Same thing happened to me twenty years ago going down the road with a load on a standard 6620. The axle had been cracked for a while when it broke. Insurance rebuilt that entire side from the damage. Ran the combine another 16 seasons after the repair.
Looks like a normal day farming with older equipment. Looks like a pretty sharp 6620. Don’t see a bunch of hillside machines in Southeast Michigan. Definitely nice to have some big iron to make the job a little easier. Good luck getting it back together. Thanks for the video.
Who ever the operator is, two rules. . Never do end rows with a full load. Never turn on a downhill grade with a full load. I'm really happy that this unit didn't completely land on it's side or worse. I could see from the way the rear wheels were turned, the operator was doing a sharp turn with an obviously full load into a fairly steep grade down. That was a beautiful recovery you guys made. Hopefully with some new parts and some wrench and hammering time she'll be as good as new again, soon. I'm sorry it happened to you, but in every mistake, we learn a lesson. Always off load into a cart when your near full or full before taking any kind of turn on steep grade. I'm just thankful no one was hurt and this happened so close to your shop. Again, great recovery guys, very impressed. God Bless y'all.
The thought process , the men helping to get the combine to a level spot , it shows patience & talent , being calm !! Amazing work that will have to be done ! Stay strong , continue on & best of luck getting it all back to working order , stay safe everyone !!!