She needs one of those Astro Pneumatics Thor impact guns I have. No breaker bar needed, if it don't break loose, it snaps the bolt off. Far as gloves go, I don't wear any either, not into latex gloves except when gutting deer. She don't have 'piano hands' that I can see...lol
Have a couple nut splitters in my toolbox that never get used.
In the other vid, they are harvesting immature hay crop and piling it for haylage to feed cattle. In Europe they pile it and let it ferment. Here we wrap it in plastic sleeves and ferment it because as a rule we don't 'cop' (it's chop btw) it. We round bale it (high moisture and the round balers have knives inside that chop the crop as it's made into rounds, which are then put in plastic sleeves to cook.
Interestingly, the new baler I just bought has the high moisture haylage settings in the computer. Not something I'd use and I didn't get it with the rotary chopper knives anyway. The new bailer has the normal (dry hay) setting -20%, wheat straw setting -10% and haylage setting -40%. All that does in control the density of the bale as it forms. Speaking of density, with the new baler, I can custom set the bale density via the computer so I can roll a soft center bale (for easy spearing) and then progressively increase the density. I'm finishing the bales at 2500 psi which gives me an extremely solid bale when net wrapped keeps really well out doors. My old NH I traded in had adjustable density as well but not to the degree this one has and my old one was mechanical, this one is all controlled by the on board computer. I input the density on the screen and the bailer adjusts to it, no touch. All the rounds I ran on the farm fields here are leaving on Friday morning. I increased the cost per bale to reflect the cost of fuel and fertilizer and my customer is good with it, so on we go...