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Cattle Boards
Grasses, Pastures & Hay
Round balers-twine or netting?
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<blockquote data-quote="jltrent" data-source="post: 1757524" data-attributes="member: 21075"><p>We got our first round baler in 1977 a NH845 chain baler. The biggest difference in your NH847 is it has two tension springs and the NH845 had one big one. It made a 4.5x4.5 bale. Very few neighbors had a round baler as I baled for a few and the first few summers I baled 1500-2000 bales every year. It was a very reliable baler as I oiled all chains daily and had very little down time. I used a non-cab tractor a lot, so I ate plenty of dust and it had the hand crank to put twine on as after a day putting upwards of 200 bales through my shoulder felt like it would about fall off from cranking. Other than bale tightness it worked as good as the latest round balers out. I remember a lot about that baler as it did have an adjustments for twine stops on each end to adjust. Those are very useable balers.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="jltrent, post: 1757524, member: 21075"] We got our first round baler in 1977 a NH845 chain baler. The biggest difference in your NH847 is it has two tension springs and the NH845 had one big one. It made a 4.5x4.5 bale. Very few neighbors had a round baler as I baled for a few and the first few summers I baled 1500-2000 bales every year. It was a very reliable baler as I oiled all chains daily and had very little down time. I used a non-cab tractor a lot, so I ate plenty of dust and it had the hand crank to put twine on as after a day putting upwards of 200 bales through my shoulder felt like it would about fall off from cranking. Other than bale tightness it worked as good as the latest round balers out. I remember a lot about that baler as it did have an adjustments for twine stops on each end to adjust. Those are very useable balers. [/QUOTE]
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Round balers-twine or netting?
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