Combines Hey combine wizard

Combine_Wizard

Guest
Well, red, I've had a few different machines from time to time. Mostly just rescues and a couple just given to me. I hate to see an old icon of the past cut up--and for whatIJ Is the price of scrap so valuable as to be really justify whacking a combine for what little it would yieldIJ Hmmmm. My current combine is a 1973 Massey-Ferguson 510. She's another rescue from certain death by scrapping. Geesh! The 510 was as good a combine as any, and really, even better than some, 30 years ago. I'm gearing up to farm seed okra for which the 510 will be very useful. I really do hope you will reconsider e-mail and maybe even either AOl or Yahoo messenger. I use both. I'd like to get another John Deere 95, too. I used to have one. My favorite is the beautiful, styled, mid to late 1960's version of the square back. To this day, that remains one of the prettiest combines of all times, too.
 

Combine_Wizard

Guest
Red, I also meant to give you this link. It's another combine talk site, much like this, but has fewer members so far, and needs more traffic. http:__combineforums.proboards42.com_index.cgi
 

Red

Guest
before i bought the 7700 which was my first combine i looked real hard at an old square back 105. it was pretty cheap but was gas and a combine that big is pretty greedy when compaired to a diesle. also it had some pretty bad cancers in the tank and other places. but still a sharp combine to look at, but the best looking one maybeIJ your 510 is a sharp looking machine as far as style goes and i would say takes the cake for one of the prettiest machines around. well it would if it didn't have that horrible looking turret auger. i always thought 915 IH machines looked pretty neat but know nothing else about them. I really liked the red and silver colors massey had in the late 70s to 80s. i heard they had a black and silver 860 for thier 100th aniversarry or something but not sure. i have always wondered why deere quit putting the red on thier machines because wasn't the waterloo boy's engine red i am not sure though. no the 95 is a good looking combine and i would also like to have one someday but don't have the money or the time yet but am still in my twenties so maybe it can wait but then if i wait their won't be as many parts for the old gals. i got it i'll just sell all my sows cows and other assorted beasts and start fixing combines. but then i'll probably go broke and have to put the old machines to work on the custom run, don't know how hard it would be to get help to drive machines with out air conditioning and buggytops and probably harder to get jobs. but i would have a catchy name like Geriatric custom harvesting. just kidding. so tell me about seed okra production mom grows some in her garden off and on my grandad loves the stuff. i'd grow it if i can feed the seed to the pigs and if it will help clean up shatter cain, the biggest problem with milo. its a little tough to figure what to do not much land to deal with. crop land is so dang competitive to rent and when i rotate to wheat use all the wheat money to buy milo to feed the pigs, and i can grow more milo than i can buy, then i have the stalks for the cows. whats the deal i can get access to pasture fairly easy but farmground is really cutthroat are people just getting lazy and don't want to fool with animals. i know i wouldn't be able to do it on crops alone not without a lot more land.
 

Red

Guest
before i bought the 7700 which was my first combine i looked real hard at an old square back 105. it was pretty cheap but was gas and a combine that big is pretty greedy when compaired to a diesle. also it had some pretty bad cancers in the tank and other places. but still a sharp combine to look at, but the best looking one maybeIJ your 510 is a sharp looking machine as far as style goes and i would say takes the cake for one of the prettiest machines around. well it would if it didn't have that horrible looking turret auger. i always thought 915 IH machines looked pretty neat but know nothing else about them. I really liked the red and silver colors massey had in the late 70s to 80s. i heard they had a black and silver 860 for thier 100th aniversarry or something but not sure. i have always wondered why deere quit putting the red on thier machines because wasn't the waterloo boy's engine red i am not sure though. no the 95 is a good looking combine and i would also like to have one someday but don't have the money or the time yet but am still in my twenties so maybe it can wait but then if i wait their won't be as many parts for the old gals. i got it i'll just sell all my sows cows and other assorted beasts and start fixing combines. but then i'll probably go broke and have to put the old machines to work on the custom run, don't know how hard it would be to get help to drive machines with out air conditioning and buggytops and probably harder to get jobs. but i would have a catchy name like Geriatric custom harvesting. just kidding. so tell me about seed okra production mom grows some in her garden off and on my grandad loves the stuff. i'd grow it if i can feed the seed to the pigs and if it will help clean up shatter cain, the biggest problem with milo. its a little tough to figure what to do not much land to deal with. crop land is so dang competitive to rent and when i rotate to wheat use all the wheat money to buy milo to feed the pigs, and i can grow more milo than i can buy, then i have the stalks for the cows. whats the deal i can get access to pasture fairly easy but farmground is really cutthroat are people just getting lazy and don't want to fool with animals. i know i wouldn't be able to do it on crops alone not without a lot more land. Ive been glad to have the hogs lately though those old gals just keep crankin out pigs and their still worth decent money. well take care Red
 

