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Farm Machinery
Machinery
Managing Flat 8's as efficiently as possible
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<blockquote data-quote="Two Tone" data-source="post: 7791854" data-attributes="member: 44728"><p>I still make a lot of conventional bales for some trusted horse owners and use Flat 8’s.</p><p>I do not bother with any packer type systems. I simple load 144 of them straight onto a trailer with an angled front rave and carry another 8 on the loader itself, taking them straight to the barn to stack them. </p><p>I crisscross the bales on back of the trailer and only need to rope the bales at back of the trailer.</p><p>It also helps to use an artic steer loader than a rigid type because you have instant side-shift by just turning the steering wheel, to keep the stack tightly bound together.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Two Tone, post: 7791854, member: 44728"] I still make a lot of conventional bales for some trusted horse owners and use Flat 8’s. I do not bother with any packer type systems. I simple load 144 of them straight onto a trailer with an angled front rave and carry another 8 on the loader itself, taking them straight to the barn to stack them. I crisscross the bales on back of the trailer and only need to rope the bales at back of the trailer. It also helps to use an artic steer loader than a rigid type because you have instant side-shift by just turning the steering wheel, to keep the stack tightly bound together. [/QUOTE]
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Managing Flat 8's as efficiently as possible
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