Workin' on the Old Tractors

Finished adjusting and greasing the haybine and tried it out this evening in a the small field where our orchard is. Its under 1 acre so it works nicely as a test plot. This is as early as I can remember starting the hay. Still plenty of moisture in the ground as I was leaving muddy tracks in a few spots. Not a lot of hay on this field but hopefully that will help it dry quickly. The haybine held together so far and cut pretty good. Now to get the tedder hooked up and see if I can get the baler going also.
 

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Finished adjusting and greasing the haybine and tried it out this evening in a the small field where our orchard is. Its under 1 acre so it works nicely as a test plot. This is as early as I can remember starting the hay. Still plenty of moisture in the ground as I was leaving muddy tracks in a few spots. Not a lot of hay on this field but hopefully that will help it dry quickly. The haybine held together so far and cut pretty good. Now to get the tedder hooked up and see if I can get the baler going also.
That's good the the haybine worked as it should always nice when things work out, have you had lots of rain this spring
 
That's good the the haybine worked as it should always nice when things work out, have you had lots of rain this spring
I was glad it made it this far. If it holds up through a couple bigger fields I can start to relaxing a bit.

We are actually below normal for rainfall but did just get a couple days of downpour last weekend. The wet spot in this field stays damp even in the middle of summer. Its always in shade in that spot and I always wonder if there was an old stump hole that was filled in that acts like a bowl to hold water with a heavy blue clay liner. I remember a stump pile right in that area when I was a kid.
 
I was glad it made it this far. If it holds up through a couple bigger fields I can start to relaxing a bit.

We are actually below normal for rainfall but did just get a couple days of downpour last weekend. The wet spot in this field stays damp even in the middle of summer. Its always in shade in that spot and I always wonder if there was an old stump hole that was filled in that acts like a bowl to hold water with a heavy blue clay liner. I remember a stump pile right in that area when I was a kid.
I was confident the haybine would work, CJet. You cover all the bases repairing this equipment!

DAC
 
Hooked the 284 to the tedder for the first time. It worked great and doesn't burn much fuel.
 

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Going over the baler and found the U-shaped pipe that the needles bolt to has a big split in it. Must have filled up with water and froze. I pulled one off of another baler and have it installed but still need to fine tune the needle adjustment. Hopefully I will have the baler up and running tomorrow because I have some hay that will be ready.
 

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Dang that thing shattered like glass! Good thing you have parts!

DAC
That part was brand new when we got the baler back in 2006. The preventer stuck and he broke or bent the needles and bent the tube and had to replace them. I don't know if I will try to fix it or not. You can't buy them any more so I suppose I should try. Its not like I have anything to lose.
 
That split piece is real critical to the timing of the needles too. I had a malfunction, not sure just what the initial cause was but it took out both needles and the yoke was sprung. Needles would not line up properly to tie. good luck on fixing yours.
 
I have a couple hundred bales worth of old straw bales that either mice ate strings, were baled to loose, or whatever that need to be re-baled. My old New Holland 276 "Hayliner" baler hasn't been used in 12 years or more, but has been in out of the weather. I'd say if I cleaned it up and greased it, after cycling a few times it would tie. So one of these days I hope to get the big mess baled up tight. It would reduce the size of the mess into a much smaller area and make using the straw much easier. I've begun using it in the garden to reduce the need for de-weeding, and even better after season ends, tilling it in really makes for much better soil texture and moisture retention.
Don't remember for certain how old this baler is, but for certain we've had it at least since 1970. Used to have a v4 Wisconsin on it as Dad's biggest tractor till we bought the 175 Massey in 74 was an MF50 and it couldn't run the baler fast enough to bale like Dad needed to being he custom square baled in 3 counties. He easily baled well over 100,000 bales a year, maybe twice that, as several customers each baled 10,000 every year. Dad custom baled from around 1950 till the early 80's when hay rolling became popular. The old 276 likely has baled 2 million bales....truly!
Sorry to get carried away on your thread buddy, but you jogged my old memories!
 
I have a couple hundred bales worth of old straw bales that either mice ate strings, were baled to loose, or whatever that need to be re-baled. My old New Holland 276 "Hayliner" baler hasn't been used in 12 years or more, but has been in out of the weather. I'd say if I cleaned it up and greased it, after cycling a few times it would tie. So one of these days I hope to get the big mess baled up tight. It would reduce the size of the mess into a much smaller area and make using the straw much easier. I've begun using it in the garden to reduce the need for de-weeding, and even better after season ends, tilling it in really makes for much better soil texture and moisture retention.
Don't remember for certain how old this baler is, but for certain we've had it at least since 1970. Used to have a v4 Wisconsin on it as Dad's biggest tractor till we bought the 175 Massey in 74 was an MF50 and it couldn't run the baler fast enough to bale like Dad needed to being he custom square baled in 3 counties. He easily baled well over 100,000 bales a year, maybe twice that, as several customers each baled 10,000 every year. Dad custom baled from around 1950 till the early 80's when hay rolling became popular. The old 276 likely has baled 2 million bales....truly!
Sorry to get carried away on your thread buddy, but you jogged my old memories!
I think it’s great to jog old memories Daniel.
I believe if each of us “old” guys would share our old memories we’d all have plenty to read about on here….. tractors or not.
 
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I have a couple hundred bales worth of old straw bales that either mice ate strings, were baled to loose, or whatever that need to be re-baled. My old New Holland 276 "Hayliner" baler hasn't been used in 12 years or more, but has been in out of the weather. I'd say if I cleaned it up and greased it, after cycling a few times it would tie. So one of these days I hope to get the big mess baled up tight. It would reduce the size of the mess into a much smaller area and make using the straw much easier. I've begun using it in the garden to reduce the need for de-weeding, and even better after season ends, tilling it in really makes for much better soil texture and moisture retention.
Don't remember for certain how old this baler is, but for certain we've had it at least since 1970. Used to have a v4 Wisconsin on it as Dad's biggest tractor till we bought the 175 Massey in 74 was an MF50 and it couldn't run the baler fast enough to bale like Dad needed to being he custom square baled in 3 counties. He easily baled well over 100,000 bales a year, maybe twice that, as several customers each baled 10,000 every year. Dad custom baled from around 1950 till the early 80's when hay rolling became popular. The old 276 likely has baled 2 million bales....truly!
Sorry to get carried away on your thread buddy, but you jogged my old memories!
These are the good stories we all like to hear. I can't imagine baling up that much hay. I have heard that some of those old Wisconsin v-4's could be a bugger to start when they were hot. Did your dad have any trouble?
 
These are the good stories we all like to hear. I can't imagine baling up that much hay. I have heard that some of those old Wisconsin v-4's could be a bugger to start when they were hot. Did your dad have any trouble?
Dad could fire that V4 by hand in an instant if the battery was low, or starter acting up, but Dad had brute strength! He kept that engine tuned so good that I never seen him have any trouble firing it up. I rode that MF50 right side fender from 4yrs old on. Before my days his balers had twin Wisconsin engines, but he could sure roll on fast with the V4! He sold that engine for just $50 after we got the "BIG" tractor, and MF175 which had plenty of power to run the baler with tractor PTO shaft. That was THE ONLY spanking new tractor we ever bought, and it was a leftover 73 model we bought in 74. I thought it was a brute till Dad had me test drive the MF1100 we went to look at and ended up taking home. I was literally scared to death to drive that monster of a tractor. I was about 15yrs old. Man the memories. It's sure making me miss my Dad!
 
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