[AT] Turning Balers and Haybines
Cecil Bearden
crbearden at copper.net
Mon Jul 18 14:07:10 PDT 2016
I just cut my corners wide, and make a run from the middle to the corner
and back to cut out my turnrows. Sorta like disking. Then when I bale
I bale these windrows first then I have an easy turn for the baler. It
saves a lot of u joints... I do this even with constant velocity
joints. You can do a lot of wide turning for the price of rebuilding a
CV joint.
Cecil in OKla
On 7/18/2016 3:02 PM, Ralph Goff wrote:
> On 7/18/2016 12:37 PM, Spencer Yost wrote:
>> As you folks may remember, I bought a NH 467 haybine at the start of the season last year and a hay baler at the start of this season. I was always taught you can turn haybines as hard right as you need. My NH 467 manual even confirms this. I also was taught balers with the two piece drive shafts can be turned “to follow a windrow to 2:30 to the right and 11:00 to the left”. I have no idea where these old guys that taught me came up with this, but that was what I was taught.
>>
>> However, the drive lines in both pieces of equipment makes a heck of a racket when I do this. So like the proverbial patient who says “it hurts when I do this”, I’ve taken the doctors advise and just stopped turning hard to the right and do a lot of picking-up the head and/or wide-looping the turns. I only have 5 acres so the extra time spent on turns is not a huge issue but still a pain in the butt. The baler in particular seems very sensitive to any turning under power.
>>
>> Has anyone experienced this? Is the racket normal for New Holland gear? Am I all washed up and dreaming and I shouldn’t be turning at all? On the haybine in particular I am pretty sure I should be able to hit the right brake and attack a square corner.
>>
>> PS: It sounds like possibly the driveshaft supports are making the noise and not the driveshaft.
>> PSS: The International gear I used to own and run never had this problem.
>> _______________________________________________
>> AT mailing list
>> http://www.antique-tractor.com/mailman/listinfo/at
>>
> My 479 haybine seems to turn sharp with no complaints either way. Not
> sure where I read it but I adjust my drawbar to the furthest forward
> position on the 2090 Case. There are only two positions. Mine is the
> three joint driveline on the haybine. Maybe I read it in the manual.
> I run the 847 NH round baler with the shorter hitch adjustment too, same
> as the haybine. Might be something you could look into
> to see if you can adjust your drawbar length.
>
> Ralph in Sask.
>
> _______________________________________________
> AT mailing list
> http://www.antique-tractor.com/mailman/listinfo/at
More information about the AT
mailing list