Posted by Brendon-KS on August 07, 2014 at 04:29:03 from (63.245.147.52):
In Reply to: Plowing wheatland posted by gtractorfan on August 06, 2014 at 19:47:30:
These machines were very popular here in Kansas years ago but have been long obsolete. Around here everyone calls it a "one-way" but "disc tiller" was a more generic name. Although this ad calls it a "disc plow" that term generally means a heavier-duty implement with larger discs supported by individual bearings and not setting parallel with each other. (Note in the ad that the discs are all on a common shaft.) Each manufacturer had their own name for the machine and obviously some names overlapped a bit. The action of the one-way is sort of halfway in between that of a disc harrow and a disc plow with a typical operating depth of three or four inches.
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Today's Featured Article - Tractor Profile: Allis-Chalmers Model G - by Staff. The first Allis-Chalmers Model G was produced in 1948 in Gasden, Alabama, and was designed for vegetable gardeners, small farms and landscape businesses. It is a small compact tractor that came with a complete line of implements especially tailored for its unique design. It featured a rear-mounted Continental N62 four-cylinder engine with a 2-3/8 x 3-1/2 inch bore and stroke. The rear-mounted engine provided traction for the rear wheels while at the same time gave the tractor operator a gre
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