Nice slick machine! Keep an eye on those grease lines, never know if one of them were to get pinched or torn or something and the bearing doesn't get anything. Thanks for answering my question on it, I did notice in your Part 1 how visible most things are on it. Still looks a bit busy yet in some places, not used to seeing the front end netwrap loading system... but like anything you learn what everything does and it turns simple. Don't think too much about resale value, but think of it as how much good use you've gotten out of something especially if it doesn't give trouble and does its job well (like with OLF's Krone baler). I'll agree 20000 for a baler is probably enough when things could hit the fan. Dad sold the SuperM this past summer and was around 15000 bales, ran it for over 7 years. Replaced a few bearings on it, and early on a couple things under warranty, but was a good baler. Actually called the guy who bought it from us, and he put 1000 bales on it without any trouble, were really happy coming from their burnt JD baler LOL! Hopefully the N Select will be just as good. Only thing around my region is AGCO isn't as much support... closest dealer I work with is 60 miles, and the next closest is over 100 (There is one only 50 miles away, but I don't want to talk about it LOL). Vermeer has support all over here.
We have had excellent results on our 604N Select with about 1800 bales. Chain adjustment and yearly belt pin replacements along with regular maintenance.
19:30 thats literally a nightmare. We work in tough straw and it sometimes tends to pack it 1/3 bales. Absoulutely insane. These 3 belts help nothing. What is current agco solution to this problem, because It’s incredibly annoying to go out 50 times a day to fix something in 50 k baler.
I got the 4160v myself.Excellent baler lots of problems.Had dry hay kit installed still puts hay in net wrap area.Good dealer near me we will get it right.
@@behrdog11 I think he talking about belt tension springs.Book don't tell u what the coil gap should be.My dealership doesn't know .Need to buy service manual.
@@josephwilcox6502 what I’ve found out is run baler at a set Engine RPM to slow down feed rate not the traditional 540 rpm I have the dry hay kit installed doesn’t make a huge difference from before now waiting for ground to dry out