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Cotton Harvest This Year |
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CrestonM
Orange Level Joined: 08 Sep 2014 Location: Oklahoma Points: 8391 |
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Posted: 17 Nov 2023 at 8:49am |
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Hey everyone, just thought I’d share a couple photos of the equipment from cotton stripping this year. I didn’t get a lot of action photos, so this will have to suffice. Had a few cotton strippers (not pickers) running this year, a 1969 760XTB, 1975 860, 1980 880, and the blue & yellow one is a 1978 Ben Pearson 1076. Not Allis but they did share some components with an Allis. Also had the 7080 on the boll buggy (think cotton grain cart). Crop wasn’t very good this year, but anytime you get 4 machines running with your friends, it’s a good time.
Edited by CrestonM - 17 Nov 2023 at 9:03am |
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DanWi
Orange Level Access Joined: 18 Sep 2009 Location: wttn Points: 1779 |
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That's pretty neat for us guys from the north that don't see that unless we head south.
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Brian F(IL)
Orange Level Access Joined: 14 Sep 2009 Location: Paxton, IL Points: 2698 |
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We saw some cotton fields in Eastern Georgia that had been picked a week ago. Most of it looked like it had been harvested using big round bales.
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Macon Rounds
Orange Level Joined: 18 Feb 2010 Location: Pittsburgh Pa Points: 2143 |
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That is a fine looking line up !
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The Allis "D" Series Tractors, Gravely Walk behind Tractors, Cowboy Action Shooting !!!!!!! And Checkmate
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Allis dave
Orange Level Joined: 10 May 2012 Location: Northern IN Points: 2916 |
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Neat, we don't have anyhting like that in Indiana.
Looking at the ground, it's a lot easier to see your harvest loss that corn or soybeans. LOL bright white cotton balls on brown dirt
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plummerscarin
Orange Level Access Joined: 22 Jun 2015 Location: ia Points: 3453 |
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Cool pictures, thanks,
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Michael V (NM)
Orange Level Access Joined: 12 Sep 2009 Location: NM Points: 2404 |
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lookin good!
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CrestonM
Orange Level Joined: 08 Sep 2014 Location: Oklahoma Points: 8391 |
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Thanks guys. With the interest they’ve received through the years, I’ve been throwing around the idea of having a small show in 2024, where all would be invited to come see these machines in action. Would be a food truck and portable bathroom on site, but other than that it would be just a typical rural field setting. Don’t write it in permanent marker on your calendars yet, but if we did it, it would probably be the 2nd weekend in November. Hopefully I’ll have a couple more machines running by then.
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Lars(wi)
Orange Level Access Joined: 14 Sep 2009 Location: Permian Basin Points: 7197 |
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What’s the difference between a cotton picker, and a cotton stripper?
Compared to the fields around here, yours are amazingly clean! I swear some of the operators down this way, if it weren’t for the bales/stacks in the fields, you’d never assume a harvester been across the field. Edited by Lars(wi) - 17 Nov 2023 at 5:40pm |
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I tried to follow the science, but it was not there. I then followed the money, and that’s where I found the science.
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Tim NH
Orange Level Access Joined: 16 Oct 2012 Location: Lancaster NH Points: 1084 |
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That is a nice lineup Creston. Your 7080 looks real good. I like the weights you have on it. Looks like a beast, lol. Tim
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WF owner
Orange Level Joined: 12 May 2013 Location: Bombay NY Points: 4664 |
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I was thinking the same thing! Creston, Could you educate us some? What is a good yield? Where do you sell it? Do you have to store it on the farm? When do you plant? Any pictures of unpicked fields?
