The Over the edge Net wrap is made for JD by Tama. http://www.ambraco.com/BaleNetwrap/TamaNet_EdegToEdgeWithTamaTech_Netwrap.php
The Vermeer Rebel 5410 & 5420 is designed to use every net wrap currently on the market. Over the edge works fine in any of the 5410 balers.
They are great and well made. Just be careful when you have a fully loaded trailer, your pulling van will weigh much less than than what is pulling and on a hill you will have problems stopping it.
The only true 0% deal on a Vermeer is through Kubota credit. The Vermeer deal is a dealer buy down with a cash rebate you will be losing. Go to Farm Credit and get a loan and pay cash is the safest way to go.
You can look for a Vermeer 504F or G. They will be priced in the $2,500-4,000 range for a good one. You could look at any of the closed throat models like a JD410 or Vermeer 504C but you are dealing with balers that must be adjusted top dead center and if they break a major part you junk them...
The 5410 Rebel and 504M Classic share the same platform. The main difference is in the pickup and the belt tightening system. If I was wanting net wrap I'd get the 504M Classic. The 504M Classic is setup to bale silage and has 7" wide belt where the Rebel has 6" wide belts.
If you are looking at...
You will not be using a hay bine in thick hay at night. Once the dew falls you have to go to the house. You need to look a drum mower or a disc mower. They will mow hay in any conditions. First you need to match the mower to your size tractor. Tractor weight is just as important as PTO HP...
I think you better look again at a Vermeer baler. Since the late 1970's all Vermeer balers have used the lower drum design that supports the weight of the bale. It is true that a Hesston/AGCO & JD do use a vertical bale chamber that the belts do support the majority of the bale weight.
The Vermeer VR1022 is made in the USA and sells considerably less than $7,900 in the $5,500 range or less. http://www2.vermeer.com/vermeer/NA/en/N/equipment/rakes/vr1022
We sell the 1200 nm clutches, 885 ft. lbs because many of our customers are baling haylage with their Rebel balers. NEVER grease the Radial Pin clutches. Greasing these clutches will cause them to fail.
The 5400 Rebel is a tough baler weighing in at 3900+ Lbs and the 5410 Rebel weighs 4700 Lbs...
http://www.lesspub.com:80/cgi-bin/site.pl?332&ceNews_newsID=6978
Under pressure from its bankers, Gehl Co. must either forge new loan terms or face possible bankruptcy, its new French owner has said.
After the West Bend construction equipment maker violated conditions of its loan agreement...
A CCM drum mower does not lift with hydraulics, it turns around back for transport. The mower rests on the ground and will not add any extra weight to one side of the tractor. We have sold these drum mower since 1980 and have sold thousands of them. All of the ground in East TN is hillside...
Pull-type mowers are not any safer than 3 point mounted disc and drum mowers. In fact the insurance statistics show that 3 point mounted mowers cutting off to the side are safer for the operator than pull-type mowers. This is because the tire blocks most of the direct path of objects from the...
The HayMAXX or Hay MAGNUM both marketing lables are made by CCM in TN. Our design is not new we took the Lely Optimo and updated it like the current Vermeer 30/40 seried design. Most of out parts are interchangable with the Lely?Vermeer mowers. We increased the disc thickness and got rid of all...
We've been selling Vermeer balers since 1972. While everyone's baler today is better than those being sold 35 years ago some dealers do have problems with technology on today's balers. The monitors sold in the 1980's on all MFG's balers were nothing but a headache once they got a few years on...
The pricing situation is different now. That baler you have now costs a dealer 15% more and the shipping cost has doubled. The baler you purchased for $16,900 with the same features you have will sell for over $20,000 today. If a customer could find a baler on a dealers lot that was under the 07...
Dave I'm not sure if I'm smart enough to follow your math. This is impressive because it really makes since. I would have come up with close to the same answer but would have got there by the old ball a chain method. I would ask Kerley to add about 10-20 lbs per acre of wheat or rye to his mix...
The problem you face are common in that model. Kuhn increased the weight of the machine and that hitch is not kind to a the cutterbar when used on tratctors that do not have float on their SCV hydraulic valve. It is not as bad if you have table level fields. Just remember your old Kuhn unit was...