Zero Turn..........Baler?

Straw Boss

Well-known Member
Kinda wished I was a hay man. Looks like fun.
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I've seen that in a few magazines. Trouble is,the drive train will probably outlast the baler.
 
I heard they were going to offer a replacement baler for it...keeping the power system..
 
Now somebody with some real talent can go out to their shop gut a old combine , and mount a new baler to it, just like in the earlier post with the loader mounted on a old combine. It is just a self propelled baler.
 
"somebody with some real talent can go out to their shop gut a old combine , and mount a new baler to it"

There was an article in Farm Show magazine where a guy did that except I think the baler was used too.
 
A combine is not a zero turn machine and farm show magazine is a joke. Always good for a laugh and thats about all.
 
I really don't know. Since the tires are smooth and are mounted like swivel casters, I assumed the linkages on top of the spindles were shock absorbers of some sort to keep the wheels from shimmying on rough ground.
 
"It looks to me like the front wheels actually steer it."

Could be like a zero turn mower that is zero turn but has a side
hill steering kit so you can hold it straight when you need to do so.

I guess my thought is, how close are the windrows that you need
true zero turn? I don't make hay anymore but I thought with all
the tedders and row combiners out there it wouldn't be an issue.
 
"A combine is not a zero turn machine and farm show magazine is a joke."

Thanks for your opinion. Now I have two. They may even agree. ;)
 

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