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2016 Farming Season

Printed From: Unofficial Allis
Category: Allis Chalmers
Forum Name: Farm Equipment
Forum Description: everything about Allis-Chalmers farm equipment
URL: https://www.allischalmers.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=134333
Printed Date: 17 Sep 2025 at 4:34pm
Software Version: Web Wiz Forums 11.10 - http://www.webwizforums.com


Topic: 2016 Farming Season
Posted By: GM Guy
Subject: 2016 Farming Season
Date Posted: 27 Jan 2017 at 3:25am
Hey all,

If its still posted in January, its not late, right? :)

Here are some pics from last year, thought all might enjoy.

http://s1290.photobucket.com/user/rborneman_08/media/2016%20Farming%20Season/100_2659_zpslc2kq4c5.jpg.html" rel="nofollow">

http://s1290.photobucket.com/user/rborneman_08/media/2016%20Farming%20Season/100_2660_zpshay2hw0t.jpg.html" rel="nofollow">

http://s1290.photobucket.com/user/rborneman_08/media/2016%20Farming%20Season/100_2663_zpsfzkkp7kf.jpg.html" rel="nofollow">
http://s1290.photobucket.com/user/rborneman_08/media/2016%20Farming%20Season/100_4969_zpsbcwn1jkx.jpg.html" rel="nofollow">
http://s1290.photobucket.com/user/rborneman_08/media/2016%20Farming%20Season/100_4993_zps2lbnvec7.jpg.html" rel="nofollow">






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Gleaner: the properly engineered and built combine.

If you need parts for your Gleaner, we are parting out A's through L2's, so we may be able to help.



Replies:
Posted By: GM Guy
Date Posted: 27 Jan 2017 at 4:12am
The only tractor shot I have this year, 7580 doing some last minute summer fallow before I head off to Idaho.

http://s1290.photobucket.com/user/rborneman_08/media/2016%20Farming%20Season/0719162014a_zpsmc4fo9sz.jpg.html" rel="nofollow">


Some Great Basin Wild Rye that the poor C2 diesel had to suffer through
http://s1290.photobucket.com/user/rborneman_08/media/2016%20Farming%20Season/0731161912a_zpsw6dkqgry.jpg.html" rel="nofollow">

It is common in Idaho for grain to be down, this is average, and it gets worse from here.
http://s1290.photobucket.com/user/rborneman_08/media/2016%20Farming%20Season/0809161800a_zpsqezplmii.jpg.html?sort=2&o=18

Idaho has rocks. Poor auger finger.
http://s1290.photobucket.com/user/rborneman_08/media/2016%20Farming%20Season/0822161934a_zpsfapoxdds.jpg.html" rel="nofollow">

Some forage oats right next to a pivot of corn. not dry, but the windo was coming so it had to be done.
http://s1290.photobucket.com/user/rborneman_08/media/2016%20Farming%20Season/0823161550a%201_zpswpupuosm.jpg.html" rel="nofollow">





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Gleaner: the properly engineered and built combine.

If you need parts for your Gleaner, we are parting out A's through L2's, so we may be able to help.


Posted By: GM Guy
Date Posted: 27 Jan 2017 at 4:14am
Back to KS for corn:

http://s1290.photobucket.com/user/rborneman_08/media/2016%20Farming%20Season/100_5158_zpsqafvy88a.jpg.html" rel="nofollow">

http://s1290.photobucket.com/user/rborneman_08/media/2016%20Farming%20Season/100_5162_zpszt9bnki9.jpg.html" rel="nofollow">

Dad and his latest marmon

http://s1290.photobucket.com/user/rborneman_08/media/2016%20Farming%20Season/100_5168_zpswd4qdryh.jpg.html" rel="nofollow">

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Gleaner: the properly engineered and built combine.

If you need parts for your Gleaner, we are parting out A's through L2's, so we may be able to help.


Posted By: JayIN
Date Posted: 27 Jan 2017 at 4:34am
Nice pics! What planting population do you shoot for in that Kansas corn? It looks like dryland corn?

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sometimes I walk out to my shop and look around and think "Who's the idiot that owns this place?"


Posted By: JasonB
Date Posted: 27 Jan 2017 at 5:35am
Beautiful pictures! Loved seeing that clean looking L2 Gleaner and R60 Orange stripe at work! Have to say those R60's were really sharp looking with the Orange stripe decals. Nice looking N6 Gleaner as well, they are becoming less common up here.

Any pictures of the C2 Diesel?   


Posted By: ILGLEANER
Date Posted: 27 Jan 2017 at 7:48am
Thanks for the pics there great !!!

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Education doesn't make you smart, it makes you educated.


Posted By: Mike Plotner
Date Posted: 27 Jan 2017 at 7:58am
Looks good out there!

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2001 Gleaner R42, 1978 7060, 1977 7000, 1966 190 XT, 1966 D-17 Series IV and 1952 WD and more keep my farm running!


Posted By: GM Guy
Date Posted: 27 Jan 2017 at 12:24pm
Thanks for the comments guys!

