Posted by kossuth on November 23, 2009 at 11:44:39 from (214.3.220.14):
In Reply to: New Holland 273 baler posted by fergienewbee on November 10, 2009 at 04:54:46:
Don Welshans said: (quoted from post at 07:48:21 11/23/09)
mike w (ny) said: (quoted from post at 11:13:53 11/10/09) ... I HAVE A 275 AND 273 BOTH GREAT BALERS NEVER MISS A BALE
What is the difference between the Nh 275- 273? Is the 275 a bigger baler? As in weight.
dw
The 275 is actually an older machine than the 273. The 268, 275, 273, and 310 are all those low profile packing assembly machines and alot of the parts interchange too (if you get the 273 keep that in mind). From the plunger back they are the same machine as everything else but the packing unit is alittle different. My dad has a 275 and had a 310. A close family friend to us has a 310 as well. Good machines but can be expensive and time consuming to fix. The packing assembly came apart real bad on the 310 a few years back. It came apart to the point it punched holes in the top of the baler and bent tracks etc. Basically just messed the machine up. To put the machine back together it would have cost almost $2000 in just parts from New Holland. Long story short we pieced it back together better than new by digging through parts catalogs and pulling what we could off 268,275,273 and 310 balers we found in the bone yards, reinforced what we felt needed reinforced, and purchased new parts when we had to. Grand total was about a $1000. They are good machines but inspect that packing assembly good and make sure it's sound. If the tracks are torn up note it. If the bearings are torn up note it. Are all the tine there? If not were they ripped out by the plunger? If so did it take the tine carriage out with it? Just some stuff to look at.
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Today's Featured Article - It Can't Be Done! - A Tractor Story - by Neil Campbell. I'll never forget the time back when I was a boy baling hay on our Farm in Big Rapid, Michigan. The most memorable event that took place was a trip up the steepest incline on the farm pulling an old New-Idea baler with a pony-motor for power and a haywagon. I had just talked my Dad into buying an old John Deere B with 6-speeds ahead and I was real proud of it, except it was a little smaller than the Case tractor that we normally
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