Combine_Wizard

Guest
Red, Just what year is your John Deere 7700IJ Do you still have your Massey-Ferguson 760 alsoIJ Yes, I think the Massey-Ferguson 510 is an attractive combine, but for some reason, I still prefer the styling and configuration of the M-F Super 92. I'd love to find a decent-looking, runnable or restorable Super 92 some day. No, I don't think the 510's turret unloader was by any means, a distraction from the its overall beauty. Compared to many combines made since 2000, the Model 510 is not overly rounded, either. One reason I admire the style of the 1964 and up John Deere 45-105, was for their straight lines-squared edges and corners and angles, rather than the traditional rounded features. Indeed, by the late 1960's to early 1970's, squaring became a fashionable trend in our combines and it realy was quite beautiful. In fact, I can't say any single combine made from 1972 to 1978, was ever ugly at all. One day, in 1979, a certain manufacturer introduced a new combine that really was as ugly as it was big. Well, most fortunately for combines, one doesn't have to be drop-dead gorgeous to be an outstanding performer, as later production soon proved. To this day, I'm still far less impressed by the looks of the 50 Series John Deere combines. In fact, I think the 95 or 105 and the 7720 are prettier in style, than the 6600 or 7700 and the Maximizers. Yes, the Maximizers are beautiful! The 00 Series were handsome, too. My preference for the former styles is only my personal opinion, too. No doubt, some here will "oooh and ahh" over the curvy 50 series, and that's okay, too. I thought the Models 760 and 750 Massey-Ferguson were definitely the most colorful of North American, if not the world's, combines. They were certainly a step above the old 10 Series style. I keep telling folks the bold 760 looked like it wore a red suit, black vest and white tie. The M-F 860 was also pretty, although so much silver really subdued the overall color scheme, just as some female birds are not quite as brilliant as their mates. I've been grown large gardens off and on for 25 years. I love produce. Okra is also one of my favorite vegetables. I love it fried, but never cared for it being boiled or stwed. It is rather slimy that way, but since talking to a new friend in another state who loves it boiled, I've decided to try it again like that, hopefully to experiment with some seasonings to add flavor. Pickling okra also saps the slimy juices, making the pods crisp and nicely sour, the way dill pickles should be. Seriously, I need alternatives to fried foods due to my age and potential risks of diabetes, so I am serious about boiling it and at least stir-frying in extra-virgin olive oil. Okra is a row crop and is easily planted_harvested using conventional machinery. The seeds are about half the size of soybeans and can be drilled, if certain holes are plugged. It requires a row crop [not corn] header and sunflower pans or attachments are ideal. I am going with 30" rows and 6 to 8, depending on the planter I can lease. Wherever cotton can be grown, so can okra. They are in fact, very closely related, although okra is still more like a hollyhock or Hibiscus. It is for that reason, many people still grow okras as an ornamental. Its height makes for nice borders and backdrops for other plantings. I have 23 varieties varieties of okra. I'm a plant breeder and seed saver. Although my M-F 510 is over 30 years old, figure at least 12 of those years was spent just sitting in the weeds. Not really that good, as I know time and weather can take as heavy a toll on a combine as wear and tear in the field [running]. I'm still rather disgusted by the total disregard for such a combine, and the person whom I bought her from, only wishing to haul her off for scrap. I could see that for the old, rusted-out remains of something really old, but this 510 had belonged to this young man's own father, who had farmed with her! So far, all the belts and chains look good and all the sheet metal is still in good shape. The machine was thoroughly cleaned when brought into the shed. She had been run outside some years ago, because the son not only did not want her, but only wanted to make room for his vehicles inside the barn. Having been cleaned, really helped in this case, nt having the usual piles of build-up in places to collect and hold moisture and corrosives. In addition to scrap value, I was out the expense of a battery and of course, some fuel.
 

Red

Guest
so where are you from i'm in southwest kansas and they do grow some cotton farther southwest but i don't think it will get to my area because 2-4-D is way to popular for fallow ground hear. so how much okra are you growing to use a combine to harvest it and what are you going to do with that amount of seed. do you sell it to seed retailers or do something else. about what is the yeild of the stuff where your atIJ will it grow dry land. yea i've still got the 760 and 7700. the massey is a 75 and the deere a 78 one of the last ones. the truth is i could do all my own harvesting with a 510 or a super 92. and get along fine but i've overdosed on capacity because i try to do some local custom work and get a little every year to help make the ends meet. i used to do my harvesting with a little 82 massey that i bought back in highschoolwhich aws and still is in good shape although the paint is fading but don't have the shed space anymore. that is a fun little machine pretty similar to the super 92 except for the walker cover. although i had a tough time working on it being a bigger guy i think i even came up with some new cusswords while i was wedged up in that thing well take care Red
 

Combine_Wizard

Guest
Red, you really crack me up--getting stuck inside a combine and all! lMAO! Yes, I'd love to talk to you about some specialty farming and all, but not on here. let me know whenever you get some kind of e-mail account going, PlEASE! Also, would still like to catch you over on that other combine talk forum. I like to talk about Masseys as well as Deere's over there. Both are outstanding combines. The first 760 I ever saw, up-close and personal, was a 1976 model. Yes, 1978 was the John Deere 7700's final production year, but seeing how I also graduated that year, I can remember the 7700 like it was yesterday! In fact, those 2 just happened to be my FAVORITE combines during my teen years. In fact, the uncle who was partly responsible for my new interest in combines, always gave me heck, telling me I'd have to choose between the 7700 or the 760 as I got older, because custom harvesters just don't go mixing combines. Well, some actually do, but it's not common. I used to live in SW Kansas, too.