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what size baler should i get for the M

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jonnny2006

06-30-2007 21:09:00




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i wanna get a baler to make some horse hay out of the grass that is waisted around my home and sell it to my brothers friend as he said he can get 1.75 to 2.25 a square bale for ditch hay. there is no trash in the grass but is a little dusty. my dad used to do it with his 39 H and a mccormick baler, til the baler got out of time and he never fixed it. he just gave away the baler and the 39 H. both of which were in bad to worse condition. should i go with a mccormick? I herd new holland are good to. Any ideas andf how much can i expect to spend on a older one? it must work good and be dependable. What do you guys think????? There is alot of grass i could bale plus i could put my 3 achers that i just mow into horse hay.

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MJF

07-01-2007 20:13:12




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 Re: what size baler should i get for the M in reply to jonnny2006, 06-30-2007 21:09:00  
We just made 700 bale last weekend with my M and an IH 440 w/ a kicker. 2nd and 3rd gear with out any problems.



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alex ahlbrecht

07-01-2007 16:13:42




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 Re: what size baler should i get for the M in reply to jonnny2006, 06-30-2007 21:09:00  
ohh im sorry i forgot to answer your question . I would say 24t because we pulled one with our Super M once and it handled it just fine and made nice square bales .



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alex ahlbrecht

07-01-2007 16:11:26




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 Re: what size baler should i get for the M in reply to jonnny2006, 06-30-2007 21:09:00  
my dad had a nh 273 on the farm when he was a kid and then they sold that farm and my dad didn't farm awhile untill i was about 12 then we bought 20 acres and planted hay with wheat as the nursing crop with some of the neighbor's equiptment it did good that year we got like 50 bushels per acre and baled the straw with another friend's 756D and some model of IH baler but i don't recall what and it baled nice the only thing that ever was wrong was that we sheared maybe 10 pins the next year we bought our own stuff for the hay , a JD 1290 haybine , 2 hayracks , a NH 55 rake and a NH 273(with a kicker) like the one he had when he was growing up . it was nice and had sat inside most of it's life . We had problems with it the first year we used it and after that we had to rebuild the whole pickup . the next year we baled hay beside a JD 24t on some man's land that he asked us to hay . The 24T ended up doing most of the baling because ours broke down so much . the next year we did ours without much problems and then the same guy asked us to do his again so we did and the baler was doing an ok job but still breaking down . then this year was the last year we were gonna use it and send it on down the road unless it started working good . and it failed to prove it's test and broke multiple times . so me and my dad both want to sell it and get a JD we don't know exactly what model yet but we know of a 24t for sale but i want a 328 it think it is . my unlce has a 328 and it works nice .

third party imagewow long post

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Dennyf

07-01-2007 14:14:10




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 Re: what size baler should i get for the M in reply to jonnny2006, 06-30-2007 21:09:00  
My uncle baled hay with his M and a T45 baler for years back in the 50s, before getting a 460 and moving to a NH baler w/kicker. He finished out with a 560 and JD baler that really had a kicker on 'er. Think he averaged 4 to 5 thousand bales per year on his dairy farm, depending on the second cutting, but don't think he ever topped 4 thousand with the T45 and the M. I recall those bales being heavier than the bales my cousin now makes.

My cousin now makes about 5-6 thousand 60lb bales per year on the same farm, with a 656D and a fairly new NH baler w/kicker, but also round bales some of the hay.

Uncle never had much good to say about the T45 either, but a bud of mine had one that came with the 40 acre horse farm he bought in 1978 and baled about 1200-1600 bales of nag hay each year with little drama. Used to rile my uncle to no end, when my bud would report how many bales he put up each summer with that old junker, with no problems. He pulled it with an Oliver Super 55.

My bud's son made it through ONE season with that old T45 after my buddy died, went out and bought a used NH baler, which they still use. ;O)

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georgeky

07-01-2007 09:39:56




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 Re: what size baler should i get for the M in reply to jonnny2006, 06-30-2007 21:09:00  
Jonnny, I have a 276 NH and a 430 All Twine IH. They are both very good balers. Parts are available for both. The IH 430 will bale more hay at the end of the day. I have never seen one that will bale with it. That being said, unless you just have to have an IH baler, I would recommend that you look for a NH, as parts are a lot cheaper for them and lots more folks know how to work on them. I can't speak to older IH balers never used one, but the 430 or 47 with all twine knotters will eat hay. Both my 276 or 430 rarely miss a bale. There will come a time in the not so far future that the IH parts will likely be retired. You have to consider the future of parts and NH will more likely have parts longer than IH will. Good luck.

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GordoSD

07-01-2007 06:44:20




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 Re: what size baler should i get for the M in reply to jonnny2006, 06-30-2007 21:09:00  
I have a NH 275. It's about the same as the 273. I wouldn't get anything older than that. Expect to pay 1100 to 1500 for one in good working condition. I'd insist seller agree to come and assist the first time you use it. AND GET A MANUAL. There area bout 50 different things to adjust on the contraption.

