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8K views 7 replies 7 participants last post by  NEHerdsman  
#1 ·
Hey All,

I have 30 acres of Hay, a moxture of Orchard Grass and Clover. My question is, do I need a Hay Bine and if so what size tractor to pull it?

Thanks,

Gorapco
 
#2 ·
Hi Gorapco,

I have a small hay operation like yourself, and run an 8 foot discbine 408 NH with a 70hp tractor without a problem. I would definitely use a discbine over a haybine, as you can run a discbine a lot faster (ground speed that is). If a discbine isn't within your budget, then a haybine over a standard disc or drum mower for sure. The conditioner is a godsend for drydown time, as an example, my neighbour runs a standard disc mower, no conditioner, and he needs an extra day or two dry down over me. I could easily swing another foot or two behind the 70 horse tractor, but the 8 footer is great for gateways etc. Having said that, my country is all flat, with no rocks. If you have large rocks, I would probably choose a haybine, and if you have hills, I wouldn't go any bigger.

I hope this helps.
Aaron.
 
#3 ·
Ditto!! I use a NH 408 discbine also, and am very satisfied! I run it with a Ford 5610 in 5th gear at PTO speed. Tractor has had a li'l twist to the smoke screw, so I'm guessing 70 HP as well.
HTH, Dave
 
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#4 ·
No you don't need a haybine. A sickle mower will do the trick too. With the clover it would help the drying process to crimp it. To accomplish that you would need to follow a sickle mower with a crimper/conditioner, or find yourself a haybine, which would have the conditioner in it. If you want to spend a little more money the discbine would be the ultimate way to go. A 9 foot haybine can be handled by a 40hp tractor. A discbine wil take quite a bit more power to pull it.
 
#6 ·
My kubota m4700 pulls my standard 8 foot disc mower okay for it's size, I think your m6800 will have plenty of power for a 8 foot haybine!
 
#7 ·
I have an M6800 and it runs a JD 1209 MOCO on hills with ease. We bale about 45 ac each year and stayed within budget to upgrade over the years from sickle mower to a MOCO (haybine). Added a tedder last year, which cuts a day or so in drying.
 
#8 ·
Whether you can use a straight mower rather than a haybine/conditioner is going depend on the conditions in your area. Seems out in the midwest folks have much more cooperative weather, here in NE almost no one does *not* use a conditioner. Same criteria seems to apply to the use of a tedder - around here no one would try to make dry hay without one, in other areas there seem to be people who have never seen one!