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Gav836

Community Management Team
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Posts posted by Gav836

  1. Biggest faults that i am aware of with these tractors is the PTO clutch pack from what i was told by our fitter at work a few months back, other than that i don't think that there is a lot that causes grief on them. Depending on the hours its done, it should last well. My neighbours 3350 done 10 000hrs before his clutch pack needed replacing, his gets used on a power harrow, Taarup forager and JD baler PTO wise, so it lasted well.

  2. We had one on our farm about 10 years ago i suppose and to be honest in my dads words "it was unreliable tractor barring the zetor that he ever drove"  ;)

    Didn't bother me as i loved it  ;)

    I loved our one too, it just had little niggles. My neighbour here had 2 turbo'd 7810's, one of which he used to pull a 3 row tanker type beet harvester. I lost count of the number of times that i saw one of them being towed back to the farm yard

  3. From personal experience, i've had a 7810 which was an excellent tractor but it was a poor starter from cold and several other owners locally all say the same.  Up until 2 years ago we had a 110-90 Fiat which had covered 7500hrs and had very little trouble in its life. To say that that little tractor could pull would be an understatement, it had bucketfulls of grunt and would pull 14 tons of barley with ease, and no it hadn't been tweaked. Have you considered going for a Fiat Winner or F series tractor F100,110,120,130,140? We still run a F140 with 7600hrs on it and apart from routine maintainence and general age related wear like a clutch has never been no trouble. For your money they represent very good value as the Iveco engines are bombproof and much better than the Ford ones

  4. Not sure on this one, but weren't Landini marketing some of them in their colours as well? Could be something to do with it just the name bit thats a puzzle if thats the case

  5. HAHAHAHA the funniest thing ive seen to do with combines is getting to the end of the field, the driver getting out the cab with a shot gun and trying to blow the s**t out of rats as they run out infront of him at the end of the row, does anyone else have the problems of "heaps" maybe just me but the person who drives the combine aught to do the baling!!

    I'm good to baler operators, if i have to stop i will back up so the straw gets spread out along the existing swath as a 25ft Lexion leaves a bloody big heap, i have only cut part widths in the past as our gamekeeper has to do his own bales with a vintage MF baler, just can't cope with 25ft in one swath! Most of ours is chopped though, we don't do a lot of straw for livestock. One of our customers did bale 60 acres of barley up and 100 acres of wheat with a conventional baler one year, never seen anything like it, it was spitting a bale out every 6 feet!

  6. I escape that as i don't do any spraying just granule spreading. I have however backed into another combine with our Lexion taking off the straw chopper in the process, the idiot parked in my blind spot, just couldn't see him in the mirrors! I know have a rear view camera fitted, brilliant bit of kit, can even back onto the header trolley with no help now. Insurance claim was about ?6k for that and ?3k for the new APS drum where it tried to digest a flint that was too big to fit in the stone trap whilst cutting tangled up spring barley  :-\

  7. open or closed? cos if you forget to close the sprayer thats interesting, its like a person always laughing at people who bend spouts thinking how could they do that, then forgetting to put the combine boom back in and bending it. being in the middle of harvest and it going to rain the next day s**t what do u do you shorten the spout!! (just add it was bent by the UJ joints) hay it worked but tractor sat in the middle of the straw row rather than on top, which made interesting baling.

    One of our near neighbours at work at a mishap with a 24m Case sprayer. His sprayman stopped for breakfast after finishing the field with a nice clean brand new sprayer, after he'd finished his breakfast he went to go back to the yard, trouble was he forgot to fold in the booms in the process and ripped them off the sprayer-result one very unhappy boss who put him on nasty yard duties and didn't speak to him for a few days  :D :D :D

  8. I'd still have a Fendt 818 over my Renault 836 anyday but it was the large price difference that was the problem for my boss, he did like the Fendt as well but just out of reach at the time

  9. Nice pics there, they have some nice kit even if it is red  ;D

    nice 6180,good to see a few more of the reds mate,didn't know knerveland did feeders though

    Kverneland own Taarup who make diet feeders and grass land equipment, they did have the Taarup name on them to start with but that has gradually been replaced by the Kverneland name

  10. It took 3 of us a week to get the bloody thing running right. Its on a contracted farm, the owner sold the best kit and left us with all the crap so pipe blow outs are common along with the reel knocking out of gear, pump not switching off at the end of a run, pump engine dying on us and the local fishermen sabotaging the pump as they don't like it 100m away from their lake. In fact in the whole season there was only one day where it didn't play up or go wrong in some way  >:(

  11. The one that my old boss tried was fully weighted and just couldn't outpull the Atles, Renault just seem to have got the power to weight ratio and balance of these tractors down to a fine art

  12. the cat suffers from male hate syndrome, she won't go near men!

    Will put the weird behaviour down to your age, male menopause and mid life crisis  ;D:D :D ;)

    Tell that cat i respect him and i'll give him some fish next time i see him

    unless i missed something my cat is still female, better get your eyes checked cheeky  ;D:D :D :D

  13. Theres.................................................... Snow business like snow business.... like no business I know - o

    Oh mammy... oh how I love you, how I love you mammy....

    :P>:(:(;);D:):-*:-\ :'( :-*

    Sorry lads in that sort of mood tonight  :-[

    Don't mind the weird mood but please refrain from singing though, (if thats what you call it  ;D ) its upsetting my cat  ;D:D :D :D :D ;)

  14. I'll have a look tomorrow for you if I get time

    True Gavin but the ones that lift up and down seperataly are known as box drills and are a completely different style to the britans type of drill. As far as doing a conversion based on a Britains model goes, the coulter bar on the real ones are mounted on a paralellogram linkage so that the coulter height can be adjusted using a turnbuckle on either side, but hydraulics would be wrong.

    I know most mounted on up and over linkages are box drills but i have seen an Accord pneumatic mounted in such a way using a hydraulic motor to drive the fan, not very common but it has been done

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