Gordo



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daves40acre

07-01-2007 06:31:54




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 Re: what size baler should i get for the M in reply to jonnny2006, 06-30-2007 21:09:00  
Well just about any new holland baler will work but try to get one that has been taken care of. Good balers I know of are 68,69,268,269,273,282 a 66 is good if you are paitent and they are in good working order, That is what I use My set up is 41 H, new holland 467 hay bine, Ih 15 rake, new holland 66 does the job for me do about 800 bales a year



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Hugh MacKay

07-01-2007 02:54:33




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 Re: what size baler should i get for the M in reply to jonnny2006, 06-30-2007 21:09:00  
jonnny: "You heard New Holland were good too", that is an under statment. IH never in their history built a baler that would hold a candle to the poorest NH. Through the 50s, 60s and well into the 70s, New Holland hay and forage equipment were superior to anything on the market. Nothing would touch them on performance, their pto balers required less hp than any other baler. Bob is right, your M will hardly notice it's back there.

I had a NH S-69, didn't seem to matter whether I used 300, 560D or 656D, it baled as much hay in an hour or a day. In fact the most hay I ever baled in one day was done with the 300. Ocasionally when those three tractors were busy with haylage, and some material got too dry for haylage, I raked it up and baled it with the 20hp Farmall 130 pulling a wagon and using thrower on flat land. It wasn't big production with the 130, but at least I didn't have to pull a larger tractor off other work.

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Bob Kerr

06-30-2007 21:43:43




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 Re: what size baler should i get for the M in reply to jonnny2006, 06-30-2007 21:09:00  
I had a new holland 68 hayliner I really liked. worked good and easy to get parts for. I pulled it with my F-12 baling wheat straw but it was a load for it. I doubt the M would notice it back there much. The 68 I had was PTO drive, but they have some with wisconsin engines also.



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D Slater

07-01-2007 07:42:54




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 Re: what size baler should i get for the M in reply to Bob Kerr, 06-30-2007 21:43:43  
Hi Bob, baled many a bale with a 2 cylinder wisconsin 68 and Farmall H tractor. With no pto shaft you could follow 90 degree and more windrow. If engine was hot and you wanted to use it agian before it cooled I learned not to shut it off.



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Hugh MacKay

07-01-2007 08:14:31




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 Re: what size baler should i get for the M in reply to D Slater, 07-01-2007 07:42:54  
Dave: You remind me of my dad one day with his first baler. He shut the Wisconcin off between two fields about a mile apart. We cranked for 2 hours, He even managed to turn it over while I had hold of a plug wire. Finally as the baler started 2 hours later it started to rain.

I never saw anything that hated work as much as that 45 baler, even when it did go it wouldn't tie more than 25 bales in a row. That was the reason IH designed those twine boxes on the side of the bale chamber, it was a seat on each side for a farmer's sons to sit there and manually tie the bales. It went down the road PDQ, soon as we got a New Holland dealer. By 1960, one of the standing jokes in our community was the 5 acres of 45 balers the New Holland dealer acquired after being in business only 5 years. Some of them hadn't baled 12,000 bales lifetime. I don't even think there was a politician hated as much as those IH 45 balers.

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chuck46

07-03-2007 08:51:45




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 Re: what size baler should i get for the M in reply to Hugh MacKay, 07-01-2007 08:14:31  
Good morning Hugh, Let me tell you a short story, when I was about 13 our neighbor came to dad at 12:30 and asked if he could bale hay that afternoon. Dad and I took the MD the 45 and 2 wagons and went. The men next door to the neighbor was to bale it, they told Bill to rake it big cause they didn"t have time to waste and their 400D and NH baler could handle it. In less than a round the shuttle board feeder on their NH went into the plunger. They were laughing at us when we pulled in, which I thought was kind of ironic. I am sure they watched, all afternoon we never clutched the MD, I asume you know how fast low is. That 45 pushed out bales on as little as 6 and 7 strokes. We pulled out at a little after 6, just in time to run home for milking, a little over 1200 bales. My dealer sold both NH and IH, he had customers who liked one or the other, and some who had trouble with either. When I bought the 440 he had 2 NH's on hand, had just sold a 430, and had the one I bought coming. I never saw acres, or even a few of any baler setting because they wouldn't work. I showed him where the 45's bale chamber was cracked. He told me the next time I saw him that a neighbor gave him 150 bucks for it before he got it off the truck. There may be thousands who had trouble with a 45, I don't really care, but someone should also be allowed to say they liked the machine and why. I have hay to bale again today, hope yours is good, Chuck

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Hugh MacKay

07-03-2007 18:01:02




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 Re: what size baler should i get for the M in reply to chuck46, 07-03-2007 08:51:45  
Chuck: Did you read my original post on this thread? If you go back to my original thread, responding to jonnny, I did say, no one held a candle to New Holland through the 50s, 60s and into the 70s. I do believe by the mid 70s other manufacturers like IH and Deere were fast catching up. I never had a small square baler after 1976, but from talking with other farmers, I believe NH actually slipped in the 80s, maybe thought they could live on their reputation. I know my neighbor 35 cow herd changed from NH to MF in the early 80s, and I also know he didn't have that NH very long. He was one of the two farmers that drove 120 miles in the early 50 to buy a new NH baler.

