I studied up on this a few years ago. Around 1932 there was a small company that basically took a stationary hay press/baler and made a window pickup for it. So it did pick the hay up and bale right in the field. It took three people to run. One to drive the tractor pulling the baler and two to wire tie the hay bales. J.I. Case made the first commercially successful baler just right after the other one. I can remember some older case baler still being used when I was very little.
Self tying balers where designed in the early 1940s. Production started right after WWII. NH and JD both had them by then. I am not sure when the other brands came out with a self tying baler. They might have even beat JD and NH but JD and NH seem to have the most units on the time.
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Today's Featured Article - Tractor Profile: Farmall M - by Staff. H so that mountable implements were interchaneable. The Farmall M was most popular with large-acreage row-crop farmers. It was powered by either a high-compression gas engine or a distillate version with lower compression. Options included the Lift-All hydraulic system, a belt pulley, PTO, rubber tires, starter, lights and a swinging drawbar. It could be ordered in the high-crop, wide-front or tricycle configurations. The high-crop version was called a Model MV.
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