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Cattle Boards
Grasses, Pastures & Hay
question for hay balers
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<blockquote data-quote="bandit80" data-source="post: 780761" data-attributes="member: 7956"><p>I agree with you it takes pressure to make the bales tight, and the pressure must be high to achieve tight bales. Guess the best way to explain my point is this, the longer it takes to make a bale, the more revolutions the bale makes, and the more time the bale has to expand in the bale chamber. Even with high pressure, a bale will expand and make looser bales the longer it is in the bale chamber. The eaisest way to see this is to bale a 50 inch or so bale and let the tractor and baler sit with the pto runing. Wait 5 minutes, and I bet your bale is bigger than 50 inches. </p><p></p><p>I guess I am basing all of this off of what was explained to me by my John Deere guy. I guess in the end, my JD 567 makes very good tight bales and sucks the hay up like a vacumn, so that is all that matters, however it works.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="bandit80, post: 780761, member: 7956"] I agree with you it takes pressure to make the bales tight, and the pressure must be high to achieve tight bales. Guess the best way to explain my point is this, the longer it takes to make a bale, the more revolutions the bale makes, and the more time the bale has to expand in the bale chamber. Even with high pressure, a bale will expand and make looser bales the longer it is in the bale chamber. The eaisest way to see this is to bale a 50 inch or so bale and let the tractor and baler sit with the pto runing. Wait 5 minutes, and I bet your bale is bigger than 50 inches. I guess I am basing all of this off of what was explained to me by my John Deere guy. I guess in the end, my JD 567 makes very good tight bales and sucks the hay up like a vacumn, so that is all that matters, however it works. [/QUOTE]
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question for hay balers
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