The Ole 760 Massy

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  • čas přidán 27. 09. 2020
  • ** The year wouldn't be complete without firing up the Ole 760 Massy combine and doing a little ride along while she is cutting some crop. She was a beast of a combine in her day. For comparisons with the Fendt IDEAL, check out theses videos from last year.
    ** • Massy Ferguson 760
    ** • David vs Goliath
    ** Just a reminder that this CZcams thing is quite delayed - due to the amount of videos I have recorded.. Haha 🤷‍♂️ So for more real time updates, follow me on Patreon.
    You guys are awesome! 🙂
    www.patreon.com/bePatron?u=25...

Komentáře • 502

  • @geroldherrick2159
    @geroldherrick2159 Před 3 lety +151

    i am 80 years old and this video made tears come to my eyes. when i was young , my father started with a massey 82 to a super 92 than a 410 then a 510 than a 760 than an 860. in 1957 dad worked with massey and mounted a 2 row corn head off of a massey sp corn picker. it dropped the corn on TOP of the cyl. this was on the massey 82. i started work with massey in 1965 as a service man. worked 41 years for massey until they din't keep up with the times. i than went with case/ih.. i live in west central iowa but have a small wheat/soybean farm 9 miles south salina.. love to go down there and show the young guys how to harvest wheat ha ha. i have been known to stop at a harvest and ask if i can run a combine and they say get in and stay 2 to 3 days. when done they say how much do we owe you and i say nothing .these are salt of the earth people, same as you guys. i love your channel and would to see your operation swap harvesting stories

    • @lileti2199
      @lileti2199 Před 3 lety +4

      Thanks for sharing your story sir!

  • @TayebMC
    @TayebMC Před 3 lety +144

    Luv how Mike asks himself questions for us. Thanks Mike

    • @7pdude
      @7pdude Před 3 lety +5

      like he knows whats comping up in the comments anyways ^^

    • @jamesthomas3749
      @jamesthomas3749 Před 3 lety +9

      He is just super in touch with his audiance. 😝🤣

    • @fisherh9111
      @fisherh9111 Před 3 lety +4

      Mike asks all the right questions and he always has the right answer too.

    • @jamesthomas3749
      @jamesthomas3749 Před 3 lety +4

      I love that he always has the right answer to the questions he asks himself. He certainly cant stump himself.

    • @corgraveland4874
      @corgraveland4874 Před 3 lety

      Perfect questions raised by Mike himself with the responses giving perfect insight, thanks for that a bunch👌👍

  • @that_preztel.
    @that_preztel. Před 3 lety +11

    Those 6 cyl. Perkins engines were real workhorses.

  • @clairdenning9062
    @clairdenning9062 Před 3 lety +8

    One of the best combines ever made, and didn't need a service truck at the end of the field like new ones.

  • @jeffc6832
    @jeffc6832 Před 3 lety +17

    Man this video brings back memories. The sound of that Perkins is music to my ears. My Dad bought a 750 new back in the 70s before I was born...the old red cab with the small auger, non-hydro, no radio...but it did have A/C. The cab actually stayed kind of clean if you kept the blower speed up, and it gave you a gentle rain on the really humid days of wheat harvest. We mostly grew corn and soybeans, with only a little bit of wheat...so the tiny little heater got more use that the A/C did up here in MN. We ran a pickup head on it for wheat (also experimented with mustard a few years), a 15-ft flex head and 6 row 1153 corn head. I can remember my Dad jumping out of cab and then walking alongside and behind while it kept going down the field, so that he could see how everything was running and if he needed to make adjustments. I grew up riding in the back of the cab until I was too big to sit up straight without hitting my head on the roof, shortly after that I learned how to drive it. We didn't need alarms, you just listened for noises and felt for vibrations that were different...and they always growled if you were pushing them too hard. Cutting short beans on dry sandy (and hilly) ground with no height control was a stressful experience...you couldn't afford to leave any beans on the ground and Dad made sure we got as much as possible or else we weren't allowed to drive combine. We ended up getting several more used MF'ers over the years and ran them up until 2001 I think.

  • @pdoug1000
    @pdoug1000 Před 3 lety +6

    Helped with Lethbridge area amber durum harvest in 1975 as a 20 year old. When I arrived the boss put me in a super 92. We started most days at 7a.m. and combined til midnight. When the 92 blew a head gasket after about 6 weeks I was put in one of the 750’s. I was in heaven running that combine.It got late that year (Nov.) so a custom combine gang with 6-760’s was hired to help finish. This gang had started in Texas in April and moved north as the crops ripened-about 100 miles/week they said.

