I saw one of these in '65 a gentleman in our area had one. He would thresh wheat and bake hay for those who didn't have the equipment. They would now and take then he would bale for them he had a large farm himself. Great memories.
First and olny self propelled New Holland I ever saw.My dad always had New Holland balers.When he quit farming he had a 525 hayliner it was a real baling machine.
It’s amazing to me how complicated we gotta make machines now days!! Look how simple that thing is compared to the ones now days 👍👍 that’s a nice piece of machinery
My grandfather had an NH bailer with the Wisconsin motor when I was growing up in Upstate NY in the 1980s. It was a good machine, but seemed to break down more than the PTO bailers he had. I can remember many summer afternoons spent fetching tools for my Uncle as he worked on it, trying to get the hay in before my grandfather got home from his day job. Good memories!
I can remember a gentleman in the mid 1960’s, who did custom hay baling , he had a self propelled new Holland baler. I grew up on a dairy farm, we had a 270 new Holland baler.
I'm all for restoring vintage implements! I'm hoping it becomes a major part of the hobby. And my favorite kind of video shows antique machinery out in the field working.
I didn't know the self propelled model existed until I saw one in a local field last summer, still operable!! Located in Okanogan County Washington. I caught a lot of bales out of New Holland balers in my youth-best bailers ever made in my opinion! Amazing collection, great video!!
I always enjoy seeing old tractors restored but, to see an implement restored & displayed is an awesome thing to see displayed with the tractor. Stay safe.
I saw this pop up, never had seen one like that before. Made me wonder where this one was at, and discovered its just down the road from me, within 10 miles. Our family farm has New Holland balers and choppers, going to Lano's for service!
I love this video. We had the 68 with the PTO. We also had one of those horrible 2 cylinder Wisconsin engines from a baler that we had on an auger. I have driven past that dealership a thousand times. Unfortunately I would not drive to that area of the state if someone gave me money. Eastern Minnesota is lost to me unless they can get control of the destruction taking place in that side of the state. I feel bad for all the good people in the rural areas surrounding the Twin Cities Metro area. I hope you all can stay safe.
Very neat to see. I use newholland haying equipment myself. In my collection I have a S67 NH baler that looks a lot like the 68 you showed but pto drive. As a kid we used a S69. It's unfortunately long gone.
My grand father had a model 68 baler with that 2 cylinder engine. From my earliest memories in the early 60's all the way till he retired farming in the early 70's it stayed in use, other than normal maintenance it was trouble free, was working the day he finally sold it.
I'm 37 now but I grew up on a 1200 acre farm. We had 3 new Holland self propelled bailers, a new Holland 1112 swather, a Heston swather, 4 ford cab tractors for raking, disking vineyard, sulphur application, and spraying. Had John Deere tractors, a big case 8 wheel, and other various pieces of equipment. I was on payroll at 9 years old and spent many hours in the hay fields cutting, raking, bailing. We also had 2 Freeman retrievers. Oh I miss those days.
I remember lots of the self propelled balers growing up. This was in northeastern Colorado in the 70s. I assume the ones I saw were newer than the one shown.
The development of the S-P baler didn’t change a lot. My Dad had a Model 178 Self-Propelled baler that he bought new in 1961. It was powered by a Wisconsin V-4. The steering column was vertical and the variable speed control was right beside the column. My brother and I spent a lot of hours on that while Dad stooked the bales. Dad liked the larger (16x18) bales so the 178 fit the ranch’s needs.
The only driving duty worse than running an open station combine in soybeans would be running that self-propelled baler! I'm amazed they even sold 430 of them. Why in the world would anyone rather sit on the baler right behind the pickup than sit on the tractor?? I imagine most people who bought one asked themselves that very question shortly after buying it...
When I was a teenager, I used to help with baling hay in the summers stacking bales on the hay racks behind the baler. The New Holland balers worked very well. One farmer had an older JD baler. If the driver on the tractor went faster than a certain speed causing the baler to pick up too much hay at one time, the shear pin on the baler flywheel would break. The driver would have to stop and replace it with a new one. It was nice way to get a 5 minute break, though. Another farmer had JD baler that used wire to tie the bales. He set the baler to make 80 - 90 pound bales. That was a grueling workout that required a good pair of leather gloves.
@@farmcentralohio I was thinking of the Amish one .I thought they wouldn't use anything with engines .like tractors, cars, or electricity . Radio TV . internet. lighting .Oh well perhaps it's me not up to speed on this, don't tell me they have moved into the 20th century now everyone else is in the 21st.
