One year when I was a kid my grandpa sold some of his extra straw off the field to a big baling outfit and they used one of these bale wagons to pick up the bales. I remember watching that thing work in awe.
Great view of the stackers in the field and unload process. I was curious about the the 348 baler and noticed that minimum required is 35 PTO HP - the 200 HP tractor was loafing!
I used to operate these “harrowbeds” in the late 70’s to 80. I believe we had 1068 and 1069 models. We hauled alfalfa and straw. Straw is much lighter and more “springy” than alfalfa. Bales don’t have as clean cut and perpendicular lines that an alfalfa bale will have. I preferred to work with alfalfa, personally. If I recall, correctly, our wagons had Ford 460 V8 engines in them.
My brother from another mother purchased a used one back in late 1980's for his farm in Ohio and swears that is the best investment he has ever made. I traveled for over a decade for work and can remember seeing convoys of these machines following the hay harvest from Nevada to Kansas.
`In 1959 my Dad took a 1952 Chevrolet farm truck and cut it in two and lengthened it to make a 15 foot long bed on it. He attached 4 D-8 Cat springs upright in the back and put a set of hydraulic cylinders under it so that it would raise to 96 Degrees. In those days we loaded the truck with a side mounted loader that picked up the bales and Dad stacked the load by hand. When He was full mom drove to the yard and they unloaded it like this machine. The following summer 4 men from New Holland came to the farm and talked to him and took several rolls of film. A couple of years later they produced what they called back then the (haro bed). He never saw a dime.
John Deere square baler and a New Holland stacker, a perfect match. All the New Holland square balers I’ve used really sucked. I found that the John Deere square balers made very uniform and tight bales.
I remember my grandpa operating one of these. There were so many levers I don't know if the new ones are automated but the old ones require the operator to run everything. This guy has some skill everything is timed up good in his driving. Then you have to split and kick off a bail so they all aren't perfected stacked. I think we saw one shot of that.
I just got a 1010 Stackliner this year. It's the pull behind version. Works great! Need to keep my bale length a little more even & remember they don't like picking up on tight corners, otherwise I had no issues. The ability to stack the whole load or automatically unload single bales has been a great help. Would definitely buy another one, if there were two of me to use them. Lol!
Growing up in Ohio I never recall seeing one but when I moved out West they seem to be almost ubiquitous. Northern Nevada, Southern Utah and Western Arizona haying seems to love them.
@@RustyCarnahan in Northern Ohio I just don't recall seeing them. The big dairy farmer we bought hay from used a square baler and kicker. My granddad used a hay gatherer before he got a baler and he would bale the field then go back to load bales onto a wagon if he worked alone. He could in his prime toss a bale to the hay loft! He unloaded his hay that way for years. One wagon stacked in a stall wore me out!
Really like your balewagon videos never get tired of driving them or watching them work. We start square baling tomorrow in our part of the country. It’s been a very wet and cool spring /summer so far for us
Field Rows Not to mention getting straw on the back of neck, inside your shirt, and everywhere else! Straw is worse then hay for getting poke, stabbed, etc. At least it was for me.
This goes back a few years, I used a NH wire baler, a NH 10' swather, and a 1040 bail wagon (pull type) or hired someone to use his 1048 bale wagon. Power was a JD 720D and a JD 730D, crop was alfalfa. Have fun
He's gonna learn the hard way. ALWAYS, raise your rolling rack, before you lower your 3rd table, in-order to insure your push-off feet, are all the way retracted. Straightening those push-off feet are a bitch.
@@augustreil Sometimes, those push-off feet don't fully retract. If you raise the third table, that's the table holding the full load, it will bend those square steel rods, you see that push the load off. If you raise the loading rack, and it doesn't move, the push-off feet are not fully retracted. The load rack, is that rolling rack you see, moving back to the home position when the third table is fully lowered.
Awesome video! Worked on lots of those back in the New Holland dealership days. Flex straw was all baled in small square bales for huge Kimberly Clark processor to make tissues and ect out of. With time they went with round bales. Not sure why but it’s all closed up, has been for years.
