Interesting watching these wheat harvest videos and how they go in all directions. I’m used to row crops where everything is combined in straight lines! Awesome Gleaners you don’t see those very often.
Good video Mike. I like seeing a variety of combines, tillage tractors, sprayers, etc. on your channel. You and Jason over at BTP continually show us a lot of things from around the country. Thanks for sharing!
Miles and miles of flat land and they still end up running in circles around the field... I guess there is no such thing as a square field. Thanks Mike. Great stuff as usual.
These guys have been custom cutters for a while.i meet them in Madison SD in 1997 ,I was driving for Forrest Tupper at the time.first time I saw a rotary gleaner in action.
Sure beats the N5 we had back in the 1980's on our farm! Love how the unloading auger swings out too. What is the rye in this field is it the yellow color? Also, they were moving kind of slow in some spots, the wheat was laying down and some areas it looked like it was feeding kind of heavy into the throat of the combine. Thanks for another great video!
Never see gleaners in my area but I like them. The guy who farms the field behind my house has the same grain cart. He pulls his with a JD 8285r on 38" spacing rice and cane duals.
They’ve come a long way from the Gs we ran years ago. Oklahoma isn’t as flat as most think. Everything we farm is covered with terraces. I like them, at least you get to finish something once in a while. Lol
Thanks for getting some Gleaner footage. Was beginning to think that Deere harvested all the wheat this year. Any crews running a Versatile RT520 this year?
Hi, greetings from Poland :) when i am watching harvesting from USA or Canada, I noticed that most of farmers use Macdone headers. What is the reason that you use more often headers from that company rather than headers from original manufacturers of combines? Are they really much better?
@7:00 mark...what in the world is he doing cutting like that in the middle of the field? lol They cut wheat a funny way. Looks hot and dry the way the countryside looks. Reminds me of watching Australian wheat harvest videos
Doesnt really matter as the sickle cuts it in any direction, some guys go diagonal to their bean rows to use the sickle sections more evenly instead of the same sections doing all the cutting as can happen following rows
They always have been. Simple and solid. Used to work with our neighbor and his NH TR97 with our L2 which we ordered with the big motor and bin extensions big tires blah...he was running a CAT and although he could get through a little faster the Cleaner always produced the cleanest samples and was never in the shop like his NH. Not sure CAT engines worked out well. Drank fuel and just weren't cut out for 100 degree 16 hour days for weeks. Could have been the owner. Goofball installed PRWD by himself. Not that he ever got stuck.
These are the standard length auger. They need to add an extension like most combines. You have to get aftermarket as Gleaner only offers this length of the 6,7,8 series combines.
The combine can kick some of the rye out(a red one can). But they will likely be docked for it at when they go to sell it because there is so much rye in it. When they go to the coop they sample the seed and with that sample they check for things like rye, cheat, etc. they will grade the load and dock on the amount of impurities in the sample. This guy needs to rotate his crops because that is starting to become a lot of rye. At least up here in Gods country(Kansas) we would call that a lot of Rye.
The gleaners have less moving parts and are easier to work on . They also provide a very clean sample . We have started out with gleaners then case now we run 2 s790 johndeere combines. We farm 5800 acres plus custom farm for others. The deere and case machines can run 45 foot heads with great capacity that's why we run deere but the newer gleaner s 95 - 98 machines can run larger heads with decent capacity. We might switch back in the next couple of years. Our combines cover about 8000 acres each every year so we get new machines ever 2 seasons .
@@anthonybanda8192 Gleaner will be coming with a new transverse in '22, so if I were going to go back to gleaner I would get the '21 model's and then trade for new ones in '24.... let them work the bugs out.
@@gleanerman2195 I personally am looking at a s98 right now . We normally run 2 machines but a third machine would help us with custom farming. I farm 900 acres myself besides my family's 5800 .I have a deal in the works on a 2019 model with under 450 hours it was a demo unit with an extended unload Auger and 40 foot draper head .
@@anthonybanda8192 You will like the longer unloader, we put one on ours, makes a big difference with a 40 footer. Rotor set-up can make a big difference in beans, in corn stock rotor with only mild tweaking works. We have ran six class 7's and two class 8's, right now we have 2 S77's and one S97. As for heads we run 35ft. macdon's on our 77's and 40ft. dynaflex on the 97. Be glad to answer any questions if you have any.
FRANCE ==== AGCO IDEAL MASSEY FERGUSON 25 machines test sous hangar 12 14 m de coupe ville VESOUL HAUTE SAONE EST FRANCE ( DIJON BELFORT ) Distribution dans toute L'EUROPE CORDIALEMENT ...... JOSEPH merci pour ces GLEANER !
Any combine will throw it out the back if you don't set it right. I have seen fields of all makes of combines that have done this. But people just can't get over the silver seeder joke from years ago and I'm guessing most that make the joke never ran a Gleaner.