@@karlhrdylicka They use things with engines all the time. They don't drive things with rubber tires, they put steel wheels on instead. All depends on the amish bishop.
@@robertheinkel6225 Dad used Japanese wire and I don't recall missing a twist until he had to get some US steel wire. It was crap. So back to Japanese wire. That always stuck in his craw as a WWII vet. Our dust was delicious. 😁
Round Baler's came about as the small family farm didn't have the labor force to handle square bales, Dad had 85 milk cows and a few horse's and we put up 80 to 90 thousand bales per year. We went to haylege in 1970 with 2 25X80 Harvestore silos . Plus all the corn silage and wheat and Oats, it kept us busy, then Uncle Sam called and I had to leave, Dad hung on for 2 more years, then sold the farm .
Where can i buy such a self propelled baler, even that 1965 model for use in Africa, Namibia. Beautiful innovation from New Holland. Are parts still available?
In my 16th year (1968) my dad bought one of the few New Holland self propelled balers in Oregon (Baker City). We used wire ties and that thing would shoot out 120 to 140 pound grass/alfalfa bales about as fast as you find a place for them on a wagon. The only weak point was the front axle. We flood irrigated and the ditches tended to bend the pivot point. Ours was reinforced with 1/4 inch plate steel and that fixed the problem. A 65.9 hp 4 cylinder Wisconsin VF4DI gave it plenty of power. That thing nearly wore me out, the bales so tight that sometimes they were shiney under the press rails and you couldn't stick a hayhook into them. It could do 27 mph down the road too and had good night lighting as well. Ours came with communal tires I don't know why. Great machine, paid for itself many times over. Dad's could bale up hay with a 4X4 fence post (by accident) in it and not even shear a pin. We found the wood had been cut 3 times in that bale.
@@loosehandle1 My dad was a fastidious farmer and we always hayed around July 4th (first cut). The air in the high desert is so dry you could mow in the morning and bale at 2PM with no mold problems. He also used a touch of hay salt just in case. Animals always cleaned the trough.
@@bustersmith5569 In our area it was because most other farmers were going to round bales. Dad viewed this as wasteful because round ones tended to rot. Round are easier to move and feed from, square bales tend to require more hand work. However in 69/70 Paramount pictures came to town and sought him out for the quality of his feed. So . . . win some lose some. We fed all the stock for the movie Paint Your Wagon. Great summer for me! Oh, and yes they were expensive, but he did custom work so it paid for him.
Wow that’s a very unique self propelled bailer. Pretty cool to see. He’s an Allis fan so he’s ok by me. Where’s his dealership? I’ll come visit! I like the toy collection too. My wife and I have started our own toy collection.
@@donvoll2580 Hi Don. I'm from Renfrew County in the Ottawa Valley. It was near Renfrew, about 12 or 13 years ago. This is the type it was: cdn.farmjournal.com/s3fs-public/inline-images/SP166-21.PNG It was by far the stand out at the auction sale it sold at. Nobody paid any attention to anything else.
Takes several MEN to throw them little bales around, I did it for many years but not for a million $ today! Nowadays Anyone can operate an Air Conditioned Tractor to move them round and large squares around
@@joewoodchuck3824 small bales are fine for small timers and horse folk. Feeding lots of cattle with small bales is a fool's errand. Small bales are more expensive by volume to boot.
I want to see it in operation. That's the best part. Did any other companies make self-propelled bailers? If so who and we're they similar to this one?
Now there's a great baler! Somewhere in my collection is a copy of a magazine with that, or earlier model, SP NH baler on the cover. The farmer's running out of time as there's a thunderstorm looming up behind him. Think it was a Farm Journal from the 60's, but I can't find the darned thing. Any clues anyone?
ça a l'entree d'un comice agricole .super waouh!bravo pour l'entretien.bravo a la collection c'est genial et marche du tonnere.belle demonstration le reportage c'est enorme .magnifique ce Matos increuvable.bye bravo du mans sarthe72 les24h du mans FRANCE chao encore bravo felicitation.👍💖👏✌🎩a vous bonne journee Bon courage bye a plus.
The self propelled baler didn’t happen to come from NE Oklahoma did it? Our family friend had one he bought new and then it sat in his barn until he passed away.