Just like any piece of equipment , they work best on level ground. Not so well on hilly ground. You get a lot of exercise getting on and off the tractor.
Here in the Imperial Valley of California, three twine bales and 3x4x8 and 4x4x8 big bales are produced. Automatic bale wagons are available for all sizes.
All I recall are the long days of loading hay bales by hand, then unloading under a hot metal roof in the pole barn. Used to get paid nothing at home, and $1.25/hr when I hired out.
We get 160 bales per load, since we usually put two tie layers in (one on the fifth layer and another on the eighth). The tie layers have one less bale than the others, but if you are manually loading pickup trucks from your stacks that extra tie layer gives much better stability.
We hade One back in the day when we hade cattel, but it was pulled by a tractor, if i remeber right it was caled NewHolland Sperry 1006. We was most using it for hay. I live in Sweden
My brothers and I used to called these 'Hay Monsters' because they were so big (compared to our definition of big at the time) and odd looking in contrast with anything else of my grandparents farm
There are 2 of these I know for sure being used in horse cave ky by the bale family. They produce several bales a year to sale and store it in an old tobacco warehouse
I used load trucks by hand , we a machine that was attached to the side the truck that picked the bale up into the truck but then you had to stack them by hand Was an easier job just to drive truck
I think the Stack Cruisers are only sold in North America. There is a business that specializes in these machines in Montana that ships parts world wide. They may be able to help you. newhollandbalewagonparts.com
This farm bakes over 2,000 acres of straw. They use every row crop tractor on the farm to bale. No need to buy an extra smaller tractor when there ones already on the farm. It’s also nice to have a good ride to go across acre after acre.
@@bigtractorpower Problem with big tractors with square balers, is extra damage to the balers, if the pto revs go too high when obstruction happens and the sheer bolt does not shear fast enough. Also witness poor quality shear bolts not breaking in time. 2000 acres is huge, therefore I am surprised they are not using large square or roynd balers.
I have seen combines with baler units on the back. Probably hard to match the speed of the two. www.google.com/search?q=combine+harvester+with+baler&rlz=1C1GCEA_enUS905US905&sxsrf=ALeKk02J7S18pdxppK_mowbeIqWjpVYD5A:1624206513540&tbm=isch&source=iu&ictx=1&fir=qmGch4udx9d7rM%252C8UrbXaFZVQTfSM%252C_&vet=1&usg=AI4_-kQ3GSB2KYaJdfHMDI8Z05jyQL0ZrA&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjJ5p_i0KbxAhWsVN8KHeR6BTcQ9QF6BAgREAE#imgrc=qmGch4udx9d7rM
One year when I was a kid my grandpa sold some of his extra straw off the field to a big baling outfit and they used one of these bale wagons to pick up the bales. I remember watching that thing work in awe.
Enjoy ALL your videos Jason. Sure beats picking them up by hand and stacking them. Been there..... done that. For sure!! Thanks BTP!!👍👍
This should be in farming simulator
Oh jes this is right
Yep good idea
Yes dude
Yes
It already is
Great view of the stackers in the field and unload process. I was curious about the the 348 baler and noticed that minimum required is 35 PTO HP - the 200 HP tractor was loafing!
Yeah, it's a little over kill running that baler with 200hp tractor.
Love seeing that! I grew up with those and was so little the last time we used one, I couldn't picture how they worked. Thank you for posting!
I used to operate these “harrowbeds” in the late 70’s to 80. I believe we had 1068 and 1069 models. We hauled alfalfa and straw. Straw is much lighter and more “springy” than alfalfa. Bales don’t have as clean cut and perpendicular lines that an alfalfa bale will have. I preferred to work with alfalfa, personally. If I recall, correctly, our wagons had Ford 460 V8 engines in them.
My brother from another mother purchased a used one back in late 1980's for his farm in Ohio and swears that is the best investment he has ever made. I traveled for over a decade for work and can remember seeing convoys of these machines following the hay harvest from Nevada to Kansas.
