Baling hay has a limited window to run! Highly dense bales don't breath so speed is important to get quality feed off in a short period of time. Something to think about! To me fast is over 50 bales an hour.
My baler (built in Hungary by an Irish company) like many of the others has a plastic 'fish pond' hung on either side that serves no useful purpose other than a platform to display the maker's name in large letters. A simple guard is all that is needed preferably one that makes some attempt to keep the chains and oily bits clean.
Massey Ferguson is by far the best! Their track recorded is second to none and all of their equipment is overbuilt. I'm running new and old Massey's and they never quit and have never had a single problem.
I agree when it comes to square balers we had a 187 and a 139 both excellent balers. There’s better round balers out there though although the latest series reads quite impressive
@@YouBeenTerminated that’s good! Doing me good was my plan when I first shelled out the cash for a brand new baler. Glad you got a good one! I just hooked up my old trusty New Holland today. It won’t give me as many fits, I am sure.
The best bales come from consistent feed and consistent speed. Most of the time speed equals lower density and poor shape. Steady and consistent is the secret but really it comes back to the rake operator. Serve up a shitty row you will get a shitty bale!
The best is the one with the least amount of bales means more hay in a bale case IH is by far the best we tried them all and the small inline case IH can not be beat
Always so nice to see what baler i’m going to want to buy used, at an auction, in 20 years.
On the end is it not the fastest baler who win but how much the baler cost and maintance cost over how many years it last.
also how they tie the bales, a fast baler with lots of broken bales is not good.
Should show the difference in bale density when you only go 5mph.. Fast baling isn't impressive to me.
Yes fast bail isn't tight and when you pick it up it falls apart
What brand of baler are you running? I’ve had some that are exactly what you describe but there are a few that do better job with some ground speed.
@@andrewdickson9964not true at all and hasn’t been true for 25 years
Getting done faster isn’t impressive? 🤔
Baling hay has a limited window to run! Highly dense bales don't breath so speed is important to get quality feed off in a short period of time. Something to think about! To me fast is over 50 bales an hour.
My baler (built in Hungary by an Irish company) like many of the others has a plastic 'fish pond' hung on either side that serves no useful purpose other than a platform to display the maker's name in large letters.
A simple guard is all that is needed preferably one that makes some attempt to keep the chains and oily bits clean.
Massey Ferguson is by far the best! Their track recorded is second to none and all of their equipment is overbuilt. I'm running new and old Massey's and they never quit and have never had a single problem.
I agree when it comes to square balers we had a 187 and a 139 both excellent balers.
There’s better round balers out there though although the latest series reads quite impressive
Every type has problems sometimes. Tell the truth
McHale are great balers, best we ever had, and we've had em all.
Have tried both krone and McHale, the McHale is superior in every way.
@nzagri6898You're clueless
Look how much more hay went in the Deere though
Much smaller windrow....
@@wts860 yeah it is a little smaller. Not a whole lot though
@@nalley6815 It wouldn't touch a McHale
I have been looking to see which ones work best in cereal hay to get the bale started cant seem to find any comparisons
Just wonderful!!! For you with all my LOVE 😋👌
Where is the CNH products? They definitely aren't chopped liver!
Did the McHale win?
I think soo bc u can bale at like 6 to 12 miles using that baler
Plus it make good quality hay
@@YouBeenTerminated I have a v660, been good when it’s good, and very bad when it’s bad. I think I am the only person who got a lemon
@@jeremyc9229 that's the 1 that I have and it done me good over the past few years 👌
@@YouBeenTerminated that’s good! Doing me good was my plan when I first shelled out the cash for a brand new baler. Glad you got a good one! I just hooked up my old trusty New Holland today. It won’t give me as many fits, I am sure.
@@jeremyc9229 hopefully it makes u some good quality hay and get the job done ✔️
Weight the bales!
Взвешивание ещё надо произвести потом ,скорость не главное в этом деле
The Krone wasn't going as fast as it can, that's for sure
Also miss a Kuhn vb 71xx in the competition and a JD 9xx or v4x1r
ZR5 is better
@@rooksbaby4169 My John Deere 530 30 years old paid and still make good bale plus easy to work on.
nice
very easy to tell who can afford the fast ones and who cant 9mph can make a good bale on 2004 bailers that are no where near these guys in ability
They should've used the Deere 990, that's actually made for going fast
As well as a MacHale
Low and slow as they always say
You get better bales at higher speeds
@@wts860not in balage
The best bales come from consistent feed and consistent speed. Most of the time speed equals lower density and poor shape. Steady and consistent is the secret but really it comes back to the rake operator. Serve up a shitty row you will get a shitty bale!
My best ever video
The best is the one with the least amount of bales means more hay in a bale case IH is by far the best we tried them all and the small inline case IH can not be beat
Are you referring to small square balers or all balers?
@@brenttonks4249I don’t think he knows