Remember a 77 and a 68 on the dairy farm I grew up on. The 68 had a thrower run by a gas motor but the baler was PTO. BTW, as a NH dealer he should know that it’s LAN’Caster not lanCAS’ter PA! 😉
Off topic sort of, why are the augers on grain carts on the left? Like the guy said in this video, everything is over the right shoulder, except carts for some dumb reason.
My grandfather actually knew the guy who created the bale knotter, because he went to school with him. And my Grandfather said everyone aways picked on him because he was never that smart.
Macchine fantastiche.... Peccato sarebbe stato bello vederle in azione, ma ma capisco che essendo pezzi unici non si poteva chiedere una cosa del genere... Complimenti😜
I saw one of these in '65 a gentleman in our area had one. He would thresh wheat and bake hay for those who didn't have the equipment. They would now and take then he would bale for them he had a large farm himself. Great memories.
Wow what a collection of balers and toys I love the self propelled baler
First and olny self propelled New Holland I ever saw.My dad always had New Holland balers.When he quit farming he had a 525 hayliner it was a real baling machine.
Now thats a cool self propelled baler and the same year i was born,i could see myself running one all day out in the field 😀 👌👍
It’s amazing to me how complicated we gotta make machines now days!! Look how simple that thing is compared to the ones now days
👍👍 that’s a nice piece of machinery
That is very neat piece of machinery
My grandfather had an NH bailer with the Wisconsin motor when I was growing up in Upstate NY in the 1980s. It was a good machine, but seemed to break down more than the PTO bailers he had. I can remember many summer afternoons spent fetching tools for my Uncle as he worked on it, trying to get the hay in before my grandfather got home from his day job. Good memories!
What a wonderful collection, especially all those toys. THANK YOU AND GREETINGS FROM AUSTRALIA 🇦🇺. 🇦🇺.
I can remember a gentleman in the mid 1960’s, who did custom hay baling , he had a self propelled new Holland baler. I grew up on a dairy farm, we had a 270 new Holland baler.
I'm all for restoring vintage implements! I'm hoping it becomes a major part of the hobby. And my favorite kind of video shows antique machinery out in the field working.
I didn't know the self propelled model existed until I saw one in a local field last summer, still operable!! Located in Okanogan County Washington. I caught a lot of bales out of New Holland balers in my youth-best bailers ever made in my opinion! Amazing collection, great video!!
Paul, you have always run an awesome business! Great memories!
I always enjoy seeing old tractors restored but, to see an implement restored & displayed is an awesome thing to see displayed with the tractor. Stay safe.
that thing is WAY ahead of it's time!
Vermeer: "this is new, this is innovative, nobody has ever done this, we made a self propelled baler!!"
NH: "...are we a joke to you?"
Vermeer did a round baler.
Varga Ferenc József
We owned one of these balers and they were a hay eating machine. It was so easy to run and so nimble to use.
Never even knew those existed.
Me to
Yes. Growing up in the 60’s our family had 2 of these. Many thousand bales through these machines.
@@waylonlegend4603 Where they reliable machines? They seem like a great piece of equipment. Surprising they weren't more popular.
We had two super 77 balers when I was growing up, both had Wisconsin engines on them
We did our own baling and custom baling too
I saw this pop up, never had seen one like that before. Made me wonder where this one was at, and discovered its just down the road from me, within 10 miles. Our family farm has New Holland balers and choppers, going to Lano's for service!
I love this video. We had the 68 with the PTO. We also had one of those horrible 2 cylinder Wisconsin engines from a baler that we had on an auger. I have driven past that dealership a thousand times.
Unfortunately I would not drive to that area of the state if someone gave me money. Eastern Minnesota is lost to me unless they can get control of the destruction taking place in that side of the state. I feel bad for all the good people in the rural areas surrounding the Twin Cities Metro area. I hope you all can stay safe.
used to weld front axles for this baler back in the 60's at the New Holland plant
Very neat to see. I use newholland haying equipment myself. In my collection I have a S67 NH baler that looks a lot like the 68 you showed but pto drive. As a kid we used a S69. It's unfortunately long gone.
I bought a brand new Oliver 550 from Lano's when they had the store in downtown Chaska, Minnesota. Nice folks, now they are a very big dealership.
had and uncle who started a hay business in the early 70s and had two of these. both with cabs and AC. looked the same basically as this one
That's the only way you could operate one of those. Can you imagine sitting there in all that dirt, baling red clover that got rained on?
