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Rob see co is pretty popular around here.
ОтветитьGood video.
ОтветитьGood video 👍. How are crops looking down your way? After all the rain we’ve had I’ve seen a little damage to our beans but not to bad.
ОтветитьI think planting date will have more effect than inoculant.
ОтветитьHey ...... I see your up over 50k subscribers ........
Keep them videos rolling ....... 😊👍
Hello from goderich ontario Canada 🇨🇦
ОтветитьGlad to see you put up video always enjoying your videos thank you
Ответить👍👍❤️🇨🇦
ОтветитьThanks Jacob. I've always appreciated your videos. Keep em' coming.
ОтветитьIt’s just something about his angry eyebrows 🤔 he gets me every time
ОтветитьNice video
ОтветитьMissed yall
ОтветитьHoping for some rain these days.
ОтветитьGreat Ford farming action
ОтветитьSo that’s is who bought federal corn I always liked it
ОтветитьHave you checked your mic holes on the camera since it was plowed under?? I noticed the sound was "warbly" since then... gets higher and lower, maybe plugged with dirt or washed soil in there that's muffling the waterproof mic (however that works-- diaphragm maybe or something?) Might check it. OR it could be the "smart mic" or "sound leveling" or whatever, software that changes the mic levels automatically in response to external sound levels, so that it picks up your voice better in noisy environments... I've noticed on the vids that you'll get a lot of ambient tractor or machinery sound but then when you start talking it tends to quiet down the ambient noise and seems to 'dial up" your voice so it's more audible... then reverts to the original sound levels once you stop talking... AND of course it has a little 'lag' in there from the time the mic picks up your voice or external sounds and the time the software responds and "dials in" on the voice and turns down the ambient noise, and another lag when it "reverts" back to original... I guess if it's software there's nothing you can do about that, except maybe turn it off but then when you talk it'll probably be too muffled or "down in the mud" to understand what you're saying over the equipment noise anyway...
Just thought I'd throw that out there so you'd know...
That was one thing that Ford was good about... they had the fender toolboxes... really handy. Small, but handy. The New Holland 5610's that replaced our old 6600 and 5200 row crop has a bigger toolbox but it's up on the bracket on the bell housing, which is less handy particularly when you need a crescent wrench to whack on a lift arm to get hitched up to an implement, a trailer pin, or bushings for link balls on from Cat 1 to cat 2 size arms... Now you gotta walk around and get all that stuff... and of course on the 5610S we put the loader on the front, we had to relocate the box bracket from the bell housing boss holes because the loader rear mounts attach there, so we had to move it to the cast bolster holes up above the axle so now the toolbox is just over the front axle... oh well... at least it's a nice big box! My brother liked the idea so much he got a regular toolbox and made a bracket for the 2310 to mount the full size box on the bell housing bolster bolt holes on it too so now it has a full size box as well...
ОтветитьI had the exact same monitor on my planters... the Cole, the JD #18, and the Deere 7100... didn't have to worry about fertilizer, but I always looked for a few seeds dribbled out at the row ends to make sure each row was dropping. Still a good idea, monitor or no, to get off at least every 30 minutes and go behind the planter and dig a little to make sure that it's dropping seeds at the proper spacing the depth... stuff happens and you don't want to plant an entire field and figure out afterwards that you had an issue... doesn't take that long to do and you only get one chance to get the crop planted right, and anymore planting is probably the most expensive operation you'll do all year, so always a good idea to double check it periodically. I know a lot of guys who get spoiled to having the monitor and set the planter up, maybe dig on a row or two for the first ten minutes they go to the field at the beginning of the season, and then never dig again til the entire crop is planted... IMHO kinda crazy... checking periodically is just cheap insurance. Even if you're running one of these big 24 row rigs, well, at least dig on several different rows every time you stop... rotate through them to make sure you'll catch any problems EVENTUALLY... LOL:) Monitors will count seeds for you sure enough, but they tell you NOTHING about how they're going into the ground!
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