there is several good brands out there just make sure the one you pick burns both corn and pellets. You can get very inexpensive models to more state of the art models that have a programmable thermostat, auto ignition, auto ash dumping, and even a cable that will hook up to a 12 volt battery that automatically provides power to keep the stove running if the electricity fails. I have owned three different models in the last 5 years , a Harman PC45, A Quadra Fire Advanced Energy multi fuel stove, And Bixby stove which burns corn and pellets. Each of these stoves had their advantages and disadvantages but were all fully capable of burning corn or pellets and I let them run 24-7 whether I was home or not and. You can adjust or fine tune them to run burning different kinds of pellets. With auto ignition and thermostat control they are just as dependable as any other heat. Just have to keep the hopper full of fuel and the ash pan empty then clean the stove once in a while. You can save enough to make the investment pay pretty fast. It is also one of the safest forms of heat. I never seen a pellet stove blow up a house or burn one down.
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Today's Featured Article - Uncle Cecil's Super A Lives Again - by Mike Purcell. A week or so out of most of my childhood summers was often spent with my Uncle Cecil and Aunt Sissie in the small East Texas town of Maydelle on their 80 acre farm. Some of my fondest memories of these visits are those of learning to drive a tractor at the helm of Uncle Cecil�s 1948 Farmall Super A. Uncle Cecil was the second owner of this wonderful little tractor, but it was almost as though he had adopted an infant. The original owner was a man from Minnesota who bought her from a local dea
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For sale Farmall super A tractor is complete and has just been setting for awhile,it was running when pulled out of the barn,shouldn’t take to much to get it going asking 1100.00
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