I wanted to see it operating.
I agree my Dads 280 baler lasted for decades. Built to last.
Auckland, New Zealand.
My grand father had a model 68 baler with that 2 cylinder engine. From my earliest memories in the early 60's all the way till he retired farming in the early 70's it stayed in use, other than normal maintenance it was trouble free, was working the day he finally sold it.
My Dad had the first NH 76 baler in Washington County, NY,, pulled it with the 1941 JD B, did lots of custom baling too.
I'm 37 now but I grew up on a 1200 acre farm. We had 3 new Holland self propelled bailers, a new Holland 1112 swather, a Heston swather, 4 ford cab tractors for raking, disking vineyard, sulphur application, and spraying. Had John Deere tractors, a big case 8 wheel, and other various pieces of equipment. I was on payroll at 9 years old and spent many hours in the hay fields cutting, raking, bailing. We also had 2 Freeman retrievers. Oh I miss those days.
Those are cool balers I haven't seen the self propelled one in a long time
How COOL is this.
The self propelled bailer was my dad's. Paul bought when he retired from farming.
Nice Collection.
Awsome bailer!
I remember lots of the self propelled balers growing up. This was in northeastern Colorado in the 70s. I assume the ones I saw were newer than the one shown.
I saw two SP balers in King City,Ca . area in 1972 baleing alfalfa .I though at the time what a good idea
This is so nice, thanks for sharing
Super nice!
What a cool guy. Great collections.
I worked behind a 281 PT baler for a few years. It could make some huge (80#) alfalfa bales. I was young enough to keep up with it.
see a lot of bailers but never see a self propelled bailer till now, they were always PTO, very few with Wisconsin engines
Impressive collection!
The development of the S-P baler didn’t change a lot. My Dad had a Model 178 Self-Propelled baler that he bought new in 1961. It was powered by a Wisconsin V-4. The steering column was vertical and the variable speed control was right beside the column. My brother and I spent a lot of hours on that while Dad stooked the bales. Dad liked the larger (16x18) bales so the 178 fit the ranch’s needs.
Wow this is a great video I never see a baler like that 😊
The only driving duty worse than running an open station combine in soybeans would be running that self-propelled baler! I'm amazed they even sold 430 of them. Why in the world would anyone rather sit on the baler right behind the pickup than sit on the tractor?? I imagine most people who bought one asked themselves that very question shortly after buying it...
I would love one of them for my farm
You're already blessed with Allis Chalmers
Yep Allis chalmers and massy Ferguson's
@@izikcolby5534 well I guess there is no perfect life! Lol
@@RJ1999x u got a farm
@@izikcolby5534 I do, and other then our big tractor being a Steiger, we have all Allis Chalmers
Never knew our new holland was so cool lol
When I was a teenager, I used to help with baling hay in the summers stacking bales on the hay racks behind the baler. The New Holland balers worked very well. One farmer had an older JD baler. If the driver on the tractor went faster than a certain speed causing the baler to pick up too much hay at one time, the shear pin on the baler flywheel would break. The driver would have to stop and replace it with a new one. It was nice way to get a 5 minute break, though. Another farmer had JD baler that used wire to tie the bales. He set the baler to make 80 - 90 pound bales. That was a grueling workout that required a good pair of leather gloves.
Oh my God this an amazing cool machine 👌
👍👍 from Rep Ireland 🇮🇪
Wow, amazing that red color😳
Nice machinery
An Amish guy in Holmes county, Ohio has/had a open station new Holland self propelled baler.
I'm pretty sure I've seen it at a show somewhere in Central Oh.
Was it pulled by horses ?.
@@karlhrdylicka Self propelled means it moves itself lol
@@farmcentralohio I was thinking of the Amish one .I thought they wouldn't use anything with engines .like tractors, cars, or electricity . Radio TV . internet. lighting .Oh well perhaps it's me not up to speed on this, don't tell me they have moved into the 20th century now everyone else is in the 21st.
@@karlhrdylicka They use things with engines all the time. They don't drive things with rubber tires, they put steel wheels on instead. All depends on the amish bishop.
Looks like you sit right where the dust is lol
You sit up there so you can fix the knotters when they choke every 5th bale, without having to get off!
They where made with cab as well so you weren't sitting in the dust
I was thinking of the dust also. As far as knotters, our NH would miss one out of a thousand. Now IH balers, one out of fifty was normal miss cycle.
