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Baler Twine
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<blockquote data-quote="Simon Chiles" data-source="post: 8017383" data-attributes="member: 1233"><p>The 9250 is slightly thicker string than the 10,000. As a guide you’d get about 500 bales out of a pair of 10,000 spools and 450 bales out of the 9250.</p><p>I get about 900 bales out of a pack of the Cordex jumbo 9250 spools, as I can get 3 packs tied together in the baler it means that we can get 2700 bales before having to reload the baler which means that on most days we only have to stop once to reload string, only occasionally do we need to do it twice. I didn’t think it worked out cheaper in the jumbo packs as I thought the string was sold according to its weight.</p><p>Personally I’d use 10,000 most of the time in a conventional baler, the 9250 only really comes into its own if you’ve got a packer when it allows you to get much higher pack pressure without breaking the strings of the bales in the pack and therefore allows you to make much better packs.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Simon Chiles, post: 8017383, member: 1233"] The 9250 is slightly thicker string than the 10,000. As a guide you’d get about 500 bales out of a pair of 10,000 spools and 450 bales out of the 9250. I get about 900 bales out of a pack of the Cordex jumbo 9250 spools, as I can get 3 packs tied together in the baler it means that we can get 2700 bales before having to reload the baler which means that on most days we only have to stop once to reload string, only occasionally do we need to do it twice. I didn’t think it worked out cheaper in the jumbo packs as I thought the string was sold according to its weight. Personally I’d use 10,000 most of the time in a conventional baler, the 9250 only really comes into its own if you’ve got a packer when it allows you to get much higher pack pressure without breaking the strings of the bales in the pack and therefore allows you to make much better packs. [/QUOTE]
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