While setting in a tractor with the AC on, listening to the radio, pulling a boll buggy during cotton harvest, I bought one off of gunbroker using my phone. It should be here by the end of the week.


Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
On large plots this has been a way of life for several years. I have two friends who use GPS programs in their tractors. I have watched the tractors several times and it's kinda like watchin paint dry. Very boring!!JustSomeOldGuy wrote:My BIL (currently working as a foreman on a big farm in Georgia) was telling me a few months back about the high end tractors with inertial sensors and GPS. They program the GPS with the field location, dimensions, and pattern. Once they 'driver' gets the tractor to the field, the electronics take over and the driver becomes a passenger.....so they can now hire tractor 'drivers' with no experience who couldn't disc or plow a straight line on their own to save their life.....they only have to find their way between the equipment barn and the current field.....
I'm still not entirely sure he isn't shining me on...........
PUT ME IN THAT TRACTOR AND I PROMISE IT WILL NOT BE BORING!!!!krieghoff wrote:On large plots this has been a way of life for several years. I have two friends who use GPS programs in their tractors. I have watched the tractors several times and it's kinda like watchin paint dry. Very boring!!JustSomeOldGuy wrote:My BIL (currently working as a foreman on a big farm in Georgia) was telling me a few months back about the high end tractors with inertial sensors and GPS. They program the GPS with the field location, dimensions, and pattern. Once they 'driver' gets the tractor to the field, the electronics take over and the driver becomes a passenger.....so they can now hire tractor 'drivers' with no experience who couldn't disc or plow a straight line on their own to save their life.....they only have to find their way between the equipment barn and the current field.....
I'm still not entirely sure he isn't shining me on...........
Not my tractor, I couldn't afford it but I was helping my buddy who's dad farms 1100 acres and custom harvests another 500. Yes they have GPS. Load the tractor and implement in the GPS unit, select your pattern or direction of travel, how much overlap between passes, point the tractor close the direction you want to go and hit a button. The newer units recognize the field you are in and you can pre-program the patterns. The tractor will steer but you still have to select engine RPM, gear, and turn around at the end of the field or steer around obstacles (electrical poles). Plus you have to pay attention to catch when something breaks so you don't really tear a piece of equipment up. Things break all the time I have learned. I hear they are working on software to perform turning around.krieghoff wrote:On large plots this has been a way of life for several years. I have two friends who use GPS programs in their tractors. I have watched the tractors several times and it's kinda like watchin paint dry. Very boring!!JustSomeOldGuy wrote:My BIL (currently working as a foreman on a big farm in Georgia) was telling me a few months back about the high end tractors with inertial sensors and GPS. They program the GPS with the field location, dimensions, and pattern. Once they 'driver' gets the tractor to the field, the electronics take over and the driver becomes a passenger.....so they can now hire tractor 'drivers' with no experience who couldn't disc or plow a straight line on their own to save their life.....they only have to find their way between the equipment barn and the current field.....
I'm still not entirely sure he isn't shining me on...........
Oh, I know! I wear ear muffs with am/fm built in. When shredding- my whole body is the color of dust after an hour or two! We sub'd out the hay production as well.jason812 wrote:
Flechero, its still dirty work but not near as bad or loud as an open cab. When I have to drive one of the open cab tractors, I wear earplugs.