    • @rodcody7278
      @rodcody7278 Před 2 lety

      Did it with 4 510s on a harvest crew in 74 hydros grain hogs I'm with ya

  • @GoldenSectionBanned
    @GoldenSectionBanned Před 3 lety +14

    We used to run Gleaner L2’s against the 760’s every year custom cutting at a friends who cropped 7000 acres net Thief River Falls Minnesota. He had 5- 760’s and we had 2 L2 all running 24’ headers in heavy spring wheat up to 70 bushels per acre. We had the same capacity. Once we ran across the fence from an 8820 with a 36’ Macdon and we were all going the same speed. Back up closer to Winnipeg we ran against a 760 with a 24 ‘ head in a thin stand of wheat but it was yielding 40 bushels. We were both going 7 mph but on a half mile run we could lap the Massey after a while because we could boost the speed to 9 mph on the turns and use the wheel brakes to spin the machine on a dime. We were 10000 pounds lighter and that really made a difference. Then in the mid 90’s working NW of Winnipeg my buddy had 10” of rain in August. Water everywhere. I ended up equipping my machine with custom built steel rice paddles like a riverboat bolted to the wheels. I still got stuck 18 times that fall and my buddy 12 lol. He put on RWA because his L2 had Hydro and duals but had to take the duals off because they became a 6’ wall of mud he couldn’t get through. One day he buried his machine to the frame in the middle of the field. We brought out a Steiger and got it stuck. Then a second Steiger got stuck trying to pull out the first. Then a long cable attached to the neighbors Versatile got the Steigers out and finally 2 of them to get the combine out. 9 men 8 hours to get that machine out. Fun times lol!

    • @sheilamclaughlin963
      @sheilamclaughlin963 Před rokem

      If u were keeping up with a 760 or860 u threw over some where because everyone I know that had both or both in the same field named the L correctly as silver seeders

    • @sheilamclaughlin963
      @sheilamclaughlin963 Před rokem

      What the hell did u have in the back of those walkers

    • @GoldenSectionBanned
      @GoldenSectionBanned Před rokem

      You must be thinking of picking up swathed grain versus straight combining. With our 1000’s of hours of experience we never had any excessive loss

  • @Northern_Farmer
    @Northern_Farmer Před 3 lety +17

    I just love the older equipment... I dunno what it is.. its just cool!!

    • @mjberta7319
      @mjberta7319 Před 3 lety +2

      It's cause they are reliable, no electronics, took skill to operate but would go forever and then some, ya they aren't the fastest but you know every farmer has a couple sitting in the back 40 just incase 😂

  • @nigeldavison3004
    @nigeldavison3004 Před 3 lety +109

    The old girl is cutting more than the JD X9 did

  • @jerkerwouters4355
    @jerkerwouters4355 Před 3 lety +69

    Hi Mike, Could you do "a history of the farm" someday? With old images etc.

  • @leesteele9290
    @leesteele9290 Před 3 lety +12

    I grew up on Classey Masseys , grandpa had a 300, then a 410 ,then my dad kinda took over and we had a 510, all that in late sixties to mid seventies then I got involved and we had a white cab 750 then a gray cab 750 then my wife died and I gave up the farming ! Always wanted to have a 760 or an 860but never had the opportunity !! We had a really good Massey dealer in our area and he had I would say a majority share of the market at the time , everybody wanted to have the biggest and Deere and IH were behind !!! Great to see you're hanging on to a little of the past everyone needs a reminder every now and then of where they came from !!!

  • @twistedsteelDK
    @twistedsteelDK Před 3 lety +4

    Hahaha me and my older brother sat on the roof of our dads 860 with .22s picking off coyotes as kids. Hahaha the purrr of that Perkins brings back some memories

  • @edelm6062
    @edelm6062 Před 3 lety +1

    I grew up with a whole series off Massies, 300, 410, 510 then 760. Always worked, just ruggedly reliable. Thanks for the memories.

  • @jasonklabunde6415
    @jasonklabunde6415 Před 3 lety +6

    I ran a 760 in corn and soybeans in the early 90's when I farmed just out of high school. Did my first combining with a 410 in junior high. Brings back some good memories and a few bad ones with breakdowns. Thanks for the video Mike!