@@farmhandmike Just a Deere guy having a little fun. Quite a few people around us used to have f2's and stuff years ago but everyone moved on because of no dealer support. Also a friend of ours demo either a s7 or s9 a few years back and it didn't make it through the demo had way to many problems. But it's all in good fun as long as you take care of them they will take care of you. Unless it's red or blue and there is no fixing that lol
Thank you for posting that video. That is my brother and sure am proud of the work he does. Go Gleaner!
I use to work for Greg about 20 years ago it was a experience of a lifetime I think of them allot
Enjoy your videos Mike, no music so we can feel like we are there in the paddock, just how I like it 👍🇦🇺
Interesting watching these wheat harvest videos and how they go in all directions. I’m used to row crops where everything is combined in straight lines! Awesome Gleaners you don’t see those very often.
What a beautiful machine, what a good looking combine, the best looking one around with the Fendt in close second place
I really like that Cleaner applies the less is more idea top to bottom. simplicity but durability to the decals.
Good video Mike. I like seeing a variety of combines, tillage tractors, sprayers, etc. on your channel. You and Jason over at BTP continually show us a lot of things from around the country. Thanks for sharing!
Awesome! Cherokee is where we're from. Finished our wheat a couple weeks ago...
Miles and miles of flat land and they still end up running in circles around the field... I guess there is no such thing as a square field. Thanks Mike. Great stuff as usual.
These guys have been custom cutters for a while.i meet them in Madison SD in 1997 ,I was driving for Forrest Tupper at the time.first time I saw a rotary gleaner in action.
Awesome vid👍great to see two Gleaners harvesting wheat with difficult wind.
Great video Mike, it looks like they had a bunch of volunteer rye come up in their wheat crop. I guess they can always sell it for livestock feed.
Glad to see a Video og Gleaner Combines.
Love to see Gleaners work.
Thanks for the Gleaner show Mike takes me back to the day of the Ms and Ls. How many acer field was that
Can't beat Gleaner Combines
Great video Mike!
Sure beats the N5 we had back in the 1980's on our farm! Love how the unloading auger swings out too. What is the rye in this field is it the yellow color? Also, they were moving kind of slow in some spots, the wheat was laying down and some areas it looked like it was feeding kind of heavy into the throat of the combine. Thanks for another great video!
Never see gleaners in my area but I like them. The guy who farms the field behind my house has the same grain cart. He pulls his with a JD 8285r on 38" spacing rice and cane duals.
Nothing beats gleaner combines
Great video Mike!! Thanks for sharing!
Great video Mike. Keep up the great work!
Cool to see some silver combines working😉👍
Good work Mike !
hi farmhand mike ,do you have any specs or models on the super gleaner wheat harvesters and the row crop machines ,great viewing as always,thumbs up
They’ve come a long way from the Gs we ran years ago. Oklahoma isn’t as flat as most think. Everything we farm is covered with terraces. I like them, at least you get to finish something once in a while. Lol
Folks dont have a clue how hilly parts of western ok can be
The terraces are for preventing erosion.
Reminds me of heavy black grass infestations here in the UK. Yield-sapping.
Bout time ya find some real combines
Wesley & Beverly Martin lol
Awsome gleaner! Large heads
Thanks for getting some Gleaner footage. Was beginning to think that Deere harvested all the wheat this year. Any crews running a Versatile RT520 this year?
Hope to catch up with some RT520's later this season.
Whats your yields looking like?
Time for some 2 gene varieties to help knock back the rye.
Good work🤠👍
Hi, greetings from Poland :) when i am watching harvesting from USA or Canada, I noticed that most of farmers use Macdone headers. What is the reason that you use more often headers from that company rather than headers from original manufacturers of combines? Are they really much better?
*Cough*
*Cough*
Yes, pretty dusty...😉👍🏻
@7:00 mark...what in the world is he doing cutting like that in the middle of the field? lol They cut wheat a funny way. Looks hot and dry the way the countryside looks. Reminds me of watching Australian wheat harvest videos
He is cutting out a terrace in the field. At 7:52 you see how steep it gets and the combine is really tilting driving along it.
Great awesome video mike, love that gleaner combine
Is there a particular reason why the harvester is running 90 degrees to the direction the wheat was planted in?
Doesnt really matter as the sickle cuts it in any direction, some guys go diagonal to their bean rows to use the sickle sections more evenly instead of the same sections doing all the cutting as can happen following rows
I didn't know that there's a market for suckatash...i have watched some of the gleaner videos.. Seem to be impressive machines
They always have been. Simple and solid. Used to work with our neighbor and his NH TR97 with our L2 which we ordered with the big motor and bin extensions big tires blah...he was running a CAT and although he could get through a little faster the Cleaner always produced the cleanest samples and was never in the shop like his NH. Not sure CAT engines worked out well. Drank fuel and just weren't cut out for 100 degree 16 hour days for weeks. Could have been the owner. Goofball installed PRWD by himself. Not that he ever got stuck.
