Service Time For Five John Deere S790 Combines
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- čas přidán 8. 09. 2024
- Big Tractor Power viewers asked to see the morning service time for this farm that runs five John Deere S790 combines and four John Deere 9420R 4wds on Kinze 1105 grain carts. This video will take you through the combine under the side panels, fueling up and heading out to the field to harvest 13,000 acres of corn.
If you would like to see what it is like to be in the cab of a 543 hp 400 bu. John Deere S790 combine in live time working with 4 other S790s check out this Big Tractor Power Live Stream at • 🔴 John Deere S790 Flee...
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Please extend a special 'Thanks' to Billy & Matt for allowing us to see a typical day of harvesting, especially seeing the Five John Deere S790 Combiners & 9420's in the A.M. prep phase. Again thanks for the vid.
Thank you for watching.
I do not know the first thing about farming, but do enjoy and appreciate learning a little about it on the various CZcams channels!
Glad you find the video informative. I enjoy filming these machines to share.
I ran a john deere 6600 for my grandpa when i was younger i loved that combine
The 6600 is one of the all time greats.
When i was 7 or 8 we had a john deere 95 then traded it for a 6600 gas. Then we got a 6600 diesel we really liked them both
Really excellent video!! You have what I consider an unique style - in that you educate viewers and you have great views of the machinery!! I come from a farming family (its all I knew for first 20 years of my life) then practised medicine for 40 years (bad decision!)...and now I so regret not staying in farming....these videos help me greatly as a 'frustrated farmer'
Thank you for watching. I enjoy sharing machines and farming. I wish I was a farmer but it is fun to visit so many farms to see how each one works.
A very impressive operation but it makes me appreciate my Gleaner after seeing how much more complicated the Deere combine appears to be and that I can actually walk around each side of my engine on my R52.
This subject was appreciated. No one man or gal per tractor could accomplish all tasks needed prior to actual harvesting. I enjoy farming films from 30's, in comparison it's a whole different scale today. This was educational as I've never seen the inside mechanics of combine only diagrams & pics. Thank's
Thank you Mark. Farming has changed allot in the past 80 years. I like seeing the vintage ways field work was done.
I love all of your videos, but getting the inside of what it takes this beautiful machinery running is amazing, thank you for sharing all this
Thank you for watching. It is neat to see what makes a combine go.
Hi BTP, greetings from Indiana and as always thank you so much for the experience. I say this every year but I still don’t see how these great farmers break even with millions of equipment, seed, fertilizer, and wages going out. God bless them all.
There is allot of management involved. The more of the land you work that you own can make a big difference. Raising two crops such as wheat and then soybeans on the same fields in the same year make a big difference too.
very nice as usual someone else in the comments made a request to do a tour of this Farm I would also like that. I would love to see their grain handling setup
The grain bins have been filmed. Stay tuned for a feature on the bins and semi trucks that fill them.
I bet that the JD dealer loves to see this man coming
Brilliant behind the scenes video showing what goes on to keep everything running smooth for harvesting
Thank you for watching. It’s fun to see these machines up close.
Very nice showing the morning maintenance routine for the combines. Pretty good sized farm!
Thank you for watching.
It's amazing to see all the tractors and combine set ups that you come across really interesting videos I enjoy watching them keep up the great work!
Thank you for watching. There are lots more interesting machines on the way.
Thank you BTP. Getting ready for combining or chopping with everything one place is impressive. Winter line-up is the most impressive.
It’s a neat operation.
I grew up spending summers and falls on a large operation (14,000 acres corn and 4000 acres beans/wheat/hay and 8000 head of hogs) in Indiana. All the corn was just to feed the hogs. The only cash crop were the beans/wheat/hay and occasionally sunflower. And back in the late 70's early 80's the equipment wasn't nearly as big and efficient. I am talking about John Deere 4440's pulling a 1210A cart taking corn from a Deere Turbo 7720 combine. Three combines, six tractor/carts and two GMC tandems. And when the grain dryers were running only two hours of sleep at a time because they had to be closely watched. So maybe three 2 hour sleep blocks and back into a machine. And being the kid, I had to do all the morning chores like feeding all the hogs, cleaning out the fairing house and pens. Hard work but fun for a kid being around all that stuff.