  • @stevenwisner6848
    @stevenwisner6848 Před 3 lety +37

    Massey combines didn't throw much grain out the back . They were good combines.

    • @nigelchurch4573
      @nigelchurch4573 Před 3 lety +1

      steven Wisner They didn't throw much out if you set them up right, good old girls..

    • @zaihami5185
      @zaihami5185 Před 3 lety +1

      @@nigelchurch4573 my neighbour still runs a 530 here in Finland and it is the most efficient combine he has had. Gone through many sampo (big manufacturer in finland) and newish claas combine but the 530 still is the best.

    • @sheilamclaughlin963
      @sheilamclaughlin963 Před rokem

      Gotta set any combine and have the brains to slow down, cause of most throw over

  • @kevintrent2779
    @kevintrent2779 Před 3 lety +2

    It's always good to look back, to see where we came from and to appreciate it. Thanks for posting this video

  • @matthewdowd4686
    @matthewdowd4686 Před 3 lety +4

    Fantastic vid mike!! Absolutely loved watching thee ye olde Massey churn through the crop! You got just about every conceivable angle of that machine and the detailed look at the workings, just left me gobsmacked. Well done sir!!

  • @hybridssuck
    @hybridssuck Před 3 lety +1

    Thank you for this video Mike! Really cool that you guys keep that thing around-AND functional!!! The old combines are so simple.

  • @timkelley8775
    @timkelley8775 Před 3 lety +1

    That was awesome Mike. Thank you for showing us that vintage combine.

  • @gordchorney7121
    @gordchorney7121 Před rokem

    My dad started with a super 27, upgrade to a new MF 300, which we still have and it works, and finally dad last combine was a 1977 MF 510 Western special, with air conditioning, I sure miss dad.

  • @andrewshaw1678
    @andrewshaw1678 Před 3 lety +4

    Great video! I worked on a farm in NB with Massey 750 and I can remember that Perkins engine blasting out like your video.

  • @koryleague8833
    @koryleague8833 Před 3 lety +2

    An old 860 was the first combine I ever ran . Cutting wheat. Me and a friend spent alot of time riding on top of that cab. The interior smelled like cigar smoke my friend's dad was never without one. I can smell the diseal. Thanks for sharing mike

  • @whitelightinggaming3737
    @whitelightinggaming3737 Před 3 lety +2

    I loved how at the end you can see an ideal on the road star struck at the old girl.

  • @philipingram1667
    @philipingram1667 Před 3 lety +1

    I cut my teeth on 760 Masseys working for a cutter in 1976 - ours had yellow wheels. They had four machines with 24 foot headers and we thought we were a big outfit cutting 96 feet of summer fallow in MT. LIke the video - keep up the good work

  • @thr8061
    @thr8061 Před 3 lety +2

    When I was a kid, my dad bought a WI dairy farm which had 2 Massey Harris 50 Clipper pull-type combines. One worked and the other was for parts. You had to get close to the gravity box (250bu) because it did not have an unloading auger, but just a 3' flip-down chute! Then my dad just hired the neighbor combine our oats / barley with his JD 7800 (?)

  • @victoriaglass9309
    @victoriaglass9309 Před 3 lety +2

    Love anything Massey Fergerson. We have two old Massey tractors and loved seeing and hearing about the old combine. Thanks Mike!

  • @shiney6756
    @shiney6756 Před 3 lety +3

    What a beautiful old Massey, and sounds absolutely awesome. Great that you keep some of the old stuff around must bring back some great memories. Got to say the straw chopper looked ahead of its time.

  • @purplerunner1715
    @purplerunner1715 Před 3 lety +3

    Great stuff Mike, glad to see the old lady still getting to take a swing in the field

  • @thepizzadevil7392
    @thepizzadevil7392 Před 3 lety +2

    awesome to see those old machines work

  • @rogerembry4777
    @rogerembry4777 Před 3 lety +2

    Love seeing old equipment , reminds me of a little boy growing up watching my uncle farm

  • @original72canuck
    @original72canuck Před 3 lety +1

    Mike thanks for sharing! Oh the memories - as I grew up around the ‘sassy masseys’ as well. First was the 510, then on to the 750 riding along as much as I could in that little cab alcove behind the operator. The first I got to operate for any length of time was one of a pair of 760s which stayed on the farm till I left for college. They were quite popular units in SK back in the day, and probably one of the reasons I went into a professional career in grain harvesting. So it’s great to see ‘Em run again!