Nice video as always! Has the combine too wide header or too short unloading auger? Seems dangerous to drive that close to the combine 😎
These are the standard length auger. They need to add an extension like most combines. You have to get aftermarket as Gleaner only offers this length of the 6,7,8 series combines.
What's with all the turns in the field... All I see is flat land??
Terraces. It looks flat but they are cutting around a lot of terraces.
Unloading auger could do with being couple of feet longer. I bet operators were glad to be out of this crop.
Nhìn máy giống xe đua quá vậy
I love the Video Mike and Also on my UA-cam Channel i have a video of me cutting Wheat here in Kansas
👍
Can someone plz tell me why they run in such strange patterns? Seems almost they are trying to make crop circles for the aliens.
Doesn't all of that rye lower the value of the wheat? Or is this just for cattle feed?
That's what I was wondering.....
I used to harvest wheat with no cab back in the day, horrible job.
Silver Seeders in action!!! LOL
So why are they doing crop circles?
With the rye in the wheat the mill wouldn't like that would they ??? Lol
They only dock it if it's above a certain percentage.
what's it testing
How wide are the McDon heads?
40 foot most likely
How to they separate the rye out of the wheat?
The combine can kick some of the rye out(a red one can). But they will likely be docked for it at when they go to sell it because there is so much rye in it.
When they go to the coop they sample the seed and with that sample they check for things like rye, cheat, etc. they will grade the load and dock on the amount of impurities in the sample.
This guy needs to rotate his crops because that is starting to become a lot of rye. At least up here in Gods country(Kansas) we would call that a lot of Rye.
Is that famous "silver seeder"? Why people call it that?
P8.5 because they’re idiots
Is a gleaner better then a Deer or a Case IH?
Can't say one way or the other, we just prefer them.
The gleaners have less moving parts and are easier to work on . They also provide a very clean sample . We have started out with gleaners then case now we run 2 s790 johndeere combines. We farm 5800 acres plus custom farm for others. The deere and case machines can run 45 foot heads with great capacity that's why we run deere but the newer gleaner s 95 - 98 machines can run larger heads with decent capacity. We might switch back in the next couple of years. Our combines cover about 8000 acres each every year so we get new machines ever 2 seasons .
@@anthonybanda8192 Gleaner will be coming with a new transverse in '22, so if I were going to go back to gleaner I would get the '21 model's and then trade for new ones in '24.... let them work the bugs out.
@@gleanerman2195 I personally am looking at a s98 right now . We normally run 2 machines but a third machine would help us with custom farming. I farm 900 acres myself besides my family's 5800 .I have a deal in the works on a 2019 model with under 450 hours it was a demo unit with an extended unload Auger and 40 foot draper head .
@@anthonybanda8192 You will like the longer unloader, we put one on ours, makes a big difference with a 40 footer. Rotor set-up can make a big difference in beans, in corn stock rotor with only mild tweaking works. We have ran six class 7's and two class 8's, right now we have 2 S77's and one S97. As for heads we run 35ft. macdon's on our 77's and 40ft. dynaflex on the 97. Be glad to answer any questions if you have any.
👍👏👏👏
the drivers pissed
I'd sure hate to go to that much expense and work, only to harvest a field of contaminated grain, that will go , "sample grade, or livestock feed".!
section 8 we do it all the time in western Canada, growing feed wheat, barley, oats and other crops.
Only a single grain cart to keep up with those two monster combines?
They're cutting wheat in Oklahoma, not shelling corn in Iowa. Not handling near the bushels.
✌️✌️✌️
FRANCE ==== AGCO IDEAL MASSEY FERGUSON 25 machines test sous hangar 12 14 m de coupe ville VESOUL HAUTE SAONE EST FRANCE ( DIJON BELFORT ) Distribution dans toute L'EUROPE CORDIALEMENT ...... JOSEPH merci pour ces GLEANER !
A'lot of videos lately with galvanized seed casters lol
?
@@growinguponthefarm7752 Gleaners used to made out of galvanized steel and seed caster because it throws it out the back
Any combine will throw it out the back if you don't set it right. I have seen fields of all makes of combines that have done this. But people just can't get over the silver seeder joke from years ago and I'm guessing most that make the joke never ran a Gleaner.
@@farmhandmike Just a Deere guy having a little fun. Quite a few people around us used to have f2's and stuff years ago but everyone moved on because of no dealer support. Also a friend of ours demo either a s7 or s9 a few years back and it didn't make it through the demo had way to many problems. But it's all in good fun as long as you take care of them they will take care of you. Unless it's red or blue and there is no fixing that lol
Chad Justice time for a new joke. It’s run it’s course over the last few... decades.