Nothing beats a good running 3000. That looks like a 9' haybine? Thats impressive. I have a 1966 3000 gas that I mow hay with a Massey 7' mower conditioner and bale with it too. One of the best tractors I ever owned.
Thanks for sharing this Randy, enjoyed it. Use a 492 hooked to a NH 7840. Your haybine is very similar, gets the job done. Interesting to see someone going round and round the field, that's how I do it.
We had the same NH Haybine - We pulled it with a Massey 165 which was a little bigger at 58 hp. It looks like your Ford 3000 handles the job very well. We did not have as level of ground and pulled it up and down some pretty good sized hills in East Central Ohio. It is nice to see the old school stuff still in the field working as good as ever. Thanks for the video! Enjoyed it.
We pull one with a ford 2000 with not problems. However some left on old fence post in the edge of a field. The haybine picked it up and jammed between the rollers. Real fun getting in out. All we had was a cole chisel that we sharpens and a hammer. Took a while.
I spent much of my youth driving that same rig cutting hay in Boiling Springs South Carolina. I left the better part of my SPINE in those fields picking up those small bales of hay. Jim in Chile
Ha! We felt like we were in high heaven when we got our Haybine. Before that, it was a 7’ Ford 3-point sickle bar mower on our Ford 2000 all summer. Then I pulled an 8’ conditioner, then swapped for a 3-point pto rake, both on our 4000. Those tasks were mine to do - start about 40 min before dew dried, greasing the equipment. As soon as dew was dried, I mapped out the day’s area (took about a week to do 40 acres) and mowed, then conditioned it. Then switched to the rake and did yesterday’s area. By the time I finished that, Dad had come home from work and started baling with the Allis-Chalmers WD-45 and small round baler. Eventually we got done and started hauling bales back to the barn. By that time, the first field was almost ready to cut again if the rains came.
@@ChileExpatFamily Funny enough, when I went off to college and grad school, he bought a big round baler! 1200 lbs = 24 small round bales. He mounted a winch- driven bale spear on his pickup and hauled hay the easy way after that!
Man, this brings back a TON of memories. If my memory serves right, we pulled the haybine with either a Ford 4000 or IH 454. Thanks so much. Appreciate you taking the time to do this!
Looks a lot like how we did it back in the 1970’s, although ours was a 4000. Your 3000 looks a lot like my current one, although your loader is more nearly matched to the tractor. Mine is way too heavy, and uses both remotes. And doesn’t come off at all easy. About a half hour for the mechanic who knew how to do it.
I have a 72 3000. Doesn’t have a loader but looking at the Westerndorf T-26. What diverter valve do you have on it? I need to put rear remotes on mine too.
Just curious. If you bush hogged around the field why not run your first round with the tractor running in the bush hogged part instead of running over the hay
That little Ford 3000, is a gem. I like MF fitted with the Perkins 152 engine as well. Does your Ford have the 3-cylinder motor? If so, any 3-cylinder with the 120° crankshaft, is excellent in my book. Thanks.
The haybines work awfully good UNLESS you have salamanders that leave an ant-like dirt mound. I never had the nerve to detach my front-end loader, because hooking the hoses back up was an SOB!
Cool video but always do your backswath last along a tree line incase there's limbs or stuff that can hurt your mower that way if you hit something your not wasting time fixing it instead of haying in a 3 or 4 day hay window
Not bad advice! However, I bush hogged along the tree line of this field prior to starting the cut. So I knew there was nothing to hit. Thanks for watching! Glad you enjoyed!
Nothing beats a good running 3000. That looks like a 9' haybine? Thats impressive. I have a 1966 3000 gas that I mow hay with a Massey 7' mower conditioner and bale with it too. One of the best tractors I ever owned.
Nice looking set up. Good hay too
Thanks for sharing this Randy, enjoyed it. Use a 492 hooked to a NH 7840. Your haybine is very similar, gets the job done. Interesting to see someone going round and round the field, that's how I do it.
Glad you enjoyed, thanks for watching!