Edited by WF owner - 17 Nov 2023 at 7:51pm |
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CrestonM
Orange Level Joined: 08 Sep 2014 Location: Oklahoma Points: 8391 |
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A cotton picker is supposed to only pick the white lint off of the plants. Used to be (and maybe still is in the Deep South) fields were picked twice, both while the plants were still green and growing. Cotton is indeterminate, so it will continue to produce new bolls while older bolls have already opened. Nowadays a lot of people chemically defoliate, then just pick once. Pickers have been in use since the 1940s for the most part, although a few machines existed in the 1930s they were mostly of the prototype nature. A cotton stripper strips everything off the plant. Leaves, burrs, lint. They can only be used after a killing freeze or after the field is chemically defoliated before a freeze. Limited production cotton strippers of different forms have been around since the horse drawn days, the earliest production machine I know of was a horse drawn single row unit by John Deere in the 1930s. Production rapidly increased among many brands in the 1950s with two-row tractor mounted units. In those days, strippers didn't have any type of cleaner on them, so everything off the stalk went to the cotton gin. Imagine a combine with no chaffer or sieve, everything goes to the bin. Gins charge more to clean dirty cotton, so in the early 1960s Allis and Hesston began offering machines with on-board cleaners, which reduced trips to the gin and saved on cleaning costs. Hesston is rumored to have beat Allis to it by a year, but Allis made up for it by producing larger quantities of these burr extractor-equipped machines, and building a more user-friendly machine. This was circa 1966. By contrast, Deere didn't offer a stripper with a burr extractor until around 1984, yet they continued to sell a lot of them, although the Deeres were only two-row until 1977, while Allis was offering 4-row headers in 1970. (Still, Deere advertises they were the first with a 4-row head, imagine that). IH never offered a stripper with burr extractor to the best of my knowledge. A cotton stripper is much cheaper to buy and operate than a picker. They have fewer parts, and cotton pickers require daily (sometimes twice daily) power washing of each row unit to clean out build up of lint and spindle grease. It slips my mind how much water and spindle grease a picker uses daily, but the cost of the daily maintenance was enough to cause more than one owner around here to either go broke or trade for a cotton stripper. After hearing that you may ask why anyone would run a cotton picker. The only answer I have found is if the cotton is yielding greater than 1,000 lbs/acre, they tend to outperform a stripper since they are not processing everything off the plant. In yields below 1,000 lbs, a stripper excels. When the crop is thin, pickers tend to leave a lot more lint on the plants, due to the picking chamber not being crowded full. In our area of Oklahoma, if you can make 500 lbs/acre on dryland cotton, you're not doing too bad. Hence why you would be hard pressed to find a picker around here. In the areas of the state with irrigation, they're more common because they can achieve those higher yields easier than we can.
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CrestonM
Orange Level Joined: 08 Sep 2014 Location: Oklahoma Points: 8391 |
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Thank you! I've waxed it and painted the exhaust pipe, but otherwise the finish is original.
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CrestonM
Orange Level Joined: 08 Sep 2014 Location: Oklahoma Points: 8391 |
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My other post just now answers some of this, but after ginning it's taken to regional warehouses. It's packaged in 500 lb bales and each bale receives an ID number with the grade. Different grades bring different prices. It's typically planted mid-May through mid-June around here, although in the Deep South they plant much earlier. I don't have any photos of an un-harvested field handy at the moment, but a quick google search will yield a bunch.
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KJCHRIS
Orange Level Joined: 21 Dec 2015 Location: WC Iowa Points: 900 |
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Nice pictures and thanks for describing what goes on to harvest cotton.
Your boll buggy looks very similar to what was used at times to dump hay or corn silage into trucks. Uncle & grandad had neighbors that sold fresh chop alfalfa to local DeHy plant, that was a 20 mile trip each way.
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AC 200, CAH, AC185D bareback, AC 180D bareback, D17 III, WF. D17 Blackbar grill, NF. D15 SFW. Case 1175 CAH, Bobcat 543B,
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Ray54
Orange Level Access Joined: 22 Nov 2009 Location: Paso Robles, Ca Points: 4516 |
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I have never grown cotton, but have been around some that have. California never had strippers as 2 bales to the acre was the goal since the beginning. Once growth regulators showed up picking twice has been history.I believe 3 to 4 bales is average yield for Cal/Arizona cotton today. But it is all irrigated.
Creston are you using a module maker, or wagons? From what I see advertised module makers are selling for scrape price more or less out here. The wagons have been parked on the edge of a field and banners tied to the sides as billboards for 30 years already. The state that has not allowed a new billboard in 40 years.
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Lars(wi)
Orange Level Access Joined: 14 Sep 2009 Location: Permian Basin Points: 7197 |
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That’s for wonderful explanation Creston, greatly appreciated.
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I tried to follow the science, but it was not there. I then followed the money, and that’s where I found the science.
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jvin248
Silver Level Joined: 17 Jan 2022 Location: Detroit Points: 312 |
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. Seeing another side of the business here. I've watched Griggs Farms YouTube channel. He just bought a new used JD picker/baler after having a rectangular module builder. He said new cotton machines are over a million dollars now. I'm way too far North to use any of the cotton education. But I watch because he's doing a lot of Regenerative Agriculture for corn, beans, and cotton. Biggest cotton harvest he's had, I think he said three big round bales per acre. . Edited by jvin248 - 20 Nov 2023 at 8:43pm |
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DiyDave
Orange Level Access Joined: 11 Sep 2009 Location: Gambrills, MD Points: 51670 |
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Did I hear a request?