On numerous ocasions I have baled one hundred tons of hay in a single afternoon, probably 8-9 hours baling. In fact I baled 100 ton each day on two consecutive days pulling the S-69 with Farmall 300. The baler had a thrower and it took 15 men and boys to take care of hay at the barn. I've seen the S-69 go for hours making 40" bales on 3 plunger strokes. On those two days I mention we completely filled a 36' x 110 conventional dairy barn, enough hay to feed the 50 mature holsteins our entire 7 month stored feeding Canadian fall, winter and spring. I have also used my 560D and 656D on that S-69 baler, however they never baled anymore hay than 300, and never two days in a row. I wouldn't fault the tractors, it takes a lot of manpower to handle 100 ton of hay from 20' thrower wagons. And labor was the reason I went to a round baler.

I haven't a bit of doubt about you claims on the IH 430. I've heard a lot of good things about them. But don't brag up an IH 45 to me, they had no capacity, poor reliability on tieing and thousands of then got cut up for scrap having baled less than 12,000 bales, lifetime. I am a relative of the New Holland dealer I dealt with, he showed me his 5 acres of 45s, some of them stacked two high. There were balers in there, didn't have the paint wore off the pickup. He told me of going to a meeting of New Holland and the standing joke, "How large is your inventory of IH 45 balers?"

In this entire post and other posts I'm talking about balers that were bought new by the users.

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chuck46

07-01-2007 21:04:08




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 Re: what size baler should i get for the M in reply to Hugh MacKay, 07-01-2007 08:14:31  
Hi Hugh, I like the advice you offer on this forum, but I must really take issue with you on balers. When I was young I did a lot of haying with neighbors, worked with a lot of diffrent balers. Never found one that would beat our 45 at home. I wore out 2 of them, by wore out I mean the plunger chamber broke out oposite the hay knife. I would guess that took at least 2 to 300 hundred thousand bales. I expected them to tie a thousand or more bales a day and not miss a handful. Today I use an IH 440, it has baled 15 to 25 thousand every year since it was new in 76, I would challenge you to find a NH to match it. Have a great day, Chuck

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Hugh MacKay

07-02-2007 03:21:12




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 Re: what size baler should i get for the M in reply to chuck46, 07-01-2007 21:04:08  
chuck: I've seen my NH S-69 go through an entire season and never miss tieing a single bale. I'm also talking 30,000 plus bales per year. I know hundreds of NH owners that will tell you the same. Bear in mind my S-69 came 15 years before your IH 440, and I did say through the 50s, 60s, and into the 70s NH were superior to anything on the market. Yes, by the mid 70s the others did start to catch up. What was the point in catching up by 1975, 75% of the hay was going round bale by then. I had my S-69 for 17 years and expect it surpassed the half million bale mark, I doubt if it missed tieing 50 bales lifetime. I traded it off for a round baler in 1976.

I wouldn't brag up IH 45 balers on this forum, just serves to make one look bad, or show how little he knows. When I was a kid in the 50s almost everyone in the area had a 45 baler. We didn't know any better. We really thought it was necessary to have the kid on behind hand tieing bales. Then two farmers drove 120 miles to the nearest NH dealer and each bought NH balers. By 1956 a local guy took out a NH dealership. Everyone said he would fail selling only a line of haying and forage equipment, and haying and forage equipment more expensive to buy than the others. By 1960 he had a 5 acre bone yard of 95% IH 45 balers. Some of them had not baled 12,000 bales of hay lifetime. It was the standing joke amoung NH dealers in the 60s, "How large is your inventory of 45 balers.

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chuck46

07-02-2007 07:47:21




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 Re: what size baler should i get for the M in reply to Hugh MacKay, 07-02-2007 03:21:12  
Good morning Hugh, So I look bad or know little because I can make a 45 tie like it is supposed to? I don"t brag only try to tell it like it is. I would not have a NH baler because they have never made a feeding mechanisim that even comes close to the auger and fork that IH made and JD copied. The quality and shape of a NH bale is very inferior. Even the company tells you to use a hyd. bale tension devise if you have an automatic bale wagon. I have used one behind my 440 for 20 years and have no problem. I don't have time to be the butt of somebodies joke, I have hay to bale. Have a good day, Chuck

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Hugh MacKay

07-02-2007 08:58:33




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 Re: what size baler should i get for the M in reply to chuck46, 07-02-2007 07:47:21  
chuck: This wasn't a joke, thousands of farmers across North America could not make a 45 tie with any kind of relyability. The archives here at YT contain hundreds of experiences from many that tell the tale.

I don't have the facts on baler sales, however I've travelled enough of North America, I'd be satisfied New Holland has 50% of the small square baler market, since the beginning of mobile balers. I don't think I'll question the judgement of all those farmers. I know our own IH dealer never stocked balers in the 60s and 70s. He even tried to buy the New Holland dealership, when the original guy retired.

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