  • @lancedever5633
    @lancedever5633 Před 3 lety +5

    I remember when I was a kid my uncles neighbor showed up with his brand new Massy 760. We all thought it was the biggest thing we had seen. There were a lot of them that guys kept going around here since they used them for grass seed. They still like a conventional for grass seed. I agree about the straw walkers. Crawling on those things was torture!

  • @marcodube6464
    @marcodube6464 Před 3 lety +1

    Sure nice to see old equipment working

  • @tommyzoo
    @tommyzoo Před 3 lety +1

    Ohh that engine noise !! Love it. The clackety sound from the side of the combine takes me back to the days with the little 500 series combine we used on the farm I worked on. Days that seemed endless, hot and dusty.
    Wonderful video of what was a bedroom poster combine for sad nerds like me !!

  • @marshalloutdoors1791
    @marshalloutdoors1791 Před 3 lety

    That's so cool to still have your grandpa combine. What a change over the years. Looks like a clean sample!

  • @kurtzbradley
    @kurtzbradley Před 3 lety

    A fine teacher as always. Love the Massey rollin’ coal too!! Thanks Mike!!

  • @hutterite1
    @hutterite1 Před 3 lety +2

    Mike, I like how you appreciate the old stuff yet. Yes, new stuff has to step up; but the old stuff still has a place in our hearts. They're still part of the family.

  • @krisbaird5555
    @krisbaird5555 Před 3 lety +1

    Love the old masseys they were a great machine. We ran two 750s when i was a kid. Still run a conventional combine now so that we can bale up straw

  • @AureFreePress
    @AureFreePress Před 3 lety +1

    Hi Mike.. Thank you very much for the informative tour of the 760..I remember when the combine was new as well... It was massive when it first came out... I think I dated myself.. Grin.. Have a marvelous Monday ❤️❤️❤️

  • @ghostsfarm4441
    @ghostsfarm4441 Před rokem

    Brings me back to my childhood with my grandfather in his MF 760, 850's, and 860's. Lots of summers spent repairing them, one year watched one burn. Oh how fun it would be to run one again.

  • @derekverhoff7306
    @derekverhoff7306 Před 3 lety +2

    Nice! Reminds me of my dad's MF 750 and grandpa's MF 510. First thing I ever combined with was a MF 750 and we kept using it until 2 years ago!

  • @billybraswell5426
    @billybraswell5426 Před 3 lety +2

    That was cool seeing the old combine at work

  • @raynonabohrer5624
    @raynonabohrer5624 Před 3 lety

    You you explain everything very good teacher. And I thought of having a school? Great video. God bless you all.

  • @ArchersView
    @ArchersView Před 3 lety +1

    Awesome sound & great old Combine!!

  • @ldtenenoff
    @ldtenenoff Před 3 lety +1

    super kool mike to b so humble about ur progress from a boy to aman as well as to keep an old girl whom clearly has many more crops to eat she just aint as fast as the the new stuff however she can still dance.this is the history of farming and how we as people eat.Thanks my freind for sharing ur time and passion with us Peace my freind

  • @Gary_and_Linda
    @Gary_and_Linda Před 3 lety +1

    Our first combine was a Massy 21, then we graduated to a Versatile 420 (I think it was), finally upgraded to a Massy 510 Western Special, then a 750 Massy. The Perkins sounded the same on the 750, a nice roar! Good times! Thanks for the memories Mike!

  • @combinelover8988
    @combinelover8988 Před 3 lety

    I LOVE these combines!!!

  • @mickaelbissec7178
    @mickaelbissec7178 Před 3 lety +1

    The sound of the engine and that exhaust is mental ! 🙌

  • @ahmedsultani3028
    @ahmedsultani3028 Před 3 lety +1

    Very informative. Thanks for the upload, man. Much love

  • @scruffy6151
    @scruffy6151 Před 3 lety

    Nice to see the old girl out working.
    Thank you for a trip down memory lane.
    👍

    • @jeffnixon5202
      @jeffnixon5202 Před 3 lety

      We do a vintage harvest every year where we hookup old headers and tractors,and harvest wheat at Croppa Creek in Australia.The machines are from the 1920’s through to the latest headers.Search “Croppa Creek Vintage Harvest “to see themworking.We have a super rare John Deere “beetle back,”inaction

  • @marknicholls595
    @marknicholls595 Před 3 lety +3

    We still run a 850 in Ontario here. Does a great job and you cant beat those perkins engines, just peers away all day on 30g of fuel and no government juice !