Very cool.
This was definitely time well spend to video tape all this actions for CZcams, it gives a perspective of work done before the starts, awesome video
Glad you enjoyed seeing it. Thank you for the comment.
Great video as always, this one was one of my favorites. How about a farm tour of this farm?
The grain bins have been filmed. Stay tuned for a feature on the bins and semi trucks that fill them.
I learned on the Titan 2 back when it first came out JD makes some nice combines for sure...........
I am a Titan II fan. What model did you run?
Always a great video sir, I grew up doing this but of course that was 30 yrs ago. Sure do miss it. My how equipment has changed.
I just filmed a 6600 and 4420 this week. These S790s really show the advancement.
Big thanks for doing vid👍it’s nice to see service trucks n fuel truck gives viewers an idea how much is needed to operate farm equipment. Interesting that they drop oil between crops, good idea, doing this gives good resale value when trading equipment. I really appreciate farmers that look after equipment, that motivate any workers in the job. Well done BTP👍
It is interesting to see how much support equipment is in the field to keep the harvesting rolling along.
how have you not been on the radio with that great voice, sound a lot like our Ag weatherman here locally, thanks for sharing your stuff is great
7 am to 12am...that is a full day!!! Very impressive video and operation, thanks for sharing!!!
They work hard.
Thank you for watching. They work hard.
Damn,just their corn acres are 7k short of our total farm.great video!
Thank you for watching.
Such beautiful machines. Really enjoyed this. Thank you.
Thank you for watching and commenting.
Interesting to see this side of harvest.
kb7722 for sure for sure
These folks are my aunt and uncles neighbors great folks.
Very cool.
That's a beautiful line up at the beginning. I love a good line up of equipment.
Thank you for watching. It is impressive seeing farm machines lined up.
I enjoyed this video, its good to show this perspective.
Thank you. Glad you liked the video.
This is my favorite. Please make more like this.
Ah the five horsemen of corn apocalypse. I’m impressed with their equipment.
They harvest a bunch of corn.
Great video! Wish I could own or even work on a farm that big.
Great drone shot in the opening. Thanks as always.
There will be more drone footage from the harvest on BTP.
Enjoyed watching this! Thanks!!!
Thank you.
This is very interesting and awesome, but that's just smart for changing the oil before harvest, fresh oil makes the engine happy, and when i seen the engine in the combine my jaw dropped.
Thank you for watching. It is neat to get to film these machines up close.
Thanks for making the video that's a lot of nice looking machinery. Never hurts to take pride in your operation. I could only imagine the fuel bill. Have a great afternoon
It takes money to make money
My gosh! How big is this family? Where do they find the help? You can have all the big toys you want but finding a competent operator is the hard part
I looked on the JD website and 4 JD 9420R, and 5 S 790's it takes 2,930 gallons of fuel a day and they fuel up twice a day, that's expensive.
That was a mistake on my part. They only fuel up in the morning.
@@bigtractorpower They probably use every bit of their 300+ gallon tanks too.
Nice job Matt!
👍👍
Very informative stuff. Great job as always.
Thank you for watching.
engage the seperator and header at full rpm to blow the belts and clutches
Wow! What an amazing operation!
It’s allot of machinery.
constant maintenance i love this!
Great video. Great voiceover. Very informative.
Thank you Doug. Glad you liked it.
That's a lot of machinery right there ! Farming is definitely a tough sport.
Big machines for large acres.
Brilliant video as always, thank you 🙂
Thank you for watching.
This realy looks like here in east germany, but we dont have this much 4wd tractors and grain carts, we mostly trasport the grain with standart tractors and trailers.
Interesting. Thank you for sharing.
Very impressive watching servicing, thanks
Thank you for watching.
Oh fancy. I work at at farm with, 6 s780 combines, and use 9 520rts and 9 570rx tractors. Didn’t know you could still get a ninety four 20 tractor. look like 9 420R to me.
That’s a big line up. The smallest 9R is the 9370R. This farm runs four 9420Rs and three 9620Rs and an MT875E.
