Yes, my late Dad would have raked the field again too. I think the Operator was baling in the wrong direction on the windrows with the buts of the hay feeding into the baler instead of the hay entering heads first. We traded a #45 for a #46 in 1962 and used it for about 20 years and traded it for a #37. It would miss 1 bale in about 600 always on the one side. I tore that knotter apart one day a found a flaw in the knotter casting that was causing the bill hook cam follower to hang up. Filed the flaw out of the casting and knotter never missed again unless the twine knife became dull. Nieghbour also had a #46 and it was a good baler as well.
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Today's Featured Article - A Lifetime of David Brown - by Samuel Kennedy. I was born in 1950 and reared on my family’s 100 acre farm. It was a fairly typical Northern Ireland farm where the main enterprise was dairying but some pigs, poultry and sheep were also kept. Potatoes were grown for sale and oats were grown to be used for cattle and horse feeding. Up to about 1958 the dairy cows were fed hay with some turnips and after that grass silage was the main winter feed. That same year was the last in which flax was grown on the farm. Flax provided the fibre which w
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