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Gleaner L4 Video |
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CrestonM
Orange Level Joined: 08 Sep 2014 Location: Oklahoma Points: 8391 |
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Posted: 07 Aug 2020 at 9:54am |
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Really neat to actually see one in action. Wonder where it's at?
Edited by CrestonM - 07 Aug 2020 at 9:54am |
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Ed (Ont)
Orange Level Joined: 08 Nov 2009 Location: New Lowell, Ont Points: 1290 |
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Neat video. Thanks Creston. After watching the video I did some research. Turns out this was by a farm equipment dealership just north of Alma, Ontario, Canada. About an hour from my place. Was just by there a couple days ago. Maybe Calvin Schmidt knows something more about it. He is down in that area. 😀
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FREEDGUY
Orange Level Access Joined: 15 Apr 2017 Location: South West Mich Points: 5391 |
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Any guess as to the width of the header on the machine in the video? Seemed kind of narrow for an "L" machine . Looks might be deceiving though . Great photography/video work, and an awesome looking harvest set up in the field !! Thanks for the link !!
Edited by FREEDGUY - 07 Aug 2020 at 7:12pm |
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DrAllis
Orange Level Access Joined: 12 Sep 2009 Points: 20534 |
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15 or 16 ft.
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Ed (Ont)
Orange Level Joined: 08 Nov 2009 Location: New Lowell, Ont Points: 1290 |
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That part of Ont is really good farm country as you can see. Expensive land and high yields.
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CrestonM
Orange Level Joined: 08 Sep 2014 Location: Oklahoma Points: 8391 |
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I was surprised to find a video of one. I've seen a few photos of them floating around the internet, but never a video. I was fortunate enough to get a sales brochure for them on eBay (last I checked I think they still have some). Hopefully someday I'll get to see one in person.
Darold Swenson was one of the big pushers of the L4, and he was out of Saskatchewan. Would be really neat to talk to him or some of the other people involved with the machine.
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DrAllis
Orange Level Access Joined: 12 Sep 2009 Points: 20534 |
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My opinion of what the "L-4" actually is, is nothing more than an L-3 with a small block Cummins engine in it. No changes to the machine worth mentioning. Same old model. Same capacity.
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Mikez
Orange Level Access Joined: 16 Jan 2013 Location: Usa Points: 8394 |
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Ok school us that don't know the significance of this combine. Thanks
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tbran
Orange Level Joined: 14 Sep 2009 Location: Paris Tn Points: 3297 |
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The L4's that were produced triggered an infringement of product patents . Parts were being shipped with no knowledge of the development of the L4. Gleaners were being test run with different engines as there was a movement of the plant going independent of AC …. The curved front glass was the trigger as the cab came from the Independence plant. The "Taco L's " had straight glass, square fuel tanks and ALUMINUM RIVETS. Most components came from the Gleaner US plant, the sheet metal and cabs were built at the SA plant. At the end of the plant run a bunch of Taco L 's were rail shipped to the US. Dealers ordered the hydro units readily only to find standard drive machines on the rail cars. The units ran fine but when choppers were added the sheet metal fell off due to aluminum rivets. the SA plant did not have power riveters so the steel rivets were too hard to install. The glass in the front was flat with a 30 degree joint where the curve in the us glass was. They could not cast a curved glass. Swenson gambled (he had a history of gambles) that Deutz Allis would mutiny or that the company was so weak and disenfranchised they would not fight his new endeavor. He was wrong.
The machines built in Mexico were basic wheat machines. Most had no AC, had ag link non roller chain elevator chains and standard non hd feeder beaters and non header height controls. They were wheat machines. The 80's were not stable times....
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When told "it's not the money,it's the principle", remember, it's always the money..
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AC7060IL
Orange Level Joined: 19 Aug 2012 Location: central IL Points: 3343 |
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CrestonM, it great to see older gleaners still harvesting - thanks for sharing. I’ve never seen an L4.
Tbran, interesting follow-up story. So what exactly was Swenson’s relationship with Duez/Allis - employee, dealership, or farmer? Am I not seeing correctly or does it appear this L4’s windshield has been replaced with a curved style? The other gleaner in the video looks like a 1978 K2 gas wheat plot combine. It’s vertical weigh bucket is located in front left corner of it’s grain tank & it has a hydraulic cooler behind its fuel tank(hydro-trans/spout auger?). At the beginning of video in the background, I see where the wheat plot strips end. Edited by AC7060IL - 08 Aug 2020 at 6:38am |
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gleaner1
Silver Level Joined: 17 Dec 2009 Points: 216 |
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All the L4’s had the curved glass, infact the later ones even had the light grey interior like the 90-91 Independence built machines.
The two piece glass units were on L2’s that gleaner had built there when they could not keep up production in Independence, that was the rumour I heard. Personally seen two L4’s, at the Minot and WCFPS shows back in the day. |
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ALLIS CHALMERS "The color is orange"
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tbran
Orange Level Joined: 14 Sep 2009 Location: Paris Tn Points: 3297 |
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The reason for the Mexican L's was price. They had to source product locally. If they shipped all the parts from Independence plant the freight would offset the labor and overhead trying to be saved and the unit would be the same price. Square tanks and flat glass they could do there.. this was a 'plant' that had a lot of dirt floors...
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When told "it's not the money,it's the principle", remember, it's always the money..
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Lonn
Orange Level Joined: 16 Sep 2009 Location: Назарово,Russia Points: 29781 |
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My sales brochure shows curved glass and grey interior. I thought I read they had heavier sheet metal and main shaft and that they were only available as wheat machines. Let me go take a look.....................