  • @stacydavid1350
    @stacydavid1350 Před 3 lety

    Reminds me of my youth good times. I ran a john Deere 6600 for a number of years. Thanks Mike keep these vids coming.

    • @kennethcarlton2860
      @kennethcarlton2860 Před 3 lety

      The first combine I operated was a 7720 John Deere and the header was offset , a little weird to get use to at first

  • @lil_skipp
    @lil_skipp Před 3 lety

    great to see you still bring the old iron out, nothing better then the smell of rich burning diesel!
    Thank you for sharing your videos rock!

  • @lgjohansson2467
    @lgjohansson2467 Před 3 lety +1

    The sound is awesome👍
    I remember when I was a kid, in the 70s
    Dad drive a Volvo BM 7 foot header without a cabin🤔😄👍

  • @philliplovett6516
    @philliplovett6516 Před 3 lety

    love this video. sounds just like the MF850 i learnt to drive when i was a young fella thanks mike.

  • @beaubrennan3293
    @beaubrennan3293 Před 3 lety +1

    love them old combines

  • @morse2795
    @morse2795 Před 2 lety +1

    This is a really awesome video, Mike!! This is the kind of equipment we farm with here in Iowa. I sure love all of your videos.

  • @bladewiper
    @bladewiper Před 3 lety

    great video. love those old machines.

  • @mattl2863
    @mattl2863 Před 3 lety +4

    My father had the same Perkins engine on an irrigation pump (i think a 6-354), i recognize the sound at the exhaust !

  • @michaelpowell9640
    @michaelpowell9640 Před 3 lety +2

    Brilliant Combines engine sound is awesome.

  • @Myamericanlife61
    @Myamericanlife61 Před 3 lety +1

    Wow awesome video Mike that took me back to my childhood memories back home in England and fine memories they were the first combine I ever worked with was a Massey Harris bagger we filled burlap sacks with barley stitched them up and passed off to a person on the trailer took 4 to 5 people for a two man operation now they where definitely different days back then we also had a thatcher in the village and every year my family would help out on the thrash and tackle and cutting wheat with a binder we had a steam engine running the whole works being a thatcher he had to cut with a binder and run it through the thrashers for the straw cause you can’t run through a combine my Dad brought us up the hard way lol hell we used to have a tin bath tub back in them days I think I was 7 years old before I seen a real bath tub wow the good old days that called it lol 😂 that was a joke

  • @Josh-cz8wb
    @Josh-cz8wb Před 3 lety

    I also learned to drive combine on a 760 and too have spent many an hour piloting one....with the door open because the air con give up😂 brilliant machine for thier time!

  • @keithdickson8364
    @keithdickson8364 Před 3 lety +2

    I learned on an old Massey 300. Those were the days.

  • @johngraczyk4583
    @johngraczyk4583 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks for the videos MIKE I think they’re awesome

  • @mikebrandt1959
    @mikebrandt1959 Před 3 lety +5

    Sometimes the older equipment seems to work better than the new stuff, just slow and steady

  • @markebel4247
    @markebel4247 Před 3 lety +2

    Grew up in massey’s. Had a 760 then a bunch of 860’s, like 6 at one time even. Had several belt drive and many hydro’s. Has special tools and brackets to remove belts under the cab and removing big gear box. Etc etc. one we had the ol straw storm!!

  • @andrewstich7117
    @andrewstich7117 Před 3 lety

    Thanks for your time to do the video very good thanks again

  • @careyarnold2494
    @careyarnold2494 Před 3 lety +1

    Love the massey thanks for the video.

  • @rbharvesters7404
    @rbharvesters7404 Před 7 dny

    Lovely combine

  • @kopenhagenkid
    @kopenhagenkid Před 3 lety +1

    Great video Mike nice old combine

  • @larryeifert6754
    @larryeifert6754 Před 3 lety +3

    Thanks great reminder of old iron. Had a 510 and 750, ended up with a New Holland. (dealer support) I believe New Holland makes a conventional combine, the CX series.

  • @farmboy5622
    @farmboy5622 Před 3 lety +2

    Ahhhhhhhhhhh,.....the beautiful smell of DEF free diesel exhaust!!!

  • @BradHolkesvig
    @BradHolkesvig Před 3 lety +3

    My first experience driving a combine on the farm was a John Deere 55 with no cab on it and no power steering. I was 10 years old and when I had to turn a corner, I had to use all my body weight and yank at the steering wheel to turn the rear wheels. I think the tank held 50 or 60 bushels. LOL !!!

