oat hay Baling issues

   / oat hay Baling issues
  • Thread Starter
#21  
Jim I can see how compressors like the ones in that pick would really help mine just go straight to the auger from the bar
 
   / oat hay Baling issues #22  
I think I'd try making the the bales shorter. Maybe around 30".
 
   / oat hay Baling issues
  • Thread Starter
#23  
hopefully these pics work they are all i have on the camera right now and i get to show off my wife and kids
 

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   / oat hay Baling issues #24  
Wow I can't imagine anyone wanting to handle a 90 lb. bale ;-)
 
   / oat hay Baling issues
  • Thread Starter
#25  
thats light for out here! our normal bales in these parts are 3 twine 90-140+ bales for alfalfa
 
   / oat hay Baling issues #26  
thats light for out here! our normal bales in these parts are 3 twine 90-140+ bales for alfalfa

I can't understand bailing them that heavy. It seems much more efficent to make them small enough that one man can handle them without having to pay a chiropractor.
 
   / oat hay Baling issues #28  
I can't understand bailing them that heavy. It seems much more efficent to make them small enough that one man can handle them without having to pay a chiropractor.

My neighbor baled his irrigated alfalfa 3-twine, 100-120 lb bales. His customers complained about the weight so he changed to 2-twine 45-55 lb bales. Even then he was losing money what with the cost of consumables (irrigation water, fuel, fertilizer, etc). So he ripped his fields last fall, leveled them and planted a plum tree orchard for prunes (aka dried plums) last month. Sunsweet pays better than the alfalfa buyers.
 
   / oat hay Baling issues
  • Thread Starter
#29  
The 36 inch works well for me for stacking. I really am not bothered by the weight I was hoping for 75 but
 
   / oat hay Baling issues #30  
The 36 inch works well for me for stacking. I really am not bothered by the weight I was hoping for 75 but
Long bales should stack better. I suggested shortening them in hopes they'd hold together.
 
   / oat hay Baling issues #31  
My neighbor baled his irrigated alfalfa 3-twine, 100-120 lb bales. His customers complained about the weight so he changed to 2-twine 45-55 lb bales. Even then he was losing money what with the cost of consumables (irrigation water, fuel, fertilizer, etc). So he ripped his fields last fall, leveled them and planted a plum tree orchard for prunes (aka dried plums) last month. Sunsweet pays better than the alfalfa buyers.

If 3 twine balers are used around here, they must be well hidden because I've never seen one. I knew there had to be at least one in California because, I've seen the bales on TV.
 
   / oat hay Baling issues #32  
If 3 twine balers are used around here, they must be well hidden because I've never seen one. I knew there had to be at least one in California because, I've seen the bales on TV.

Yesterday my next door neighbor baled about 8 acres of non-irrigated oat hay with his 3-twine baler.

AlanB-2013-3.JPGAlanB 2013-2.JPGAlanB 2013-1.JPG


Another neighbor down the road and around the corner bales about 25 acres of irrigated alfalfa with a self-propelled 3-twine baler

Dicks baler-2.JPGDicks baler-1.JPG

A third neighbor baled about 150 acres of non-irrigated oat hay with a 3-twine baler.

Those things are all over the place around here.
 
   / oat hay Baling issues #33  
I never seen an aftermarket sq baler drive system such as in your photo.
 

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   / oat hay Baling issues #34  
Those things are all over the place around here.[/QUOTE]

Does just one man usually throw those big bales on a truck?
 
   / oat hay Baling issues
  • Thread Starter
#35  
Oh gotcha. When I was working on this baler frying to get it to tie a k.ot I set it to about 15 inch lengths the kids loved that!
 
   / oat hay Baling issues
  • Thread Starter
#36  
They only load by hand if the bale picker is broke. But in highschool I delivered hay for a feed store and got to hand move 60 100-120 lb bales. And stack them in people's sheds.
 
   / oat hay Baling issues #37  
Oh gotcha. When I was working on this baler frying to get it to tie a k.ot I set it to about 15 inch lengths the kids loved that!
I do that manually when I finish baling a cutting and want to clean out the baler. Perhaps I should do that for the last 2 bales to make the easier to get out...

Aaron Z
 
   / oat hay Baling issues #38  
I never seen an aftermarket sq baler drive system such as in your photo.

Don't think it's available nowadays. It's vintage from the 1970s. It's called a "One Wheeler" and it was made by Keith Foster in Madras, OR.

Dicks baler-3.JPG

KEITH - Making History

The name on the side of my neighbor's one wheeler is "Keith Rankins". Don't know the significance.
 
   / oat hay Baling issues #39  
Those things are all over the place around here.

Does just one man usually throw those big bales on a truck?[/QUOTE]

The bales are dropped on the field. Generally the small time buyers just drive onto the field with their pickups and load their flat bed trailers with a dozen or so bales. My neighbor has a New Holland bale stacker for moving the bales to the barnyard. He has used the stacker to make large volume deliveries to nearby customers.
 
   / oat hay Baling issues #40  
Handling those big bales ought to build a 'young' man man up. I suspect they'd tear this 'old' man down.
 

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