I had a cousin in the Fairfield Iowa area in the 80's one of his neighbors was still using one, Al said it was a well built baler and the neighbor was still picking corn had a very nice wire Corn Crib. Good quality hay and ground earcorn great for happy fat cows....
Wish you were closer. I’ve wanted one for several years. But all the decent ones are far off. And trucking those are nigh impossible due to width. I can unload anything under 8 tons. But I’m told they’re 6+ inches wider that flatbed semi. Oh well I can wish.
Hello! Thanks for the interesting video! I would like to use a small part of your video in my film about the history of hay balers. Can I do it? Link to your video is required! Thank you!
Interesting to see close up operation. Not having any experience with these I heard that you end up with a bunch of "baseball bats" because the center of the bale is so tight. Any truth to that? A lot of stopping and starting. I heard the bales would weather well but so well a lot would be still in the field when the next crop of hay needed to be cut. But that's not the balers fault.
It could make bales with or without a hard center, that’s up to the operator. Yes, the bales weathered very well, but how long they sat in the field was totally up to the farmer. Allis made a round bale loader that would pick up the bales and 3rd party companies made attachments that would take the bales from the baler right up to a wagon.
I had a cousin in the Fairfield Iowa area in the 80's one of his neighbors was still using one, Al said it was a well built baler and the neighbor was still picking corn had a very nice wire Corn Crib. Good quality hay and ground earcorn great for happy fat cows....
Wish you were closer. I’ve wanted one for several years. But all the decent ones are far off. And trucking those are nigh impossible due to width. I can unload anything under 8 tons. But I’m told they’re 6+ inches wider that flatbed semi. Oh well I can wish.
I hauled this one home from South central Iowa 23 years ago on a car hauler.
just brought one home on 7x24 tandem axle trailer. pulled it with jeep liberty CRD. wheels forward of fenders, hanging off both sides
Hello! Thanks for the interesting video! I would like to use a small part of your video in my film about the history of hay balers. Can I do it? Link to your video is required! Thank you!
This thing is cool!
Interesting to see close up operation. Not having any experience with these I heard that you end up with a bunch of "baseball bats" because the center of the bale is so tight. Any truth to that? A lot of stopping and starting. I heard the bales would weather well but so well a lot would be still in the field when the next crop of hay needed to be cut. But that's not the balers fault.
It could make bales with or without a hard center, that’s up to the operator. Yes, the bales weathered very well, but how long they sat in the field was totally up to the farmer. Allis made a round bale loader that would pick up the bales and 3rd party companies made attachments that would take the bales from the baler right up to a wagon.
The baler has been sold!
Just checking in to see if my call came through just in case I dialed the wrong number. It would be from a 509 area code.
What are you asking for it and where is it located
$1500.00
Ridott IL
Could you use one of these with an allis G?
Absolutely not, the G is to small and it doesn’t have a standard PTO.
@@The1952caallis sad
@@The1952caallis can you at least tow a hay wagon with a g?
@@megaaggron9778 it may be able to pull a hay wagon, but it would have a difficult time controlling it.
@@The1952caallis but it’ll run a lawn mower cart, right?
Does anyone know what the last NF Allis produced?
I believe it was the 185 or possibly the 190.
Do you still have this?
Yes I do
@@The1952caallis for $1,500 I'll take it. Can you help me get it to eastern Nebraska for a very deserving 85th birthday surprise?
@@tom...1351 I can get you in touch with someone who can
How much
$1500 or best offer
Is it still for sale
Yes it is!