Yesterday's Tractor Co. We Have the Tractor Parts You Need
Click Here or call 800-853-2651
 
TRACTOR   PARTS TRACTOR   MANUALS
   Allis Chalmers Case Cockshutt Farmall IH Ford 9N,2N,8N Ford
   Ferguson John Deere Massey Minn. Moline Oliver All The Rest
 
Marketplace
Tractor Manuals
Tractor Parts
Classified Ads
Photo Ads

Community
Discussion Forums
Project Journals
Tractor Town
Your Stories
Show & Pull Guide
Events Calendar
Hauling Schedule

Galleries
Tractor Photos
Implement Photos
Vintage Photos
Help Identify
Parts & Pieces
Stuck & Troubled
Vintage Ads
Community Album
Photo Ad Archives

Research & Info
Articles
Tractor Registry
Tip of the Day
Safety Cartoons
Tractor Values
Serial Numbers
Tune-Up Guide
Paint Codes
List Prices
Production Nbrs
Tune-Up Specs
3-Point Specs
Glossary

Miscellaneous
Tractor Games
Just For Kids
Virtual Show
Museum Guide
Memorial Page
Feedback Form

Yesterday's Tractors Facebook Page

Related Sites
Tractor Shed
TractorLinks.com
Ford 8N/9N Club
Today's Tractors
Garden Tractors
Classic Trucks
Kountry Life

Enter your email address to receive our newsletter!

subscribe
unsubscribe
  
Tool Talk Discussion Forum

Topic: Dad's and sons...light is a tool, so is stern talk..
[Return to Forum]

Author  [Modern View]
dennis min

11-14-2012 15:32:16
71.48.125.3



Report to Moderator


All,

Time was many moons ago,

My very tolerant father had to endure his overly inquisitive #2 son in the shed while working on an 8N. I had little listening skills, or attention, or anyhting else that would make things go easier, especially in the cold.

Did any one ever burn their dad"s forehead with the mettalic heat shield from the 100 watt trouble-light, while distracted by a mouse running the purlins on the shed?

What my Dad had to deal with, I am unsure I"ve got the same grace and patience. Swift blistering caused Dad"s selectively interrupted vocabulary.

Meant in a lighthearted sense...find the humor please.
D.

[Reply]   [No Email]
JRSutton

11-15-2012 12:12:54
75.130.109.233



Report to Moderator

Re: Dad's and sons...light is a tool, so is stern talk.. in reply to dennis min, 11-14-2012 15:32:16  
I can picture doing that with a work light!

But I only burned my dad once.

In the car going to church - I went to turn off his choice of what he selected on the radio - knocked the cigarette out of his hand onto his brand new, expensive, dress pants - burning a series of large holes.

man was he mad.

I sat in church wondering whether or not I should turn him in for using the lord's name in vain.

Needless to say I left the radio alone from that day forward.

  [Reply]  [No Email]
jackinok

11-15-2012 06:57:16
162.58.82.136



Report to Moderator

Re: Dad's and sons...light is a tool, so is stern talk.. in reply to dennis min, 11-14-2012 15:32:16  
at our house,the youngest boy always got to be "HELPER" older ones moved on to bigger and better things. since i was the youngest boy,and we were close together,guess who got to be helper longest!!LOL.. didnt hurt me none though,and dad when he was older and had a stroke so he couldnt go would poke the older guys with his cane and holler "get back out of the way and let jack do it,you boys are going to be here all day"..they had the brains i had the strong back.dad would make me hold two lights,one so i could see and one so HE could see.he would work all day on something not saying anything "but shine your light here"..that meant his wasnt in the right place so i had to shine mine on it too.

  [Reply]  [No Email]
Bret4207

11-15-2012 04:04:31
64.19.90.196



Report to Moderator

Re: Dad's and sons...light is a tool, so is stern talk.. in reply to dennis min, 11-14-2012 15:32:16  
I don't believe I'm anywhere near as patient as my Dad was. But I also try to explain things to my kids, where my Dad would hand me a book and say, "Here, read this and it's all explained." He could read a book and understand complex or completely foreign ideas, I never could get it like he did. I'd give an awful lot to be able to spend one more day with him. He's been gone since 1980.