JayIN, population goes as low as 8,000 on the high ground and as high as 16K in the low ground. We hire a good friend that is a bigger operator to plant with his 8000 series White 16 row with variable rate control. We like the concept of variable rate, but cant afford it, so we hire that out.

JasonB, I think I have a pic from 2015 of the same combine in the same field, so that should be close enough, I will go look for it.

-------------
Gleaner: the properly engineered and built combine.

If you need parts for your Gleaner, we are parting out A's through L2's, so we may be able to help.


Posted By: GM Guy
Date Posted: 27 Jan 2017 at 12:40pm
JasonB, found some! :)


I dont like the strain it puts on the machine, and dad happens to have a 71 G diesel Hydro that started life as a grain combine, and the previous owner did a shop conversion to a bean special, but none of the panels are perforated so as a bean combine it could not rid itself of dirt very well.

My thoughts are to convert it to be a grass machine, as it has a spike tooth cylinder which works well in grass, and the late G has more adjustments in the cleaning system, so we can fine tune it better, and this particular G has a hydraulic belt unloading conveyor, which eliminates the transition point which liked to clog in grass. plus, the 301 turbo is alot cheaper to find parts for and has more grunt, and the separator clutch is bigger.

http://s1290.photobucket.com/user/rborneman_08/media/2015%20Farming%20Season/100_3597_zpsgswl6aj9.jpg.html" rel="nofollow">


http://s1290.photobucket.com/user/rborneman_08/media/2015%20Farming%20Season/100_3591_zpszhaef0zo.jpg.html" rel="nofollow">


-------------
Gleaner: the properly engineered and built combine.

If you need parts for your Gleaner, we are parting out A's through L2's, so we may be able to help.


Posted By: LB0442
Date Posted: 27 Jan 2017 at 2:03pm
Great pictures, thank you for posting them.


Posted By: JasonB
Date Posted: 27 Jan 2017 at 2:33pm
Originally posted by GM Guy GM Guy wrote:

JasonB, found some! :)


I dont like the strain it puts on the machine, and dad happens to have a 71 G diesel Hydro that started life as a grain combine, and the previous owner did a shop conversion to a bean special, but none of the panels are perforated so as a bean combine it could not rid itself of dirt very well.

My thoughts are to convert it to be a grass machine, as it has a spike tooth cylinder which works well in grass, and the late G has more adjustments in the cleaning system, so we can fine tune it better, and this particular G has a hydraulic belt unloading conveyor, which eliminates the transition point which liked to clog in grass. plus, the 301 turbo is alot cheaper to find parts for and has more grunt, and the separator clutch is bigger.

http://s1290.photobucket.com/user/rborneman_08/media/2015%20Farming%20Season/100_3597_zpsgswl6aj9.jpg.html" rel="nofollow">


http://s1290.photobucket.com/user/rborneman_08/media/2015%20Farming%20Season/100_3591_zpszhaef0zo.jpg.html" rel="nofollow">
Great looking C2 Gleaner! In very nice clean looking shape! Love seeing the older Gleaners. Thanks for posting. 


Posted By: AC7060IL
Date Posted: 27 Jan 2017 at 6:48pm
Originally posted by GM Guy GM Guy wrote:

Thanks for the comments guys!

JayIN, population goes as low as 8,000 on the high ground and as high as 16K in the low ground. We hire a good friend that is a bigger operator to plant with his 8000 series White 16 row with variable rate control. We like the concept of variable rate, but cant afford it, so we hire that out.

JasonB, I think I have a pic from 2015 of the same combine in the same field, so that should be close enough, I will go look for it.


Thanks GM Guy. We have a son & daughter-in-law living in Denver. This fall while we were driving across I70 from IL to CO to enjoy Thanksgiving with them, we saw corn fields like yours & asked the same population question. Now we know. Doing some simple yield math, I figure a 500kernel ear x 8,000 plants might yield 30-50bu/acre. Double that for higher 16,000 plant low areas?? How close did I figure?


Posted By: GM Guy
Date Posted: 27 Jan 2017 at 7:59pm
AC7060IL, you are pretty close! :)

With the wind damage that resulted in alot of down corn on the end rows (thankfully none on the long passes) we still netted about 48 bu. acre on the corn.

Did you drive by on I70? that corn field was on the north side. :) Stop in next time, free tours given. :)

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Gleaner: the properly engineered and built combine.

If you need parts for your Gleaner, we are parting out A's through L2's, so we may be able to help.


Posted By: AC7060IL
Date Posted: 27 Jan 2017 at 8:19pm
Yes, we drove I70 both directions. What exit are you close to? The next trip out, we will stop by for a tour - thanks. We saw corn on both sides still awaiting harvest. After Thanksgiving (11-30-16) on our return trip thru east CO & west KS, wind (from NW) gusts were 40-50mph and were blowing semis (box trailer types) over or pushing their trailers sideways 2-3'. Tumble weeds were rolling all over I70. Closer to Salina, we watch a farmer trying to pick his corn in those winds. I was amazed the corn was still standing.


Posted By: shameless (ne)
Date Posted: 28 Jan 2017 at 1:55am
wow...we strive to plant 22-28,000 per acre dryland corn here!


