A neighboring farmer to me has a Bale Baron. Like my Krone baler, it’s always broken. lolI just use my Bale Barron. View attachment 4319200
Haven’t had any major problems with mine. It only jams when the bales are over 35 inches Then it’s a pain in the butt to clear.A neighboring farmer to me has a Bale Baron. Like my Krone baler, it’s always broken. lol
Yep, and the baler has no electronics to cause problems.We used to bale hay with a John Deere B- 28 hp
“Bale for money”. That’s an elusive process.Yep, and the baler has no electronics to cause problems.
Now if you used that rig to bale for money, a bigger HP tractor would be used; of course the bigger tractor would break things easier.
When I was a lot younger dad had a New Holland 76 and then a Super 77 baler it was power with that ****** Wisconsin V4 engine. He pulled it originally with a JD A and then a 70d when he up graded even with the 70 you could feel everytime the plunger went back. Sitting still the whole rig would rock back and forth. I have seen some literature with what appears to be an A Farmall and a 8N Fork pulling a 77. Something I would NOT do on hills but might consider it on perfectly level land.
The 77
The 76
Small sq. bales of hay for horses are selling for $8 ea. around my area, shoot ordinary straw is selling for $3.50 ea., and it's a byproduct of combining wheat/oats.“Bale for money”. That’s an elusive process.
No way in heck you can make small squares with a slow rig and pop them on the ground to make any kind of serious money.
But that’s fine for feeding your own horses cows, or selling some to a neighbor.
Feels like it’s taken me forever to find the “sweet spot” between automation in equipment and tonnage produced to make an acceptable profit.
Just to clarify, A dozen years ago, I was baling with 2 wagons behind the baler, the idea being to kick them into the rear wagon and then fill the front wagon. While turning around under my 4400V service lines, a bale kicked up perfectly and snagged in one of the lines. It caught fire from contact with the ground line. I let it burn out, making sure the field didn't catch from the ashes dropping down, but the black marks on the wires are still there after all these years..I think the comment was working under a power line. But, I think that may also be a bale thrower... I'm not sure I'd want to be the bale catcher.
The big lines are high enough up that one can't really mess with them.