i don't know if i would want one of those things or not. they take up quite a bit of time hooking and unhooking. i'd rather have several trailers that i could load by hand and just set under a shed until i could get them unloaded than anything else. i always wanted to build a one wheel trailer that set flat on the ground and just set down on a couple of simple holes that were on the side of a trailer or truck. i would have put a person on that and let them snag the bales as the truck went by and throw it on the truck. either way yhou still have to stack it. i use to cut and bale for the public and there has been a many a day when if i had spent and extra hour driving to a barn a ways from the field or didn't have trailers to stack the hay on, that the baled hay would get wet. you can take a ton truck, build a rack over the cab to stack hay on and drive it straight into the loft of a barn and have a place to unload the hay from real ease. one guy on the bed of the truck throwing to the guy on the rack and you don't have to throw the hay very high. never pick up a bale and stand there and hold it. always know where your going with it before you pick it up. i know labor is hard to find, but i've seen the day when me and one guy hauled and stacked 500 bales in a barn that was 25 miles away from the field. farming is hard work and if you aren't willing to work at it you have no business in it at all. no need in being stupid about it either though. there is always an easeway to do things if you'll just look.
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Today's Featured Article - Oil Bath Air Filters - by Chris Pratt. Some of us grew up thinking that an air filter was a paper thing that allowed air to pass while trapping dirt particles of a particles of a certain size. What a surprise to open up your first old tractor's air filter case and find a can that appears to be filled with the scrap metal swept from around a machine shop metal lathe. To top that off, you have a cup with oil in it ("why would you want to lubricate your carburetor?"). On closer examination (and some reading in a AC D-14 service manual), I found out that this is a pretty ingenious method of cleaning the air in the tractor's intake tract.
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