Many years ago We needed a baler to use in straw. We found a 24T for $100.00. Figured use it till it quit. 25,000 bales later we got out of the straw business it sat ready for more. Still sits in the shed waiting to be needed again. Great balers, I think most square balers of that time were good quality. At an auction a buddy bought a new Holland Baler with boxes of parts stacked on it. Paid$10.00 for it. Cleaned it up and used it many years. Told me that someone must have stacked all those boxes on it just to get rid of them
Hey Ikon,,,great video again. Thanks for bringing it back. We always had a New Holland hayliner from the mid 70s or so. My cousin still has it to make horse hay.
Ran 30k plus bales/year through a 336 for the better part of 25 years, with a kicker on the back. There was no part of that machine I haven’t held in my hands at some point, other than the internals of the main gearbox. I’m an IH man to the core, but that was a damn fine baler, other than that factory jack. Whoever designed that should have had their ass kicked.
Thanks for tuning in! There's still a couple 327s around here. The 348 is the common one followed by any vintage NH baler. The new Kubota round balers are starting to appear as of late & I wonder how many small squares they will be replacing. Seen any orange balers by you?
Ikon is my favorite brand of film camera, Dr No would have been Mr No before receiving his doctorate. The camera is taking his picture. It's constructed as an anagram of my name. Thanks for tuning in!
Many years ago We needed a baler to use in straw. We found a 24T for $100.00. Figured use it till it quit. 25,000 bales later we got out of the straw business it sat ready for more. Still sits in the shed waiting to be needed again. Great balers, I think most square balers of that time were good quality. At an auction a buddy bought a new Holland Baler with boxes of parts stacked on it. Paid$10.00 for it. Cleaned it up and used it many years. Told me that someone must have stacked all those boxes on it just to get rid of them
Hey Ikon,,,great video again. Thanks for bringing it back. We always had a New Holland hayliner from the mid 70s or so. My cousin still has it to make horse hay.
Ran 30k plus bales/year through a 336 for the better part of 25 years, with a kicker on the back.
There was no part of that machine I haven’t held in my hands at some point, other than the internals of the main gearbox.
I’m an IH man to the core, but that was a damn fine baler, other than that factory jack. Whoever designed that should have had their ass kicked.
Would be really cool to see a video with the difference/similarities between the small square and large square balers.
Kinda funny how they are baling with quarter turn chute so a NEW HOLLAND Stack wagon can pick them up! 🤣🤣
😂 Exactly!
I have those old John Deere video tapes.
Very good balers! I've made a lot of bales with a 327. Thanks for sharing!
Thanks for tuning in! There's still a couple 327s around here. The 348 is the common one followed by any vintage NH baler. The new Kubota round balers are starting to appear as of late & I wonder how many small squares they will be replacing. Seen any orange balers by you?
@@ikonseesmrno7300 the only orange ones that I've seen are at shows.
Wow, 100 strokes a minute on the 467. I would like to try one of those balers
Neat thing about it is they weren't that much different than the 14T it 24T.
Your handle is curious, i always like how deere used the color yellow 1960-1975. The yellow on those early 80’s balers looked nice also.
Ikon is my favorite brand of film camera, Dr No would have been Mr No before receiving his doctorate. The camera is taking his picture. It's constructed as an anagram of my name. Thanks for tuning in!
@@ikonseesmrno7300 thank you for the explanation lol.
336 baler was good to
They are indeed a good baler. Thanks for tuning in!
I have a 338
Good baler. Still one or two around here, but they weren't the common ones. Thanks for tuning in!