We had the same NH Haybine - We pulled it with a Massey 165 which was a little bigger at 58 hp. It looks like your Ford 3000 handles the job very well. We did not have as level of ground and pulled it up and down some pretty good sized hills in East Central Ohio. It is nice to see the old school stuff still in the field working as good as ever. Thanks for the video! Enjoyed it.
Glad you enjoyed watching! I imagine this haybine would really push the 3000 around if there were hills. Plenty of power for cutting though!
We pull one with a ford 2000 with not problems. However some left on old fence post in the edge of a field. The haybine picked it up and jammed between the rollers. Real fun getting in out. All we had was a cole chisel that we sharpens and a hammer. Took a while.
@@c.carney1948 That would be seriously a pain. How long did it take?
I spent much of my youth driving that same rig cutting hay in Boiling Springs South Carolina.
I left the better part of my SPINE in those fields picking up those small bales of hay. Jim in Chile
Ha! We felt like we were in high heaven when we got our Haybine. Before that, it was a 7’ Ford 3-point sickle bar mower on our Ford 2000 all summer. Then I pulled an 8’ conditioner, then swapped for a 3-point pto rake, both on our 4000. Those tasks were mine to do - start about 40 min before dew dried, greasing the equipment. As soon as dew was dried, I mapped out the day’s area (took about a week to do 40 acres) and mowed, then conditioned it. Then switched to the rake and did yesterday’s area. By the time I finished that, Dad had come home from work and started baling with the Allis-Chalmers WD-45 and small round baler. Eventually we got done and started hauling bales back to the barn. By that time, the first field was almost ready to cut again if the rains came.
@@johnsadler8637 my back reminds me how much I wished my dad had bought a round bailer. That was a long time ago 😔
@@ChileExpatFamily Funny enough, when I went off to college and grad school, he bought a big round baler! 1200 lbs = 24 small round bales. He mounted a winch- driven bale spear on his pickup and hauled hay the easy way after that!
@@johnsadler8637 I went to the navy and the same thing happened 😮
Man, this brings back a TON of memories. If my memory serves right, we pulled the haybine with either a Ford 4000 or IH 454. Thanks so much. Appreciate you taking the time to do this!
Glad you enjoyed watching!
Buy a hat! Lol
Great video, thanks.
Looks a lot like how we did it back in the 1970’s, although ours was a 4000. Your 3000 looks a lot like my current one, although your loader is more nearly matched to the tractor. Mine is way too heavy, and uses both remotes. And doesn’t come off at all easy. About a half hour for the mechanic who knew how to do it.
We used a 3600 with a 7’ haybine and this 300 handles the 9’ better that our setup did. Interesting!
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I have a 72 3000. Doesn’t have a loader but looking at the Westerndorf T-26. What diverter valve do you have on it? I need to put rear remotes on mine too.
It's a rotary diverter valve from Summit Hydraulics. They are a good place for cheaper hydraulic components.
looks like you are going to make lots of hay,are you going to square or round bale it ?
Small squares, I believe the whole field yielded 5-600 bales.
Just curious. If you bush hogged around the field why not run your first round with the tractor running in the bush hogged part instead of running over the hay
The whole field is not trimmed around.
That little Ford 3000, is a gem.
I like MF fitted with the Perkins 152 engine as well. Does your Ford have the 3-cylinder motor?
If so, any 3-cylinder with the 120° crankshaft, is excellent in my book. Thanks.
Yes, 3 cylinder engine.
when did diesel take over tractors in the usa
Nothing wrong with that!
Hey where are you from sir?
The haybines work awfully good UNLESS you have salamanders that leave an ant-like dirt mound. I never had the nerve to detach my front-end loader, because hooking the hoses back up was an SOB!
Why drive anti-clockwise to open the field, drive clockwise and cut the back swarth afterwards... Otherwise it is motering well, doing it's job.
I do it the same way he does. It doesn’t matter just personal preference.
Cool video but always do your backswath last along a tree line incase there's limbs or stuff that can hurt your mower that way if you hit something your not wasting time fixing it instead of haying in a 3 or 4 day hay window
Not bad advice! However, I bush hogged along the tree line of this field prior to starting the cut. So I knew there was nothing to hit. Thanks for watching! Glad you enjoyed!
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