The brochure says air conditioning was standard equipment. Also hydrostatic transmission was standard equipment. It lists as improvements over the L3: Cummins 5.9, Heavier finals, heavier and reinforced rear axle and spindles, heavier front axle assembly, heavier gauged steel thresher housing assembly, heavier rear deck and ladder, 100% heavier main threshing clutch shaft, heavier engine drive.
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Lonn
Orange Level Joined: 16 Sep 2009 Location: Назарово,Russia Points: 29781 |
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Now I'd like to see a video of the all green gleaner R50. I sat in one a few years ago. Ugly but rare to see one. I bet there are more L4 gleaners than all green R50 combines.
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Calvin Schmidt
Orange Level Joined: 11 Sep 2009 Location: Ontario Can. Points: 4525 |
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I have seen the L4 in the video in person about ten years ago when it was for sale by a farmer very close to Shantz Equipment. It originally came from Saskatchewan. The owner is driving. A former A-C dealer now Agco and strong with Gleaner
I'm about 20 minutes south of the dealership.
Edited by Calvin Schmidt - 10 Aug 2020 at 7:17am |
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Nothing is impossible if it is properly financed
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CrestonM
Orange Level Joined: 08 Sep 2014 Location: Oklahoma Points: 8391 |
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I've heard about the Mexican built L2s, but have not seen a photo of one with the straight glass. That's something else I think would be neat to see.
My custom harvest boss said the N6s they had also had aluminum rivets in them, and they had to replace them with steel rivets when they shook loose. |
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FREEDGUY
Orange Level Access Joined: 15 Apr 2017 Location: South West Mich Points: 5391 |
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Thanks for your reply Calvin. Is the reason for the narrow header to make a "baleable" windrow behind the combine ?
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Calvin Schmidt
Orange Level Joined: 11 Sep 2009 Location: Ontario Can. Points: 4525 |
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Narrow head could be for baling straw but 100 bu wheat is also common around here . The dealer also has a combine salvage yard so could have been what was available with a straight cut. 10 years ago it had a pickup for windrows
Edited by Calvin Schmidt - 10 Aug 2020 at 7:41pm |
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Nothing is impossible if it is properly financed
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FREEDGUY
Orange Level Access Joined: 15 Apr 2017 Location: South West Mich Points: 5391 |
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I've never had the opportunity to run wheat, does it take a lot of power to run wheat being clipped 4-5 inches down from the heads ? We run a 15' header on an F2 in 60 bushel beans, but perhaps this is not a fair comparison . Thanks again for all of your replies !!
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Calvin Schmidt
Orange Level Joined: 11 Sep 2009 Location: Ontario Can. Points: 4525 |
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He are a few pictures from 2010 when the farmer had it for sale only a few miles from the current owner. I assume it is the same combine.
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Nothing is impossible if it is properly financed
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Calvin Schmidt
Orange Level Joined: 11 Sep 2009 Location: Ontario Can. Points: 4525 |
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Combine capacity in wheat is more about cleaning capacity. Corn it's power
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Nothing is impossible if it is properly financed
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FREEDGUY
Orange Level Access Joined: 15 Apr 2017 Location: South West Mich Points: 5391 |
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Thanks.
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FREEDGUY
Orange Level Access Joined: 15 Apr 2017 Location: South West Mich Points: 5391 |
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Calvin, or others, seems like Gleaner put out a C 62 ?? Was this primarily for wheat growers or did "row croppers" utilize them ?
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Lonn
Orange Level Joined: 16 Sep 2009 Location: Назарово,Russia Points: 29781 |
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From what I understand the C62 was a shelved design by Gleaner, maybe under Allis Chalmers and then it was revived and produced under AGCO. I'd guess an R62 could do almost anything a C62 could but do it better with proably the exception of Canola........ purely a guess on my part gleaned from lots of reading about each machine. I have no experience with the C62 or canola. Seemed the C62 was mostly sold in wheat country but I'm sure some went into the corn belt. I say that based on seeing them for sale in wheat country and never having seen any for sale in my area of the corn belt.
Edited by Lonn - 10 Aug 2020 at 8:33pm |
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Wink I am a Russian Bot |
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VAfarmboy
Silver Level Joined: 06 Dec 2013 Location: Virginia Points: 468 |
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Years ago I got into some 80-100 bushel wheat with dad's old Deere 4400 with a 13' header once and the biggest problem was elevator capacity. It was just more wheat than that machine (designed when 40 bushels of wheat was a bumper crop) could handle.
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CrestonM
Orange Level Joined: 08 Sep 2014 Location: Oklahoma Points: 8391 |
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I’m not sure it is...it has “Allis-Chalmers” on the cab and the Cummins emblem under the L4 on the bin. The one in the video doesn’t have either of those characteristics. |
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SteveM C/IL
Orange Level Access Joined: 12 Sep 2009 Location: Shelbyville IL Points: 8244 |
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From what I remember on Gleaner forum,the C62 is a Walker machine with a rubber belt under Walkers instead of shaker pan like M-L. Was not a Gleaner design. Massy?
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Lonn
Orange Level Joined: 16 Sep 2009 Location: Назарово,Russia Points: 29781 |
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-- --- .... .- -- -- .- -.. / .-- .- ... / .- / -- ..- .-. -.. . .-. .. -. --. / -.-. .... .. .-.. -.. / .-. .- .--. .. ... -
Wink I am a Russian Bot |
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DrAllis
Orange Level Access Joined: 12 Sep 2009 Points: 20534 |
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Gleaner design that utilized many R-62 parts as well.
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Calvin Schmidt
Orange Level Joined: 11 Sep 2009 Location: Ontario Can. Points: 4525 |
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If I remember correctly the C62 was basically a M-F and as the Doc said a lot of other Gleaner parts.
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Nothing is impossible if it is properly financed
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