Towards the end they show a huge number of bales stacked, which must be for some huge corporate farm. Those balers move a lot faster than the ones we used on our farm in the 70's.
You can set them to be as tall as you wan them to be yourself. for example you could split the bale in half or split it in 10 pieces. The weight off the small bale also depends on the type of crop and moisture and off course your density settings but my guess would be that a small section like you see on 13:25 would weight around 140lbs. Keep in mind though that you would still need equipment to move the bale around when its a whole.
I don't think OLF has even seen nor watch any video before buying his. He's more of a "hands-on" try-it-on no messing around when inspecting a machine because in the end, it digs deep in your pockets ;) He loves his Krone HDP baler. But he might as well be getting a John-Deere (Kuhn) in a couple of years, or the same/bigger/improve Krone. Only time and brokerage (brakages and long-run repair cost) will tell ;)
tractorboy31 that's how it is pronounced... Krone is German for Crown and pronounced Kroner... Same goes for the Danish currency, it is the Danish crown or Krone
Well... it is not really how it is pronounced, but you can tell that he is trying to get it right. He is getting quite close. tractorboy is probably exactly that, a boy, and hasn´t learned yet about other languages so i don´t blame him either.
tractorboy31 As a native German speaker, he is saying the name 100% correctly. He is not saying Kronah or Kroner but Krone. Just like you hear people pronounce Porsche with the "e" at the end. He is just pronouncing the "e". There are no silent vowels in the German language.