I would be curious to know how much those NEW HOLLAND Automatic Bale Wagons were new. Even the 50 year old ones really seemed to hold their value.
Nobody does it better than new Holland sure Beats moving in my hand
👍👍
`In 1959 my Dad took a 1952 Chevrolet farm truck and cut it in two and lengthened it to make a 15 foot long bed on it. He attached 4 D-8 Cat springs upright in the back and put a set of hydraulic cylinders under it so that it would raise to 96 Degrees. In those days we loaded the truck with a side mounted loader that picked up the bales and Dad stacked the load by hand. When He was full mom drove to the yard and they unloaded it like this machine. The following summer 4 men from New Holland came to the farm and talked to him and took several rolls of film. A couple of years later they produced what they called back then the (haro bed). He never saw a dime.
The stack cruiser is a handy machine👍😉 it makes bale handling so much easier👍
Great video👍😁
John Deere square baler and a New Holland stacker, a perfect match. All the New Holland square balers I’ve used really sucked. I found that the John Deere square balers made very uniform and tight bales.
Thank you mr big tractor i watch your videos like documentarys very educational
Yes me to from the UK, 50p an hour, tight farmers!!!!
We still use or original new holland 1065 with new holland 500 and 505 balers.
Thanks for your hard work jason.
I remember my grandpa operating one of these. There were so many levers I don't know if the new ones are automated but the old ones require the operator to run everything. This guy has some skill everything is timed up good in his driving. Then you have to split and kick off a bail so they all aren't perfected stacked. I think we saw one shot of that.
I just got a 1010 Stackliner this year. It's the pull behind version. Works great! Need to keep my bale length a little more even & remember they don't like picking up on tight corners, otherwise I had no issues. The ability to stack the whole load or automatically unload single bales has been a great help. Would definitely buy another one, if there were two of me to use them. Lol!
Growing up in Ohio I never recall seeing one but when I moved out West they seem to be almost ubiquitous. Northern Nevada, Southern Utah and Western Arizona haying seems to love them.
Got two pull types working in Southeast Ohio
@@RustyCarnahan in Northern Ohio I just don't recall seeing them. The big dairy farmer we bought hay from used a square baler and kicker. My granddad used a hay gatherer before he got a baler and he would bale the field then go back to load bales onto a wagon if he worked alone. He could in his prime toss a bale to the hay loft! He unloaded his hay that way for years. One wagon stacked in a stall wore me out!
Really like your balewagon videos never get tired of driving them or watching them work. We start square baling tomorrow in our part of the country. It’s been a very wet and cool spring /summer so far for us
Had a pull type stackliner on the farm since the early 70s. Did a little video on it a few months back.
Too cool I’ve never seen this before. Sure beats loading them by hand on 100 degree heat
Field Rows Not to mention getting straw on the back of neck, inside your shirt, and everywhere else! Straw is worse then hay for getting poke, stabbed, etc. At least it was for me.
@@tomdonelson385, Yup, I remember picking corn and holy Moses did our skin get torn up !!
Loved these great machines. Thanks for sharing. Great channel.
This goes back a few years, I used a NH wire baler, a NH 10' swather, and a 1040 bail wagon (pull type) or hired someone to use his 1048 bale wagon. Power was a JD 720D and a JD 730D, crop was alfalfa. Have fun
Love the Channel
Wonderful videos
Always really enjoy watching
Respect and support from the UK.
He's gonna learn the hard way. ALWAYS, raise your rolling rack, before you lower your 3rd table, in-order to insure your push-off feet, are all the way retracted. Straightening those push-off feet are a bitch.
From a city/country boy, that's all jibberish. Can you explain, thanks ? !!
Google a operators manual and amaze yourself 😎🇬🇧😎
@@augustreil Sometimes, those push-off feet don't fully retract. If you raise the third table, that's the table holding the full load, it will bend those square steel rods, you see that push the load off. If you raise the loading rack, and it doesn't move, the push-off feet are not fully retracted. The load rack, is that rolling rack you see, moving back to the home position when the third table is fully lowered.