@@robertheinkel6225 Dad used Japanese wire and I don't recall missing a twist until he had to get some US steel wire. It was crap. So back to Japanese wire. That always stuck in his craw as a WWII vet. Our dust was delicious. 😁
I knew Lano was a familiar name!! They have a lot of Bobcat dealerships in my home state of Minnesota
I really hope someday I can own a self propelled
Used to see these around here years ago
Believe the demand for round bails was why they dissapeared
Round Baler's came about as the small family farm didn't have the labor force to handle square bales, Dad had 85 milk cows and a few horse's and we put up 80 to 90 thousand bales per year. We went to haylege in 1970 with 2 25X80 Harvestore silos . Plus all the corn silage and wheat and Oats, it kept us busy, then Uncle Sam called and I had to leave, Dad hung on for 2 more years, then sold the farm .
My great grandpa had one of those
I seen one of the self-propelled units working in northern BC a few years (5) back when I was working up there
Just when you didn't think bailing hay could get any duster along came the New Holland Model 1281.
Hi great video keep the good work up 🍀 👍😃
Awesome thanks
Klasse !!!!
Grew up in the 4 corners of missouri, iowa, nebraska and kansas and never saw one.
They also have a Allis Chalmers WD 45 Diesel that is a great baler tractor which they purchased from me and restored.
Remember seeing one of the self-propelled square balers operating in the late 80s early 90s. The operator looked like a bobblehead lol.....
Great video, very interesting.
We still use them, taking profits from the investment instead of investing again. And creating job for our neighbors.
Where can i buy such a self propelled baler, even that 1965 model for use in Africa, Namibia. Beautiful innovation from New Holland. Are parts still available?
In my 16th year (1968) my dad bought one of the few New Holland self propelled balers in Oregon (Baker City). We used wire ties and that thing would shoot out 120 to 140 pound grass/alfalfa bales about as fast as you find a place for them on a wagon. The only weak point was the front axle. We flood irrigated and the ditches tended to bend the pivot point. Ours was reinforced with 1/4 inch plate steel and that fixed the problem. A 65.9 hp 4 cylinder Wisconsin VF4DI gave it plenty of power. That thing nearly wore me out, the bales so tight that sometimes they were shiney under the press rails and you couldn't stick a hayhook into them. It could do 27 mph down the road too and had good night lighting as well. Ours came with communal tires I don't know why. Great machine, paid for itself many times over. Dad's could bale up hay with a 4X4 fence post (by accident) in it and not even shear a pin. We found the wood had been cut 3 times in that bale.
Why didn't they catch on ?? Looks more efficient then any pull type ! Maybe it was the cost ?
Didn't those heavy bales get moldy?
@@loosehandle1 My dad was a fastidious farmer and we always hayed around July 4th (first cut). The air in the high desert is so dry you could mow in the morning and bale at 2PM with no mold problems. He also used a touch of hay salt just in case. Animals always cleaned the trough.
@@bustersmith5569 In our area it was because most other farmers were going to round bales. Dad viewed this as wasteful because round ones tended to rot. Round are easier to move and feed from, square bales tend to require more hand work. However in 69/70 Paramount pictures came to town and sought him out for the quality of his feed. So . . . win some lose some. We fed all the stock for the movie Paint Your Wagon. Great summer for me! Oh, and yes they were expensive, but he did custom work so it paid for him.
Этот чувак.. Воплотил мою мечту в реальность))) абалдеть...
Wow that’s a very unique self propelled bailer. Pretty cool to see. He’s an Allis fan so he’s ok by me. Where’s his dealership? I’ll come visit! I like the toy collection too. My wife and I have started our own toy collection.
Cool
I've only ever seen one self propelled NH baler here in Ontario, and that one had a tractor narrow front on it, and a V4 Wisconsin engine.
Good day 42lookc I'm from Kitchener Waterloo area. So were did you see one, & were are you from. I can't remember ever seeing one. Thanks
@@donvoll2580 Hi Don. I'm from Renfrew County in the Ottawa Valley. It was near Renfrew, about 12 or 13 years ago. This is the type it was: cdn.farmjournal.com/s3fs-public/inline-images/SP166-21.PNG It was by far the stand out at the auction sale it sold at. Nobody paid any attention to anything else.
@@42lookc G day Boy that must have been 1 of the first ones. Do you remember what it went for Thanks
@@donvoll2580 I think it went for $3100 or $3200. I have no idea what part of the country it ended up in.