Yup, I know the thing with the light- "Shine the light where I'M LOOKING, not where YOU'RE looking!!!"

:lol: :lol:

  [Reply]  [No Email]
Dick2

11-15-2012 02:35:37
174.19.205.113



Report to Moderator

Re: Dad's and sons...light is a tool, so is stern talk.. in reply to dennis min, 11-14-2012 15:32:16  
I got growled at when I was a kid, but I learned from it. My son was impossible as a helper; he could slip away faster than a hawk on a dive.

Daughter was my best helper; she would stand patiently waiting for my next order and do exactly as I directed her. She much preferred to help me than help in the kitchen.

  [Reply]  [No Email]
schriffs

11-14-2012 20:34:04
67.230.232.237



Report to Moderator

Re: Dad's and sons...light is a tool, so is stern talk.. in reply to dennis min, 11-14-2012 15:32:16  
"Hold the light on what I'm working on, not on me"... I learned a lot in the shop, barn, field, etc... mostly from Dad, also from brothers, neighbors, etc. No school can teach that stuff. I still learn something new every couple of weeks! Sometimes I wish I hadn't learned so much, because i don't want to pay someone to do something I can do myself, and I can fix almost anything. That makes for a long to-do list.

  [Reply]  [No Email]
JRSutton

11-15-2012 12:17:57
75.130.109.233



Report to Moderator

Re: Dad's and sons...light is a tool, so is stern talk.. in reply to schriffs, 11-14-2012 20:34:04  
never thought of it that way - but you're 100% right about the downside to knowing how to do everything!!!

Add five siblings who DON'T know how to do ANYTHING, and that list gets five times longer.

  [Reply]  [No Email]
JMS./MN

11-14-2012 21:24:09
209.237.125.241



Report to Moderator

Re: Dad's and sons...light is a tool, so is stern talk.. in reply to schriffs, 11-14-2012 20:34:04  
Kevvie.....it's a generational thing about where to aim the light. Your Grandpa taught me that.....just like my usual job on a WC engine overhaul was cleaning up parts, and that's how I learned what made them tick. For my YT Mag friends, Schriffs (who posts here very occasionally), is my middle son, JD diesel tech, excellent diagnostician, and like his two brothers....the best sons any Dad could have. It's fun to see how they always work together, and with their three sisters as well.

  [Reply]  [No Email]
tomturkey

11-14-2012 19:54:01
216.81.211.253



Report to Moderator

Re: Dad's and sons...light is a tool, so is stern talk.. in reply to dennis min, 11-14-2012 15:32:16  
I really disliked helping my Dad. Helping him meant, "Here, hold this screwdriver" "Give me the screwdriver" "Here hold this for me".Long periods of holding tools. I'd try to sneak away, but..."hey, where you going?"We're not done yet. It is all very amusing now, very boring back then. I also experienced the shine the light so I can see thing. All seems so funny now gobble

  [Reply]  [No Email]
pete black

11-14-2012 18:17:22
166.147.120.16



Report to Moderator

Re: Dad's and sons...light is a tool, so is stern talk.. in reply to dennis min, 11-14-2012 15:32:16  
the one i remember the most and dislike to this day "kids should be seen and not heard". vowed never to say that to our sons.

  [Reply]  [No Email]
showcrop

11-14-2012 17:45:03
75.67.231.80



Report to Moderator

Re: Dad's and sons...light is a tool, so is stern talk.. in reply to upred, 11-14-2012 15:32:16  
my dad would have me helping him do things now and then, and more frequently as I grew older. He was very stern and strict and always required that I pay attention so that I would be ready with the next tool or part and not need waking up. That experience and training stood me well in future employment.

  [Reply]  [No Email]
to_many_irons

11-14-2012 17:13:49
24.224.192.21



Report to Moderator

Re: Dad's and sons...light is a tool, so is stern talk.. in reply to dennis min, 11-14-2012 15:32:16  
gramp and dad both

can you see .

yep

well hold so i can .