We ran 2 New Holland balers and 1 Stackmaster hauling alfalfa hay in ne Colorado back in 76 and 77, good equipment.
a great vlog of the balewagon Thanks
Slick operation
I was recently in southern utah/ arizona area and a lot of the hay farms down there had these sitting around
So satisfying to watch one of these
i use one for my hay operation.
That be a fun job ripping round picking up bales
😁👍
Very interesting! Thanks for sharing.
Thank you for watching. It is a neat process.
Good content as always! A farm near me in Sweden uses Kemper automatic staking wagons to pickup smallbales
I got one of these. There is a steep learning curve to running them.
That is real slick
It works very well.
I've seen one of these Bale stackers at work. It is impressive.
👍👍
Don’t have one, but I need one like that
Would love to run one of those. Good video
That's pretty neat, never seen one in action.
On a smaller scale, my Dad made a lift for my Grandad that fed bales up to the truck bed to be stacked manually inside.
Very cool. I have some lift brochures from IH, Deere and HESSTON from the 60’s.
Nice Video.
Kinda reminds me of a minecraft cobble stone farm
We use two pull-type balewagons in our operation. A 1002 and a 1033
Awesome video! Worked on lots of those back in the New Holland dealership days. Flex straw was all baled in small square bales for huge Kimberly Clark processor to make tissues and ect out of. With time they went with round bales. Not sure why but it’s all closed up, has been for years.
Just like any piece of equipment , they work best on level ground. Not so well on hilly ground. You get a lot of exercise getting on and off the tractor.
I saw one of them up the road from me. It was amazing ! The only other thing I ever saw that would stack hay sweated a lot. Me!
Used a 24T Deere baler and a NH 1086 ish pull type. Only used them 2 years.
Is the straw for daily cattle feed or ? very educative video jason, thanks a lot
The video states it's to be used as bedding
Wao Nice machine! I never seen this before.
I need one of these!
They move a bunch of bales in a hurry.
We run 2 1069 wagons on our farm here in western New York
Very cool. I grew up in the Rochester area.
Where in Western New York is this. I am curious, I live in western New York
Here in the Imperial Valley of California, three twine bales and 3x4x8 and 4x4x8 big bales are produced. Automatic bale wagons are available for all sizes.
amazing
All I recall are the long days of loading hay bales by hand, then unloading under a hot metal roof in the pole barn.
Used to get paid nothing at home, and $1.25/hr when I hired out.
AMAZING
Hey wats up.. wild machine eh
Máy chạy nhanh quá luôn
We used an arm-strong stackers on flat-rack wagons until the late 70s. After that it was a NH 315 with a belt thrower and thrower wagons.
😁👍👍
We get 160 bales per load, since we usually put two tie layers in (one on the fifth layer and another on the eighth). The tie layers have one less bale than the others, but if you are manually loading pickup trucks from your stacks that extra tie layer gives much better stability.
If only those bale collectors were around when we had to collect them ! But...we wouldn't have a job, so, I guess it all worked out ?!!
stack cruiser is one of the wackiest and greatest pieces of farm equip i’ve ever seen.
We need this on FS19
👍👍
I'd like to have seen it loading the 3rd last row (3rd row down from top when unloaded), they're stacked a little different.
That is the tie row. I hope film one of theses Stack Cruisers with a drone to show how that is done.
@@bigtractorpower yeah was thinking it's a tie row, i look forward to seeing that then 👍 great videos as always
We hade One back in the day when we hade cattel, but it was pulled by a tractor, if i remeber right it was caled NewHolland Sperry 1006. We was most using it for hay. I live in Sweden
My brothers and I used to called these 'Hay Monsters' because they were so big (compared to our definition of big at the time) and odd looking in contrast with anything else of my grandparents farm
There are 2 of these I know for sure being used in horse cave ky by the bale family. They produce several bales a year to sale and store it in an old tobacco warehouse
Where do they sell these bales ?? Race tracks,horse farms ??
