mine is a old beater but when you can swath 9ft high reeds canary grass at 10 mph they are a big wow, bets thing for irrigated meadows, Dry farm hills and rocks slow it down some but still way faster then a sickle bar.Faster horses said:That Sue is a good woman!
That is a rotary swather, right? So how do you like it on dryland hay?
We hear John Deere is only going to make rotary swathers from now on,
but the other heads will be available. No one that we know of has a
rotary around here right now, but they are being talked about. Some
friends had peas that were really high and the wind knocked them down
so they couldn't cut them with their regular swather. JD brought down a
rotary and the boys said that was just the the thing for those lodged peas.
Worked really, really well.
Denny said:A double nine will knock down a lot of hay and the rocks are more forgiving.I have both the discbine excels in heavy hay and the dbl. 9 in rocks and thinner hay.
Cedarcreek said:Had a neighbor trade for a pull type rotary. It was one of the drier years and in our thin dryland hay all it did was thin what was there a little. That and it broke several windows in the tractor cab. He couldn't trade back to sickle type soon enough. The extra speed wouldn't help me any, my fields are to rough to go over about 4 1/2 miles an hour.
tenbach79 said:We use a NH 340 with a disc head and love it. When we bought it we had a NH 2550 swather with a 18' sickle head. But in tall orchard grass/alfalfa it was slow, but with the disc head you could motor right thru it. But the faster you run the worst it's going to cut. When I cut our oats I ran 9 mph and cut really good but that was oat hay also. I use a cordless impact gun to change all the knives and takes about 15 min.