dadohead
Platinum Member
In the first few weeks of starting at Deere... they sent me to Machine Operator Training. I was a brand new backhoe engineer.
There was 8 of us. It lasted 2 weeks and was run at the Coal Valley test site near Moline. It was an unbelievable experience. Some of the best pro operators around worked there (their real job was to demo machines for prospective customers wanting to see machines perform). For a couple weeks they taught us
8 operators/ 8 machines. You started in the morning checking/servicing the machine you were appointed. Every 2 hours you rotated to something different. End of the day you drove what you were running in and power washed it off then serviced again. They treated us like we were contractors. We filled in a huge gully in the woods and graded a road across it. Numerous machines were flipped during that 'class'! One guy snagged the outrigger cylinder on the backhoe with the bucket and blew hydraulic oil everywhere. I sank a scraper up to the axles in a soft field. Got pushed out with a 850 crawler.
I'll never forget my first experience on the scraper. We had done all the prep work and it was time to start depositing material in that valley. I'm belted in and the pro stands on the ladder showing me the controls... about 2 minutes. Then says "pickup your load over in that field." "She'll really fly down this hill so start opening the bowl before you're at the bottom." "Swing her around as you go up the other side." "Don't flip it... it will really want to flip." "Drop the cutting edge close to the ground... it should stop the flip." Holly crap... Pucker city!!! At the end of 2 weeks we were all fairly competent. We all stunk on the grader though. :<(
There was 8 of us. It lasted 2 weeks and was run at the Coal Valley test site near Moline. It was an unbelievable experience. Some of the best pro operators around worked there (their real job was to demo machines for prospective customers wanting to see machines perform). For a couple weeks they taught us
8 operators/ 8 machines. You started in the morning checking/servicing the machine you were appointed. Every 2 hours you rotated to something different. End of the day you drove what you were running in and power washed it off then serviced again. They treated us like we were contractors. We filled in a huge gully in the woods and graded a road across it. Numerous machines were flipped during that 'class'! One guy snagged the outrigger cylinder on the backhoe with the bucket and blew hydraulic oil everywhere. I sank a scraper up to the axles in a soft field. Got pushed out with a 850 crawler.
I'll never forget my first experience on the scraper. We had done all the prep work and it was time to start depositing material in that valley. I'm belted in and the pro stands on the ladder showing me the controls... about 2 minutes. Then says "pickup your load over in that field." "She'll really fly down this hill so start opening the bowl before you're at the bottom." "Swing her around as you go up the other side." "Don't flip it... it will really want to flip." "Drop the cutting edge close to the ground... it should stop the flip." Holly crap... Pucker city!!! At the end of 2 weeks we were all fairly competent. We all stunk on the grader though. :<(