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Source: Babylon Bee. Sponsored by BRAWNDO, its got what you need!
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Mikez
Orange Level Access Joined: 16 Jan 2013 Location: Usa Points: 8384 |
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Cool thanks for sharing
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Ted J
Orange Level Joined: 05 Jul 2010 Location: La Crosse, WI Points: 18821 |
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Thanks for the Pics Creston and especially the education!! I might be able to make it to the show next year if you have one. I'd think you'd draw a bunch of people who have never seen it happen. Your 7080 is pretty & impressive! Thanks again 'LiL Buddy'!
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"Allis-Express"
19?? WC / 1941 C / 1952 CA / 1956 WD45 / 1957 WD45 / 1958 D-17 |
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CrestonM
Orange Level Joined: 08 Sep 2014 Location: Oklahoma Points: 8391 |
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I use a module builder. No gins out here have the equipment to vacuum the trailers out anymore. And you’re right, they basically sell for scrap price. |
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CrestonM
Orange Level Joined: 08 Sep 2014 Location: Oklahoma Points: 8391 |
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Thanks! Glad you liked it, Ted! |
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AC7060IL
Orange Level Joined: 19 Aug 2012 Location: central IL Points: 3340 |
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Creston, Awesome photos & descriptions. I used Norm's book to look at specs of your 3 AC cotton machines. See if I got it correct? 1969 760XTB, AC 226G, 520cu.ft basket, Gleaner K frame/drivetrain, custom cab. 1975 860, AC 2800 diesel 301 84hp, Variable speed, Gleaner L/M cab curved windshield, Gleaner F frame/drivetrain? 1980 880, AC 433I diesel 200 95hp, hydro drive, electro-hydraulic tilt, Gleaner F2 frame/drivetrain? Your maroon 7080 looks great. It seems not too long ago, you had just bought it and were making it ready for approaching season? What is your typical post cotton harvest season involve - stem shreader? (flail, bush hog?), disk, plow, etc? Or, can you no-till into last season's cotton stems? Thank for sharing. Yes, I'd be interested in your tentative 2024 AC cotton harvest field day(s). I've never been around cotton. Who knows, may bring a car-load of siblings with me?
Edited by AC7060IL - 29 Nov 2023 at 6:30am |
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Ron Eggen
Orange Level Joined: 15 Sep 2009 Location: Lohman, Missour Points: 541 |
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What about the federally funded study Case /IH and Deere did using parts of an A-C stripper & other machines thet determined they could build a machine that would save a million dollars a season on harvesting ?
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CrestonM
Orange Level Joined: 08 Sep 2014 Location: Oklahoma Points: 8391 |
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You’re close, the 760 and 860 are built using the K drivetrain, it went to F2 on the 880. The stripper development closely followed combines. For instance the 707 and 707XTB had the 4 cylinder G226 like the Gleaner E. When the K came out and the switch to the GM 250 was made, that reflected in the cotton strippers. So the 760XTB had the GM 250. I want to say the basket is 320 cubic feet on the 707 and 760. I’d have to check the book to make sure, but the 860 and 880 are 520 cubic feet. Midway through 707 production and through all of 760 production an Ansel cab was available, although after running mine I’d probably rather have open station unless it was very cold and windy. The Ansel cabs are very crude. The Gleaner cabs are so much better on the 860 and 880. The 860 initially had the GM 250 gas engine, then in about 1975 the diesel Allis 2800 became available and became standard later. Everything you said about the 880 is correct. After harvest, since I’m no till on this field, I go in and seed a winter cover crop blend then sometime between then and March use a bat wing rotary mower to cut the stalks down. Although some people leave them standing. Thanks for the interest in the show. I’ve got a 707 I’d really like to have running for the event, but I’ve currently got the engine out of it for overhaul. Between that and getting everything coordinated, we’ll see if I can pull it off. |
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CrestonM
Orange Level Joined: 08 Sep 2014 Location: Oklahoma Points: 8391 |
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https://www.allischalmers.com/forum/super-stripper-no-pole-ac_topic135705.html TBran would be the one to talk to about that. He’s probably got some more good stories. |
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