Yesterday's Tractor Co. Restoration Quality Tractor Parts
Click Here or call 800-853-2651
 
TRACTOR   PARTS TRACTOR   MANUALS
   Allis Chalmers Case Cockshutt Farmall IH Ford 9N,2N,8N Ford
   Ferguson John Deere Massey Minn. Moline Oliver All The Rest
 
Marketplace
Tractor Manuals
Tractor Parts
Classified Ads
Photo Ads

Community
Discussion Forums
Project Journals
Tractor Town
Your Stories
Show & Pull Guide
Events Calendar
Hauling Schedule

Galleries
Tractor Photos
Implement Photos
Vintage Photos
Help Identify
Parts & Pieces
Stuck & Troubled
Vintage Ads
Community Album
Photo Ad Archives

Research & Info
Articles
Tractor Registry
Tip of the Day
Safety Cartoons
Tractor Values
Serial Numbers
Tune-Up Guide
Paint Codes
List Prices
Production Nbrs
Tune-Up Specs
3-Point Specs
Glossary

Miscellaneous
Tractor Games
Just For Kids
Virtual Show
Museum Guide
Memorial Page
Feedback Form

Yesterday's Tractors Facebook Page

Related Sites
Tractor Shed
TractorLinks.com
Ford 8N/9N Club
Today's Tractors
Garden Tractors
Classic Trucks
Kountry Life

Enter your email address to receive our newsletter!

subscribe
unsubscribe
  
Tractor Talk Discussion Forum

Topic: windrow rakes
[Return to Forum]

Author  [Modern View]
jacksfork

08-02-2012 15:25:36
72.21.74.76



Report to Moderator


I plan to cut my hay with a sickle bar cutter and I would like your opion on the best windrow rake to use. I have a 20 acre field that can produce 2 tons/acre. I am tired of waiting for the custom guy to arrive when I need him. I am a novice so any imformation is appreciated.

[Reply]   [No Email]
Don-Wi

08-03-2012 19:02:06
75.207.101.238



Report to Moderator

Re: windrow rakes in reply to jacksfork, 08-02-2012 15:25:36  
Your tractor will pull just about any rake, with maybe exeption of the LARGE v-rakes. We've got a 5 wheel farm-hand style wheel rake (made by Morill in Cali) that we got at auction for $7.50. We've replaced a bunch of teeth over the years, but it's been good to us.

Still well under $1000 invested in it. The one thing it needs is to have the centers of the wheels either bored and bushed, or cut out and replaced and bushed. Being I run a larger machine at work, it may be possible for me to bore them out myself and fix it up, but it may be easier to cut out the old and weld in new.

It does very well in heavier windrows. Not so much in thin hay, or like it would be for you behind a sickle bar. I really doubt it would be heavy enough to push around anything more than a small lawn tractor.



Donovan from Wisconsin

  [Reply]  [No Email]
chevytaHOE5674

08-03-2012 18:50:52
74.221.61.254



Report to Moderator

Re: windrow rakes in reply to jacksfork, 08-02-2012 15:25:36  
I have a 4 bar rake that I have pulled with my ATV just to see if it would do it.

Plenty or people raking hay with N series fords which are less than 35hp.

  [Reply]  [No Email]
jacksfork

08-03-2012 16:36:59
72.21.74.76



Report to Moderator

Re: windrow rakes in reply to jacksfork, 08-02-2012 15:25:36  
Thank you all for your comments. I neglected to say that I have a grass field, a small tractor and a smaller budget. I believe that a two wheel pto driven wheel rake is the least expensive but will it do a good enough job? Could a 35hp tractor pull a bar rake? I am looking for a used small baler. Any suggestions?

jacksfork

  [Reply]  [No Email]
rustyfarmall

08-03-2012 14:10:01
67.55.162.174



Report to Moderator

Re: windrow rakes in reply to jacksfork, 08-02-2012 15:25:36  
Quoting Removed, click Modern View to see

Are you going to bale it yourself also? If you mow it down, rake it, and then have to wait for the baler guy, you might just lose the entire crop.

  [Reply]  [No Email]
JRSutton

08-03-2012 04:09:27
75.130.109.233



Report to Moderator

Re: windrow rakes in reply to jacksfork, 08-02-2012 15:25:36  
I think you'll find cost to be a determining factor.

To hay 20 acres, you can't justify a $10,000 rake.

Might be hard to justify a $5000 rake

Figure out exactly what you CAN justify - and that's pretty much going to determine which rake you buy.

I think you'll find a solid cheap 4 bar rake meets your needs just fine.

  [Reply]  [No Email]
tjdub

08-02-2012 22:28:47
208.74.246.137



Report to Moderator

Re: windrow rakes in reply to jacksfork, 08-02-2012 15:25:36  
I'm going to agree with what Paul said, but I want to add something. If you get a bar rake, pass on one that has a solid shaft as a drive axle. If it has a shaft that's staggered and connected together with U-joints which drives a gearbox you're most likely OK, no matter what color. If it has a solid shaft that is connected to the bars with chain or a belt, don't walk away, RUN. The old steel-wheel rakes worked and still work good, but there was a "dark age" for bar rakes between the steel-wheelers the later models.