Y a pas un plus gros tracteur pour la presse...? Sinon sympa la vidéo 👍🚜
Are the NH stacking machines still made or are they managing to keep all the old ones going?
I heard someone from New Holland tell me that they do still make them but you have to order it then they’ll make it.
We had a pull type version. The pickup was on the other side.
I would be curious to know how much those NEW HOLLAND Automatic Bale Wagons were new. Even the 50 year old ones really seemed to hold their value.
I do not know on the past models. A new 2021 model 103 which is very similar to the 1069 and 1079 is $259,975
I used load trucks by hand , we a machine that was attached to the side the truck that picked the bale up into the truck but then you had to stack them by hand Was an easier job just to drive truck
More info such as engine, transmission, hydraulics, price, would be appreciated.
This video I made covers the specs and price. It is posted at th-cam.com/video/NGYZU2mjCSA/w-d-xo.html
We have the exact same one
That’s a snatch and grab piece of machinery..
We use a 1075 and a 1095 but our bales are three string
👍👍
Ok, its been made for 50 years but why did you use the first production unit for this video?
I use pull type 1033 stack liners
👍👍👏👏🚜🚜🚜🚜🇧🇷
i want one of these so bad. 1069.. ugh
I guess these bales are for horses, wouldn't it then be better with a walker combine?
My family does custom combining for them and we are currently running our 9650 walker machines there BTP also made a video of them
We have have 1038 1033 and 1010 wagons
Where can i download this?
Can that go into traffic?
Yes. They're equipped with head & tail lights to be road legal & can do 55 mph or better. They can really hustle the hay back to the farm!
Is it available in India ?
I think the Stack Cruisers are only sold in North America. There is a business that specializes in these machines in Montana that ships parts world wide. They may be able to help you. newhollandbalewagonparts.com
the man is wrong on capacity ,it is 160 bales with 2 tying tiers (the norm being the 4th and 7th tier)
I imagine subsidizes paid by the Fed Gov pays for all this equipment with the working mans tax dollars and these factory farmers are millionaires
Totally wrong. Family farm that works hard. Most of the machines in this video over 20 years old and one is 40 years old.
Quite the imagination you have, KubotaMan. You Kubota is an imported product, right?
Ahh yes because a farm with a probably 20 year old combine is a "factory farm"
Why do they so little balles?
Could be for sale could be for a cattle operation that doesn't normally take a full bale etc.
Of someone could slap dis shid into fs19 for my console pleb butt I would be very grateful
It would be neat to see in FS19.
why dont you make bigger bales
Tractor is overkill for the baler.
This farm bakes over 2,000 acres of straw. They use every row crop tractor on the farm to bale. No need to buy an extra smaller tractor when there ones already on the farm. It’s also nice to have a good ride to go across acre after acre.
@@bigtractorpower Problem with big tractors with square balers, is extra damage to the balers, if the pto revs go too high when obstruction happens and the sheer bolt does not shear fast enough. Also witness poor quality shear bolts not breaking in time.
2000 acres is huge, therefore I am surprised they are not using large square or roynd balers.
Probably taken not far from where you grew up !!!
Why can’t combine make bele
I have seen combines with baler units on the back. Probably hard to match the speed of the two. www.google.com/search?q=combine+harvester+with+baler&rlz=1C1GCEA_enUS905US905&sxsrf=ALeKk02J7S18pdxppK_mowbeIqWjpVYD5A:1624206513540&tbm=isch&source=iu&ictx=1&fir=qmGch4udx9d7rM%252C8UrbXaFZVQTfSM%252C_&vet=1&usg=AI4_-kQ3GSB2KYaJdfHMDI8Z05jyQL0ZrA&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjJ5p_i0KbxAhWsVN8KHeR6BTcQ9QF6BAgREAE#imgrc=qmGch4udx9d7rM
Why is your John deer so slow the one we have
is faster
First
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