Posted By: Mikez
Date Posted: 28 Jan 2017 at 8:47am
Thanks for sharing the pictures


Posted By: GM Guy
Date Posted: 29 Jan 2017 at 2:15am
AC7060IL, we are near Exit 27.

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Gleaner: the properly engineered and built combine.

If you need parts for your Gleaner, we are parting out A's through L2's, so we may be able to help.


Posted By: Sugarmaker
Date Posted: 29 Jan 2017 at 9:05am
Very nice pictures! It nice to see some areas of the country I may never get to. Thanks for taking the time to post the pictures!
Regards,
Chris


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D17 1958 (NFE), WD45 1954 (NFE), WD 1952 (NFE), WD 1950 (WFE), Allis F-40 forklift, Allis CA, Allis D14, Ford Jubilee, Many IH Cub Cadets, 32 Ford Dump, 65 Comet.


Posted By: victoryallis
Date Posted: 29 Jan 2017 at 5:47pm
Do you farm in multiple states or custom combine?

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8030 and 8050MFWD, 7580, 3 6080's, 160, 7060, 175, heirloom D17, Deere 8760


Posted By: Ryan Renko
Date Posted: 29 Jan 2017 at 6:18pm
Great pictures!!! It looks like you take great care of your equipment. That R 60 looks like a beast!!! Ryan


Posted By: wheatbreeder
Date Posted: 29 Jan 2017 at 7:03pm
love the pic thanks for posting

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Farm stuff 8050,6690,175,F2,5050,WD


Posted By: Daehler
Date Posted: 29 Jan 2017 at 7:45pm
Great pictures! Just curious on how it works on farming in two different states that far apart? It's also amazing on how farming practices differ. We plant 28 to 33,000 on corn population.

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8070FWA,7080 BlackBelly, 7045,2 200s,D19,D17,G, WD,45,UC,7 AC mowers and lots more!
"IT TAKES 3 JD's TO OUT DO AN ALLIS, 2 TO MATCH IT IN THE FIELD AND 1 FOR PARTS!"


Posted By: CrestonM
Date Posted: 29 Jan 2017 at 9:53pm
Thanks for the great pics!!! Those are some great L2 shots!
The "air-brella" on the Diesel C2 is neat, too! I've heard they just blow chaff down your neck, and they aren't common down here. A neat collector's item, regardless. 


Posted By: Unit3
Date Posted: 30 Jan 2017 at 9:58pm
Hmmmm. I have seen your Marmon truck on a calender? I love your pictures of the L2 and the R60 side by side. 

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2-8070FWA PS/8050PS/7080/7045PS/200/D15-II/2-WD45/WD/3-WC/UC/C


Posted By: GM Guy
Date Posted: 01 Feb 2017 at 10:21pm
Originally posted by victoryallis victoryallis wrote:

Do you farm in multiple states or custom combine?


We just farm in KS. We do a few small custom jobs in KS. Most people out here have their own machine, or have a dedicated custom cutter, so we only get small jobs the cutters wont bother with or in the case of this year, a neighbor's combine breaking down.

As far as Idaho,

Grandma's place is in Idaho, and it is rented out to keep peace in the family. (siblings, fair rent rate versus crazy rent some BTOs that failed math class were paying before they went down, etc.)
We have a second fleet of combines out there that we leave out there and do small time custom work with, we try to do a couple hundred acres total.

Keep in mind guys we are over-capacitated on combines, we dont have many acres, so we may look big, but I think in our county we are in the bottom 25 percent size wise. :)




-------------
Gleaner: the properly engineered and built combine.

If you need parts for your Gleaner, we are parting out A's through L2's, so we may be able to help.


Posted By: victoryallis
Date Posted: 01 Feb 2017 at 11:34pm
Originally posted by GM Guy GM Guy wrote:



Originally posted by victoryallis victoryallis wrote:

Do you farm in multiple states or custom combine?



We just farm in KS. We do a few small custom jobs in KS. Most people out here have their own machine, or have a dedicated custom cutter, so we only get small jobs the cutters wont bother with or in the case of this year, a neighbor's combine breaking down.

As far as Idaho,

Grandma's place is in Idaho, and it is rented out to keep peace in the family. (siblings, fair rent rate versus crazy rent some BTOs that failed math class were paying before they went down, etc.)
We have a second fleet of combines out there that we leave out there and do small time custom work with, we try to do a couple hundred acres total.

Keep in mind guys we are over-capacitated on combines, we dont have

many acres, so we may look big, but I think in our county we are in the bottom 25 percent size wise. :)





Makes sense now.

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8030 and 8050MFWD, 7580, 3 6080's, 160, 7060, 175, heirloom D17, Deere 8760


Posted By: Butch(OH)
Date Posted: 02 Feb 2017 at 1:00pm
Thanks for posting the pictures I enjoyed them a lot. A few years ago I visited my oldest in Ruleton when he was working for Eyster harvesting and they were camped there. They were running corn north of Kanarado and a few miles north of town there was an farm still running cylinder Gleaners, I think Ls? There was a big old Gleaners pull type in the fence row behi d the house.



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