Posted by Al Baker(pumpman) on October 15, 2020 at 09:16:04 from (199.192.180.1):
In Reply to: Hay wagon posted by Grandpa love on October 15, 2020 at 05:48:51:
Steel kicker wagons are cheap to buy if you target areas that once had small dairies. I bought most of mine off craigslist. 500-1000 bucks will buy a fairly nice one in Wisconsin. (I use the Badger to float them to Mi.) I have pulled some as far as 200 miles home. Its not bad on the tires if you pick a rainy day to lub and cool them. We run seven, would buy a couple more if I stumble across some. Easy to load, work to unload. When the weather is right we just bale. Stopping to unload is asking for rain here. 7 wagons mean we can bale over 1000 bales and get them on wheels to be put under cover. We unload in the morning, or evening when its cooler. Al
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Today's Featured Article - Ford Part Number Trivia - by Forum Participants. "Replaced by" means the part was superseded. All of my part books date back to 1964 and New Holland have changed some part numbers. They usually put the old Ford part number on the package. I was suppressed when I looked up the part number of the auxiliary drive shaft because for some reason the part number went through a radical change and it lost its "Basic Part Number". Ford part numbers follow the following rules. Most part numbers are in three parts. The middle part is called the
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