be a cutting oil. It isn't a lubricant, it is a coolant. Of course the "wetter" the coolant, the better it gets to the heat.
If you think little tractors are stupid, you need to spend more time with a shovel and a pick haha
Re-watch/listen. He said this in past tense.
I was once told that a professor said that an expert is an unknown spurt of water🤔
I have heard a similar definition: Ex is a has been, “spurt” is a drip under pressure 😉
Can you do a comparison of the 1025r vs BX vs work master 25 vs Massey Ferguson!
Maybe even kioti!
I feel like those are the most popular tractors
I have done in depth 1025r vs BX. Have you seen it? 11 episodes.
The others you mention are not even close.
An expert is somebody that drives from 30 miles away or more to do the job.
👍
And a Chevy needs an even larger turning area.
hey Tim your missing a bolt for the front left rim!
yep. mentioned in the first episode. threads are stripped, and it has been 'wallered out' such that there is not an easy way to fix it. Ideas....that would work in Honduras?
@@TractorTimewithTim have a broken tape measure? Take small part and place in hole like a role pin then force thread the bolt on/in. It will ruin the threads but I'm guessing they already are on both sides.
could be drilled out and tapped for the next larger size
Is the awful terrain better suited to grow these crops, or is it just plain less valuable land?
Good coffee must be grown at high elevations.
The soil on the side of these mountains is amazing. I don’t see how it stays on the side of the mountain without sliding off.
Watch the first and second episodes of this series to see what I am discussing.
They could make concrete wheel weights by simply pouring them in-situ in the wheels. ua-cam.com/video/WJjSMR51Ntw/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/WJjSMR51Ntw/v-deo.html
Danger one side loading a tractor loader is a good way to wreck a loader boom always keep the load evenly placed in the center of the bucket
Come over here to the Philippines and help me dig a pond with my yanmar ym357a with a front loader your more then welcome to my friend
That would be fun!
No seat belt with the rops up on that surface. Think about your family brother....
Hello Tim and family…I made my own bolt on hooks for my gc2310 . The only thing I set up different is I put a 3rd hook in the center..as well as a D ring inside the bucket that lines up with the bolt pattern of the upper hook . Lifting heavy stuff dead center makes the stress equal on the loader arms and keeps the tractor more stable when lifting…less chance of lifting up a rear tire as you experienced in your video .
I use the D ring often as well…especially when using ratchet straps…as the hooks on the strap connect to the ring . And tho it hasn’t happened (yet lol) should a strap break…under force…it’s more likely to aim inside the bucket like a catchers mitt . Just food for thought
The center of the bucket is the weakest point. That is why we avoid it.
@@TractorTimewithTim you are correct to an extent…the lifting capabilities of these subcompact tractors does not exceed the strength or construction of the bucket . I’ve used the center hook for the majority of all my lifting going on 5 years…there is zero fatigue or trace of bending whatsoever…and I have more than exceeded its design . When you lift off center it causes the loader arms to flex and twist…eventually you will end up with cracks where the welds are…uneven loader arms or a bucket that no longer sits flat on the ground
@@chrissterling3225 I used the two holes already in my bucket. I used those for the inside hole in each of my bolt on hooks and drilled a new hole for the outside of the hook mount. That way I can loop my chain around the two hooks with the chain grab hook positioned in the center of the loop. That way I get an even pull but the narrow loop does not put much side force on the hooks.
Yawn zzzzzzzz frrrp scratch scratch