Net Wrap Guide

Vermeer R665 Rancher round baler on display at a fairground, showing the chassis and net wrap chamber

Net Wrap for Vermeer Balers: Complete Brand Gui...

Every active Vermeer round baler model and the exact net wrap width it takes — 504R, 604M, 604N, 605M, 605N, Rebel 5410, 6650 Rancher. Plus what you should pay, the...

A John Deere round baler making a hay bale in a southern Illinois field, in the same Roll-Belt lineage as the modern John Deere 460R

What Size Net Wrap Fits a John Deere 460R? (48″...

The John Deere 460R Roll-Belt baler uses 48″ or 51″ net wrap — the same 1.20 m chamber as the 460M it replaced. Quick specs, wraps-per-bale guidance, the 460M-vs-460R differences, and...

Round hay bales scattered across a field after baling, each finished with net wrap, near Moonshine Gap

48 vs 51 Inch Net Wrap: When the 3 Inches Actua...

Both 48-inch and 51-inch net wrap fit the same 4-foot round balers — but the 3-inch difference matters more in some operations than others. Where edge cover pays for itself,...

A round bale of fresh alfalfa in a Montana hayfield — well-made round bales hold their shape and shed water regardless of which color net wrap the operator chooses.

Net Wrap Color Guide: Green vs White vs Black —...

Net wrap color is mostly marketing — UV resistance comes from the HALS package, not the pigment. What white, green, black and striped wraps actually do, and when color choice...

A round baler running in a hay field — the moment when wrap-cycle, density and width decisions all converge into a finished bale.

Top 7 Net Wrap Mistakes That Cost You Money (an...

The seven specific decisions that drive nearly every net wrap waste problem on a working farm — wrap count, width, cycle speed, bargain wrap, dirt storage, leaving wrap on at...

Round hay bales stacked in long rows for winter feed at Reeder Creek Ranch in Colorado — the kind of organized outdoor storage that holds dry-matter loss to single digits.

Outdoor Hay Bale Storage Through a Midwest Wint...

Best-practice outdoor hay storage for Midwest winters — railroad-tie rails, north-south row orientation, hill-grade drainage. The three nearly-free decisions that cut spoilage from 20% to under 5%.