Posted by RayP(MI) on October 18, 2015 at 13:17:26 from (207.241.143.27):
Was in a hurry to get that year long pile of hay and droppings out of the sheep pasture and out on the hayfield while weather is still tolerable. Friday I backed into a post with the loader tractor damaging the plumbing on the auxilliary hydraulic tank. Took me all Saturday morning to get it replumbed. Only took a $2 pipe nipple, but getting the broken stub out if back of tractor without damaging threads was a task.
Today the floor of the spreader buckled catching about 3 or 4 of the cross bars on the apron and breaking the idler sprocket bracket at front of apron. I can weld it back. The floor can get a new piece of plywood. Only a two foot span needs replacing. But can I slip it in without having to open up apron? Then there is those bent cross bars... can I straighten them withouta fight?
Gotta feeling Monday isn't going to be a good day.
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Today's Featured Article - New Hitches For Your Old Tractor - by Chris Pratt. For this article, we are going to make the irrational and unlikely assumption that you purchased an older tractor that is in tip top shape and needs no immediate repairs other than an oil change and a good bath. To the newcomer planning to restore the machine, this means you have everything you need for the moment (something to sit in the shop and just look at for awhile while you read the books). To the newcomer that wants to get out and use the machine for field work, you may have already hit a major roadblock. That is the dreaded "proprietary hitch". With the exception of the
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