I have fixed a lot of stuff with Bailing Wire

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Red Oak
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I have fixed a lot of stuff with Bailing Wire

Postby Red Oak » Sun Aug 24, 2014 5:44 pm

But this after noon was a first, my S-I-L hit some road debris with his BMW and tore the air dam and related plastic under belly loose, and I wired it up and the duct taped the hell out of it.
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Grassman
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Re: I have fixed a lot of stuff with Bailing Wire

Postby Grassman » Sun Aug 24, 2014 5:50 pm

Give me some baling wire and duct tape and I can fix anything!

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GFB
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Re: I have fixed a lot of stuff with Bailing Wire

Postby GFB » Sun Aug 24, 2014 6:04 pm

Yeah..me, too!

(I was going to ask what the heck bailing wire is..but decided this was a better response)
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Red Oak
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Re: I have fixed a lot of stuff with Bailing Wire

Postby Red Oak » Sun Aug 24, 2014 6:13 pm

Wire used to tie Hay and other forage into Bales, that has a million uses in civilized America.

At least you know what Duct Tape is ? Right ?
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GFB
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Re: I have fixed a lot of stuff with Bailing Wire

Postby GFB » Sun Aug 24, 2014 6:16 pm

Red Oak wrote:Wire used to tie Hay and other forage into Bales, that has a million uses in civilized America.

At least you know what Duct Tape is ? Right ?



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Cowman52

Re: I have fixed a lot of stuff with Bailing Wire

Postby Cowman52 » Sun Aug 24, 2014 8:29 pm

Before duct tape it was baling wire and inner tubes cut into various lengths and shapes.

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Sangersteve
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Re: I have fixed a lot of stuff with Bailing Wire

Postby Sangersteve » Sun Aug 24, 2014 9:02 pm

We were on a job up in Wisconsin, 12 3500 ton machines down during a scheduled plant shut down. Had 9 guys doing different portions of the same job on each machine.

One part of the job was safety wiring 24 1 1/4" bolts. That crew ran out of safety wire. Panic ensued until the two guys from Texas told them safety wire and bailing wire are the same thing. A trip to the feed store saved the day.
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Re: I have fixed a lot of stuff with Bailing Wire

Postby ann jusko » Mon Aug 25, 2014 6:47 am

I think we used as much baling wire for other things than we did for the hay baler. When we moved to Heath, my husband brought barbed wire and baling wire rolls, along with the tractor and implements.

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planosteve
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Re: I have fixed a lot of stuff with Bailing Wire

Postby planosteve » Mon Aug 25, 2014 7:47 am

You can still buy bailing wire???
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marti
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Re: I have fixed a lot of stuff with Bailing Wire

Postby marti » Mon Aug 25, 2014 1:36 pm

Give me baling wire, duct tape, and electric ties and I am a happy camper. In a pinch, baling twine will work...but not as well or as long. oh...and colored electric tape to "mark" tools that tend to get lost in the grass.

Cowman52

Re: I have fixed a lot of stuff with Bailing Wire

Postby Cowman52 » Mon Aug 25, 2014 4:46 pm

You get baling wire from the pile where the farmer cuts it off the hay before feeding it to the cows.
7000 ft will cost you about 90 bucks.

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crocmommy
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Re: I have fixed a lot of stuff with Bailing Wire

Postby crocmommy » Mon Aug 25, 2014 5:16 pm

Cowman52 wrote:You get baling wire from the pile where the farmer cuts it off the hay before feeding it to the cows.
7000 ft will cost you about 90 bucks.


He feels bailing wire to the cows? :lol:

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Bob Of Burleson
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Re: I have fixed a lot of stuff with Bailing Wire

Postby Bob Of Burleson » Mon Aug 25, 2014 5:59 pm

I'm intimately familiar with baling wire. When I was a kid, we baled hay the old-fashioned way — with a mule-driven baler. My job was as puncher and tyer. It was supposed to be a two-man job, but since the going rate of pay was an astronomical 40 cents and hour, my dad got two workers for the price of none. Here's what the rig looked like:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yphvDQyo3VU

One of the guys on the side of the baler is punching baling wire through the blocks and the other is tying it.

(Good thread, Red. :D )

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geeiabil
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Re: I have fixed a lot of stuff with Bailing Wire

Postby geeiabil » Mon Aug 25, 2014 8:35 pm

Sangersteve wrote:We were on a job up in Wisconsin, 12 3500 ton machines down during a scheduled plant shut down. Had 9 guys doing different portions of the same job on each machine.

One part of the job was safety wiring 24 1 1/4" bolts. That crew ran out of safety wire. Panic ensued until the two guys from Texas told them safety wire and bailing wire are the same thing. A trip to the feed store saved the day.


All the safety wire I've seen is probably about 26 gauge stainless (very small ) nowhere close to the size of baling wire. It's mostly used on aircraft parts hardware.
Isn't most hay in this day and age rolled and wrapped in plastic making baling wire semi-dinosaur like?
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ann jusko

Re: I have fixed a lot of stuff with Bailing Wire

Postby ann jusko » Tue Aug 26, 2014 3:40 pm

You always try to get some square bales (actually rectangles) for your cattle. Much easier and better quality to feed an individual cow or calf. I doubt baling wire will every "go away" in my life time.

Red Oak
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Re: I have fixed a lot of stuff with Bailing Wire

Postby Red Oak » Tue Aug 26, 2014 7:09 pm

I always thought a round bale and a tractor with a hay fork was easier ;)
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grouchy
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Re: I have fixed a lot of stuff with Bailing Wire

Postby grouchy » Wed Aug 27, 2014 7:14 am

Red Oak wrote:I always thought a round bale and a tractor with a hay fork was easier ;)

Yep.

ann jusko

Re: I have fixed a lot of stuff with Bailing Wire

Postby ann jusko » Wed Aug 27, 2014 7:53 am

It is easier. But we always had some square bales on hand for any cow or calf that needed separated from the herd. Or when we bought stock and kept them separate from the herd for awhile. And of course, for the horses who were kept in a separate pasture.

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Jami
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Re: I have fixed a lot of stuff with Bailing Wire

Postby Jami » Wed Aug 27, 2014 9:52 am

You need square bales for hay rides!!

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Orphie
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Re: I have fixed a lot of stuff with Bailing Wire

Postby Orphie » Wed Aug 27, 2014 10:05 am

GIB.. didn't know what bailing wire was? LOL.. You have been to Texas silly!
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