@@42lookc Wow but I guess it went for to b saved. Did you know a fellow that had 300 Allis tractor up that way. Thanks
I love seeing the older equipment being cared for. Besides, what was so wrong with rectangular bales?
They require *a lot* more time and labor to make and dispense than round bales.
@@mwilliamshs And the big bales require machines at every stage. My farmer dad laughed his ass off at round bales.
To each their own.
Takes several MEN to throw them little bales around, I did it for many years but not for a million $ today! Nowadays Anyone can operate an Air Conditioned Tractor to move them round and large squares around
@@joewoodchuck3824 small bales are fine for small timers and horse folk. Feeding lots of cattle with small bales is a fool's errand. Small bales are more expensive by volume to boot.
Ran a new Holland self propelled for many years....the one we used had a cab with a swamp cooler on the roof to at least try to keep you cool
this would have been easier to drive!we had a new 1965 Massey Ferguson 35 and baler,many memories!
I want to see it in operation. That's the best part. Did any other companies make self-propelled bailers? If so who and we're they similar to this one?
Now there's a great baler! Somewhere in my collection is a copy of a magazine with that, or earlier model, SP NH baler on the cover. The farmer's running out of time as there's a thunderstorm looming up behind him. Think it was a Farm Journal from the 60's, but I can't find the darned thing. Any clues anyone?
www.pinterest.com/pin/334181234832865954/?%24ios_deeplink_path=pinterest%3A%2F%2Fpin%2F334181234832865954&%24android_deeplink_path=pinterest%3A%2F%2Fpin%2F334181234832865954&_client_id=wqjYC9XZsq8XWU0DHmrOaOcl4PQyz9wwlquzJyZLU9TKPJJ-q381hHQCGD3zzwfe¤t_page_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.pinterest.com%2Famp%2Ftheclutteredshoppe%2Fhay-baler%2F&install_id=e3e5b83219df4750a16881b707e3db38&%24fallback_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.pinterest.com%2Fpin%2F334181234832865954%2F&_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.pinterest.com%2Famp%2Ftheclutteredshoppe%2Fhay-baler%2F&_branch_match_id=819279463766879848
@@svtirefire It's close, but not quite. If I get a minute this week, I'll look for it & post it on Pinterest if I find it.
ça a l'entree d'un comice agricole .super waouh!bravo pour l'entretien.bravo a la collection c'est genial et marche du tonnere.belle demonstration
le reportage c'est enorme .magnifique ce Matos increuvable.bye bravo du mans sarthe72 les24h du mans FRANCE chao encore bravo felicitation.👍💖👏✌🎩a vous bonne journee Bon courage bye a plus.
Just saw one of these with a cab on the side of the highway today.
The self propelled baler didn’t happen to come from NE Oklahoma did it? Our family friend had one he bought new and then it sat in his barn until he passed away.
Wow imagine how much dust the operator is going to eat on that thing! Cool to see though
Newholland baller the very best 👍👍👍👍
Great machines = increase productivity. #thumbsup
Wow!
In 1968 we got the first bailer in town and our new holland would bale twice as much as a John Deere
Trying to find video to time this 1282 baler any help out there
Who invented the knotter for newholland
My dad use to have one of those
Remember a 77 and a 68 on the dairy farm I grew up on. The 68 had a thrower run by a gas motor but the baler was PTO. BTW, as a NH dealer he should know that it’s LAN’Caster not lanCAS’ter PA! 😉
Yes 🙌
I wonder how they would do pulling a hay wagon in the hills of Northeastern Pennsylvania
Never thought about until now. You really dont see a lot of implements that have been restored at shows.
We baled a lot with our 77 but I don't think we ever put our 66 on the baler.
Off topic sort of, why are the augers on grain carts on the left? Like the guy said in this video, everything is over the right shoulder, except carts for some dumb reason.
Would you be interested in a Cockshutt combine
My grandfather actually knew the guy who created the bale knotter, because he went to school with him. And my Grandfather said everyone aways picked on him because he was never that smart.
Hundreds of bales? You mean thousands.
nice vid, love it
Jones from North Wales built their first self propelled baler in 1947. Not many made worth a lot of money if you can find one😀
Macchine fantastiche.... Peccato sarebbe stato bello vederle in azione, ma ma capisco che essendo pezzi unici non si poteva chiedere una cosa del genere... Complimenti😜