I was just informed that we may be getting a round bail or two for the winter to feed the horses. Can a round bail be picked up by a BX1880? I was told they weigh around 600 lb.
Good luck! You might be able to skid one with the FEL - but a spear on the rear may not get it up...... you are out there a bit with distance, depending on 4x4 4x5 bail and the dampness of the bail......I was just informed that we may be getting a round bail or two for the winter to feed the horses. Can a round bail be picked up by a BX1880? I was told they weigh around 600 lb.
Pulling 600 lbs will require some type of "hitch" to attach a chain or cable. Other wise you will simple pull the chain through the plywood. Maybe a piece of 2 x 6 or 2 x 8 bolted flat to the plywood then bolt a steel strap hinge through the 2 x 6 and the plywood so you have some meat to pull against.probably a few times a year, when the grass stops growing. I just don't want to damage anything. I was thinking of a plywood board with some 2x around the edges for support.
I have gathering wheels on my New Holland. Never an issue starting a bale either. Don't believe I've ever plugged mine that I can remember. With mine, the tie / wrap is automatic. The digital screen tells me not only how the chamber is filling, but alerts me when the bale is almost ready to wrap. When it's wrap time, it tells me to stop and then tells me to open the tailgate and dump, close and go again. I can switch between net and twine on the fly too and it has on board moisture sensors that constantly monitor the RM of what I'm bailing. I can roll anything between a 4x4 and a 4x6 in 2" increments. I tend to run 52's all the time at high density. Like playing a video game but in the cab.It is a pain in the a$$ baler. The feeder is too narrow an plugs way to easy. Often hard to start a roll. And it is slow to tie and dump. However it makes nice sized bales for horse people to put into their pickup and roll around by hand. I sold 100's.
Can you take a picture of your feeder or provide a link? Looking for ideas on how to feed my cattle and goats that are pastured together using the same round bales. I currently just put one bale at a time under the side awning of the run-in shed but looking for better ideas to limit the waste created doing it that way.One thing that horesy people don't seem to fathom is feeding. They either don't give enough forage and instead give them grain (which they don't need) or they give them too much hay and the horse(s) just whizz on it. I feed my rounds in elevated feeders that keep the bales off the ground and have folding in barred panels that limit what the cattle (and the nag) can get in a mouthful. So no wasted on the ground whizzed on hay. It all gets eaten and they have roof's on them to keep the bales dry too.
Nope. my wife raised Pecheron Draft horses. I didn't. I don't much care for horses, I prefer cattle myself. Cattle are income, horse are like boats, a boat is a hole in the water you pour money into. Horses are just like boats but not in the water.So you raised horses flip? I did, I raise Arabs, my Daughter still does. I can give you the link if you like. All top blood lines, one line that goes back to the 3rd crusade, and it can be proven. SO remarks like that one are just plain silly, yes I bit my tongue on that.
I basically copied the Klene Pipe Structures elevated round bale feeder and added my own roof structure. I use the fold down barred grates like Klene does as well but I changed his design to a single swing door and built the feeders out of heavy gauge steel angle with marine grade plywood feed floors.. Might take a picture at a later date, I'm busy making hay right now. Matter of fact, just got done with dinner, worked until dark today.Can you take a picture of your feeder or provide a link? Looking for ideas on how to feed my cattle and goats that are pastured together using the same round bales. I currently just put one bale at a time under the side awning of the run-in shed but looking for better ideas to limit the waste created doing it that way.