I still use a bar rake (JD 662) and it works great, but I know I could save a whole lot of fuel and time going to a modern V-rake (wheel rake) and most people in my area have.

  [Reply]  [No Email]
oldtanker

08-02-2012 22:54:39
66.228.255.239



Report to Moderator

Re: windrow rakes in reply to tjdub, 08-02-2012 22:28:47  
Quoting Removed, click Modern View to see

I have to say that you are not giving the solid axle rakes a fair shake. I have one, the only piece of equipment that my dad had, 5 bar and it works great. I just used it today raking straw. Are there better rakes out there? Sure but a str8 axle belt driven one works great too!

Rick

  [Reply]  [No Email]
Paul from MI

08-02-2012 20:22:45
204.106.250.243



Report to Moderator

Re: windrow rakes in reply to jacksfork, 08-02-2012 15:25:36  
Just about any parallel bar rake will destroy less leaves on alfalfa than others, but I've made a lot of pretty good ha with an old JD #594 4 bar steel wheel rake. There's lots of newer designs that have advantages, but for just a few acres these old ones, like the Howells, work fine.

  [Reply]  [No Email]
kornfused

08-02-2012 19:18:23
69.149.222.155



Report to Moderator

Re: windrow rakes in reply to jacksfork, 08-02-2012 15:25:36  
A lot depends on the size of the tractor you are using. Wheel rake will push a small tractor around. I have used both styles and find a 4 bar rake does the better job of cleaning up the field.

  [Reply]  [No Email]
Wheat Farmer

08-02-2012 18:29:19
97.121.174.12



Report to Moderator

Re: windrow rakes in reply to jacksfork, 08-02-2012 15:25:36  

I have a Kuhn GA 300GM, Works great with the three point hitch. If I get the hay in a windrow and get a big rain on it, I can remove the swath screen and blow the windrow back out.

  [Reply]  [No Email]
James Howell

08-02-2012 15:56:35
75.240.233.32



Report to Moderator

Re: windrow rakes in reply to jacksfork, 08-02-2012 15:25:36  
We rake several small fields and use a JD 640 hay rake.

It is a 4 bar, left side delivery, ground driven rake.

Photobucket

Works good for our purposes and is a low maintenance, inexpensive rake.

  [Reply]  [No Email]
jacksfork

08-03-2012 16:23:55
72.21.74.76



Report to Moderator

Re: windrow rakes in reply to James Howell, 08-02-2012 15:56:35  
Thank you for the responce and the photo of JD bar rake. I have a small tractor (2700 lbs with 35 hp) and a small budget. My field is grass. What do these cost and will my trator pull it?

jacksfork

  [Reply]  [No Email]
James22

08-03-2012 11:00:29
207.179.221.5



Report to Moderator

Re: windrow rakes in reply to James Howell, 08-02-2012 15:56:35  
I would suggest converting it to a five bar if you bale alfala. Easy to do you all ready have the holes. Did it on a JD 896A. Bought parts from salvage yard. Probably overkill for my infrequent use, baling straw.

  [Reply]  [No Email]

[Options]  [Printer Friendly]  [Return to Forum]   [Add a Reply]

Hop to:
TRACTOR   PARTS TRACTOR   MANUALS
Same-Day Shipping! Most of our stocked parts ship the same day you order (M-F).  Expedited shipping available, just call!  Most prices for parts and manuals are below our competitors.  Compare our super low shipping rates!  We have the parts you need to repair your tractor.  We are a Company you can trust and have generous return policies!   Shop Online Today or call our friendly sales staff toll free (800) 853-2651. [ More Info ]

Home  |  Forums


Copyright © 1997-2013 Yesterday's Tractor Co.

All Rights Reserved. Reproduction of any part of this website, including design and content, without written permission is strictly prohibited. Trade Marks and Trade Names contained and used in this Website are those of others, and are used in this Website in a descriptive sense to refer to the products of others. Use of this Web site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy Policy

TRADEMARK DISCLAIMER: Tradenames and Trademarks referred to within Yesterday's Tractor Co. products and within the Yesterday's Tractor Co. websites are the property of their respective trademark holders. None of these trademark holders are affiliated with Yesterday's Tractor Co., our products, or our website nor are we sponsored by them. John Deere and its logos are the registered trademarks of the John Deere Corporation. Agco, Agco Allis, White, Massey Ferguson and their logos are the registered trademarks of AGCO Corporation. Case, Case-IH, Farmall, International Harvester, New Holland and their logos are registered trademarks of CNH Global N.V.

Yesterday's Tractors - Antique Tractor Headquarters

About this site - Yesterday's Tractors is your one-stop source for antique tractors. If you are interested in older tractors you've come to the right place! Join more than 275,000 other classic tractor enthusiasts from all over the globe. We have many resources for antique tractor enthusiasts available including photos, classified ads, more than 24 tractor discussion forums, a show guide, values, specs and much more. Bookmark this site and come back often. Thanks for stopping by! Feel free to use our feedback form to send us your comments, suggestions and ideas.