I wish i had a chance to work a season on one of thoose big farms. Nice and a interesting video as always. Greetings from Norway
Thank you for watching. I have a friend in Holland who spent a year in the U.S. working on a farm. He really enjoyed it and comes back to visit.
Good idea for a video!
Very nice film. Thanks.
Thank you for watching.
Thank You for this video.
Thank you for watching and commenting.
Hard working always bear good Fruit.
Great subject! Another interesting bit must be some season and daily planning. Those combines scatter to the fields, but I bet they aren't just all hunting around for an opportunistic stand of corn to harvest. I bet there is a bit of discussion each day about who is going to be doing what that day. Maybe they even measure moisture every night to decide what to cut the next day?
The farm has a plan to harvest fields in a certain order and each field is harvested the same way each year. So here is not a planning session. Everyone from experience just knows how the harvest will go from start to finish.
Nice video with drone view
Thank you. There are more videos with drone harvest footage on the way.
For those of us who would never have the chance to experience this in real life, I wish maintenance was much more in depth in Farming Simulator 19.
this is awesome agriculture heavy equipment
Thank you for watching.
Very informative, this is a great video and I enjoy watching all your videos!!
Thank you for watching.
Very Nice Video👌👌👌
Thank you for watching.
J'adore les exploitations American car vous avez du gros matériel et de grosse surface c'est mon rêve de venir en Amérique et de travailler sur une grosse exploitation car nous avons pas ça en France
My French is a little rusty but I think you were saying you like the explanation of the machines in the United States.
Very nice and interesing Video BTP
Thank you for watching and commenting.
Awesome Video!!
S790s 👍
Awesome video as usual.
Thank you for watching.
Awesome video
Thank you for watching.
Use to run a 12 row head with a 9750 was a very good match done a good job, wonder what good of a job they're making. because they can't fill him up.
The 9750 was a cool combine when it came out. The first time I visited this farm in the year 2000 they had three 9610s with 1293 heads and were demoing a 9750STS with a 1293. The next year they had three 9750STS combines. In 2003 they had the very first 9860STS made.
Great video!
Thank you for watching. Glad you liked it.
Nice video
Thank you for watching and commenting.
Don't stop now.Thanks.
Many more videos on the way. Thank you for watching.
Would love to learn how to use a combine
O melhor de todos os videos .👍👍
Thank you.
Have they (or anyone else) ever considered growing their own fuel?
My calculations say that you would need 1-3 acres of oilseed rape to produce enough fuel to cultivate 100 acres of other crop.
Vegetable oil conversion kits for tractors exist, and of course the best part is the reduction in pollution, also vegetable oil does not generate soot so no DPF clogging. If not you could turn it into biodiesel.
Nice video BTP
Thank you for watching.
It's fall. See these all around everywhere out in fields
That’s great. S790s are the norm here too.
Yup pretty much all 790s and 780s here this year. Hope to see some 770s yet.
What is the moisture of the corn at harvest? Do they dry it? If so can we see some of the drying/operation of the farm's facilities?
The farm has a 3 million bushel bin system. I do plan to feature it.
Money money money, thx for ze video
Subbed btw
Buenisimos videos. Siempre Felicidades
👍
I’m curious about how many gallons of diesel are cunsumed in an average day?
If they truly owen them they get good service however leased equipment doesn't get all required service, it just gets used then the dealer will tell the next farmer it was well maintained and show created records....
Drone clips, good job!
I have several drone views on the corn harvest on the way for a few different brands.
That takes around 12 to 14 people to make go so a man with 1000 acres alone is on the same par
Jigsaw puzzle on wheels..✌🚜🇺🇸🚜
Lots of moving parts for sure.
How many hours do they typically put on their equipment before they trade it in?
700 to 800 hours on the combine each season. This far trades each year.
I notice a lot of green plants after the corn is cut, is that some type of cover crop underneath the corn?
Those are weeds. Corn harvest stayed on August 13 this year. As the corn plants begin to dry down in late July the leaves wilt back exposing the soil between the rows. With the shade gone the weeds begin to grow with summer rain and heat to feed them. It’s no big deal the corn is made and as soon as the corn harvest is done the field is disked up to be seeded into wheat.
