- Joined
- Feb 21, 2003
- Messages
- 26,251
- Location
- SE Michigan in the middle of nowhere
- Tractor
- Kubota M9000 HDCC3 M9000 HDC
Kind of surprised, you usually have a comment, germane or not.
That reminds of the old saying "kettle calling the pot black"!!!Kind of surprised, you usually have a comment, germane or not.
You're lucky or don't make many bales. I inventoried my rd bales in early part of Jan & had 297 4X5+ bales on hand. I didn't want a lot of added income in 2022 so I haven't advertised my hay. Since 1st of year I've sold 100 rd bales.I never have any left over myself. All sold.
5030
That reminds of the old saying "kettle calling the pot black"!!!
Thanks for words of encouragementIndeed, Jim. So true.
Hope you are well and going to keep haying next year? You keep me (and probably quite a few others) inspired with how you keep on going!!
Using your numbers, and estimating 10 minutes for rethreading the needle, that's a bale every 18 seconds. I don't see how to expect anything better than that. Maybe increase ground speed?I just purchased a used Case 8545 small square baler. What kind of numbers of bales per hour can I expect from this baler. I have it attached to an 85 hp tractor and my bales are around 3ft long and weigh around fifty pounds.
I baled with it today and in 2 hours, I baled 370 bales on the counter. I had some break open and I had to rethread a needle once due to the twine breaking.
Is this the norm for an inline baler, I thought it would be a little faster?
Marshall
He hasn't been seen since two months after he posted that....8 years ago.Using your numbers, and estimating 10 minutes for rethreading the needle, that's a bale every 18 seconds. I don't see how to expect anything better than that. Maybe increase ground speed?
Each bale should have 12-15 "strokes" or "leafs". Figuring 15, your plunger is making a full revolution every 1.2 seconds.
So, I'm guessing your bales have a lot less strokes per bale. Break one and count them. I've saw bales with many less, such as 4 or 5 strokes. They are functional bales but nothing pretty about them. And very hard to handle without breaking the bale.
Sure wouldn't want to be the stacker guy on your wagon pulled behind your baler.![]()