Posted by DaninKansas on May 23, 2014 at 10:00:15 from (24.248.193.103):
In Reply to: A Good Deal? posted by Bryce Frazier on May 23, 2014 at 07:30:49:
The issue will be the knotter. If you get the right person that knows what they are doing it "COULD" be working fine with just an hour or so's worth of labor.
I had a JD 14T baler that I bought from a 80 year old neighbor that said it worked fine for him the last time he used it - about 8 years earlier before he parked it in the shed. I set it up and baled a little bit with it and found that it failed to tie one in twenty bales on one side. If I had just run it a little longer and let all the kinks work out it probably would have been fine.
Instead I thought I would be proactive and get it working right before I shoved a lot of hay through it. I talked to the local JD stealership and "Yeah we got a guy that knows all about them". $1600 later I had a baler that wouldn't tie on one side at all. It never made another bale again and I get $300 for it at the scrap yard.
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Today's Featured Article - Hydraulics - Cylinder Anatomy - by Curtis von Fange. Let’s make one more addition to our series on hydraulics. I’ve noticed a few questions in the comment section that could pertain to hydraulic cylinders so I thought we could take a short look at this real workhorse of the circuit. Cylinders are the reason for the hydraulic circuit. They take the fluid power delivered from the pump and magically change it into mechanical power. There are many types of cylinders that one might run across on a farm scenario. Each one could take a chapter in
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