What is the engine oil capacity for the S790? And, what weight oil is used? Great video and narration as always. TKS.
Rusty White not sure on amount but 15w-40 is what goes in them tractordata.com has the info and specs
Rusty Whi
That is a good question. I am not sure. I will do another video like this in the future and ask that question.
Rusty White around 29 quarts for our 660.
Rusty White 45 quarts for a 690/790
I Big tractor I assume they have a tractor and trailer tanker that comes and puts the fuel in the transport trucks😁
I am not sure where they fill up. I would think at a fuel depot.
@@bigtractorpower I have a neighbor who chops part of the silage for Feria Dairy and it takes a transport of fuel a day to keep 5 or 6 choppers + trucks and tractors running. We get ours delivered by transport 6,700 gal when our 200 bbl tank get low. From a pipeline depot but my son farms mostly himself my small 2,000 acre farm.
Great video. I like all of your videos. Is this all you do? Do you have any other job?
Great video! I love those big combines! I am no farmer but what a magnificent machine. Tell me more about how that huge engine is configured in the combine please? I couldn't tell if it was over the back two axles or the other way? Just the design to get that much horsepower from up in the air down to the ground to drive this heavy beast is pretty awesome.
It’s hard to show a combines design because the sheet metal. I will try to show an inner workings video in the future.
Why the 9420R on the carts? I use 8225R on 1100 bu carts and it is a good match and much less fuel.
Is it more of a bigtractorpower thing or because that tractor is available?
Are you on flat ground? I have seen places on this farm where the 9420R spins out on a hill pulling a fully loaded cart. Sometimes at the end of harvest they will through one of their 8245Rs on a cart as the 9420Rs start tillage. The 8245R will stay on the less hilly parts of the field. These 9420Rs do tillage with disks in September after corn, v-rippers after soybeans in November, plant corn in March and run carts in wheat, corn and soybeans. They get allot of use. The 8245Rs on the farm run a bat wing most of the time and set and cultivate tobacco.
Imagine taking diesel engines out of them tractors or combines and converting them to electric how much would they accomplish.
I think Andrew Hourigan said they burn 115000 gallons of fuel a year on a 3500 acre dairy farm
Fuel is a big investment in producing a crop.
For that 3500 acres seems like a lot of fuel unless they are chopping the corn for silage ! Perhaps some of their family should have been schooled in engineering and understand ways to use less fuel per bushel produced.
near me we have some guys harvesting close to 80k acres they run 14 s790
Are they harvesting corn or small grains?
soybeans mostly this year and some corn- from what I've heard they are at about 60k acres of soybeans harvested to date
That is allot of soybeans. This farm will run 6 combines in soybeans this fall. I was at the farm Saturday and they were getting the combines ready for soybeans.
out of their 14 combines, 13 were on soybeans they currently sit at about 70% done
how many hours do they put they on each machine every year?
Exzellent
Thank you for watching.
Wow, they fill up twice a day? Any idea what their fuel costs are per day?
That was an error on my part. They fill up once day. I saw the fuel truck in the evening in the field. I am not sure what the total cost is but I am sure it’s a good sized expense.
Is there a grain cart missing? I was thinking there is usually 5 but I only saw 4
They only run 4 carts. They used to just have three but added the fourth a few years ago.
Does the farm lease some of the 5 combines or do they own all of them. Because that would be a lot of money to buy them.
I am not sure what they do. I just report on the machines. I do not ask how a farms business side is run.
Top top 👍👍👍😉
Thank you for watching.
I'd like to work there!
Can you drive a semi? The farm is always looking for truck drivers.
I wanna know where the first guy got his sunglasses from
Matt told me he got them at Wal-Mart for $5.
Rednecklive99 yeah I thought they were good looking glasses myself
bigtractorpower I’ve bought some similar at Walmart and from a fuel at lavergne TN
From a fuel stop
Placard on fuel truck says 1203, which is gasoline....either they are making a grave morning mistake and fuel guy got fired after this, or UN numbers are different in the states.
The truck was originally owned by a local gas station chain. Most likely it’s on old decal.
Wonder if he's got a Hazmat license for it