[ words changed some lol . ]

learned lots from them .

  [Reply]  [No Email]
Dean Olson

11-14-2012 16:57:41
98.196.66.64



Report to Moderator

Re: Dad's and sons...light is a tool, so is stern talk.. in reply to dennis min, 11-14-2012 15:32:16  
"Hold the light so I can see not so you can!"

Growing up in the midwest I was a big boy. Threw a lot of hay bales and delivered water softener salt as a part time job. I also thought that tighter was better and busted more than a few bolts.

Had my share of stern talk.

Many a fond memory, now anyway. Not so much at the time.

  [Reply]  [No Email]
Hendrik

11-15-2012 03:18:58
194.53.253.51



Report to Moderator

Re: Dad's and sons...light is a tool, so is stern talk.. in reply to Dean Olson, 11-14-2012 16:57:41  
Fully concur.
While helping my dad wrenching, I too tended to overtighten things. Led Dad to tell me to stop that because "when it must be taken apart again, odds are that I (Dad) must do it".
In vocational I tightened a chuck to the main shaft of a lathe so strongly, the instructor could not remove it when he needed the chuck changed. Background was that not long before that I got nearly killed by a 30 lbs chuck that was slung from a lathe, because someone had failed to tighten it properly.
Yes, good memories

  [Reply]  [No Email]
Billy Shafer

11-14-2012 17:39:36
173.184.85.29



Report to Moderator

Re: Dad's and sons...light is a tool, so is stern talk.. in reply to Dean Olson, 11-14-2012 16:57:41  
One day after the ranch got the first diesel tractor they bought. It stopped running so my dad and the foreman were working on it. I was sitting in the seat making a pain of myself. Two hours of working and a few cuss words later. I took the top off of the fuel tank and said. This tank is empty. Both of them stopped and gave some very stern looks and a good talking to. About playing some where else.

  [Reply]  [No Email]

[Options]  [Printer Friendly]  [Return to Forum]   [Add a Reply]

Hop to:
TRACTOR   PARTS TRACTOR   MANUALS
Same-Day Shipping! Most of our stocked parts ship the same day you order (M-F).  Expedited shipping available, just call!  Most prices for parts and manuals are below our competitors.  Compare our super low shipping rates!  We have the parts you need to repair your tractor.  We are a Company you can trust and have generous return policies!   Shop Online Today or call our friendly sales staff toll free (800) 853-2651. [ More Info ]

Home  |  Forums


Copyright © 1997-2013 Yesterday's Tractor Co.

All Rights Reserved. Reproduction of any part of this website, including design and content, without written permission is strictly prohibited. Trade Marks and Trade Names contained and used in this Website are those of others, and are used in this Website in a descriptive sense to refer to the products of others. Use of this Web site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy Policy

TRADEMARK DISCLAIMER: Tradenames and Trademarks referred to within Yesterday's Tractor Co. products and within the Yesterday's Tractor Co. websites are the property of their respective trademark holders. None of these trademark holders are affiliated with Yesterday's Tractor Co., our products, or our website nor are we sponsored by them. John Deere and its logos are the registered trademarks of the John Deere Corporation. Agco, Agco Allis, White, Massey Ferguson and their logos are the registered trademarks of AGCO Corporation. Case, Case-IH, Farmall, International Harvester, New Holland and their logos are registered trademarks of CNH Global N.V.

Yesterday's Tractors - Antique Tractor Headquarters

About this site - Yesterday's Tractors is your one-stop source for antique tractors. If you are interested in older tractors you've come to the right place! Join more than 275,000 other classic tractor enthusiasts from all over the globe. We have many resources for antique tractor enthusiasts available including photos, classified ads, more than 24 tractor discussion forums, a show guide, values, specs and much more. Bookmark this site and come back often. Thanks for stopping by! Feel free to use our feedback form to send us your comments, suggestions and ideas.