  • @peterloewen3201
    @peterloewen3201 Před 3 lety +3

    Best part of the 760/860 combines was the Perkins diesel. You could see it coming over the crest of a hill even by the exhaust smoke!!!

  • @billw4746
    @billw4746 Před 3 lety

    Flat lander`s live in a different world. I run a case 1470 I like fields that are so steep you cannot see the other side. I feel the pain of getting the header polished it took me 2 days to get my combine to feed this year. It my experience machines with straw walkers all cleaned better. Thank you for a nice video

  • @heerriiwa1111
    @heerriiwa1111 Před 3 lety

    the last shot was good the new dog in town coming over the hill to see what has imvaded its territory, glad to see you respect the old girl in letting her still get in on the harvest.

  • @bryanginder5903
    @bryanginder5903 Před 3 lety

    Love the old Massey!!! We still run two if them!!

  • @stryrker135
    @stryrker135 Před 3 lety

    Love this old gal!! Need more vids of her!!! Look after yourself!

  • @prjndigo
    @prjndigo Před 3 lety +26

    Weeellllll, actually: That header uses Sight and Sound and Steering. If you see smoke it's on fire, if you hear REEEEK REEEEK REEEEK you've bent it and if you feel the steering wheel in your gut you've hit something.

  • @pablocantillanaaguilar303

    10:52 "told us the key to success in life" xD

  • @Microphone73
    @Microphone73 Před 3 lety

    Endlessly educational!

  • @cecilnewton8171
    @cecilnewton8171 Před 3 lety

    That’s awesome Mike. Haven’t things changed.

  • @LazyKFarmstead
    @LazyKFarmstead Před 3 lety +1

    We built our little farm with a 1965 Massey Ferguson. Having it restored now. She is small but mighty.

  • @farmfishandfreedom2933

    Brings back memories of riding with my grandpa in our gleaners. Good times gooooooood times....

  • @dazzfromaus4797
    @dazzfromaus4797 Před 2 lety

    Love these good old machines.
    They go forever and.get the job done.

  • @kevinhagen9841
    @kevinhagen9841 Před 3 lety

    Pretty awesome to see the old girl can still do it 👍

  • @jeremymullen5378
    @jeremymullen5378 Před 3 lety +1

    Nice old 760

  • @palcolandcattle4259
    @palcolandcattle4259 Před 3 lety +2

    The Mighty Fine 860 corn grain bean v8 hydro was the combine I learned on. My grandpa bought it new in 1988. I think it was a hold over. He also had an older 860 with the straight 6 and variable belt. He still has it on the farm but it hasn't been used in 10 years. I'd like to fire it up like you did but it don't have a chopper or chaff spreader and that don't work in no till very well.

  • @Razorback83
    @Razorback83 Před rokem

    Nice to see these old girls still running, can't beat a classic

  • @rolfsblog
    @rolfsblog Před 3 lety

    Nice video Mike! It's good to see that the Massey does some harvesting!

  • @sweed58
    @sweed58 Před 11 měsíci

    Great roar from that perkins

  • @adamgregoire6862
    @adamgregoire6862 Před 3 lety +3

    The auto generated captions translate the exhaust noise as “music”. Nice!!!

  • @jeremymullen5378
    @jeremymullen5378 Před 3 lety +2

    Right on mike ,,, sounds mint

  • @johncook3817
    @johncook3817 Před rokem

    Massey ferguson are the best!!!!!!!
    I am a massey ferguson nut so I loved the footage of the old combine hard at it!!!!

  • @charlesjones7116
    @charlesjones7116 Před 3 lety +1

    Mike your enthusiasm for farming is awesome. I dread the day when family farming is just a memory and global corporations control all means of production. Keep up the good fight!

  • @sliverymango1783
    @sliverymango1783 Před 3 lety +1

    used to run an 860 brings back memories

  • @darrenmisick8039
    @darrenmisick8039 Před rokem +1

    Good video Mike ,I still have my families first 760 too.

  • @laurier3348
    @laurier3348 Před 3 lety +1

    I had a 760 in the Netherlands, loved that machine, not a hydrostat, with gears.

  • @alanweber6805
    @alanweber6805 Před 2 lety +1

    I remember those combines and used the older one the super month two

  • @mitchpolanik9719
    @mitchpolanik9719 Před 3 lety +3

    We still do 800 acres a year with 2 860 combines