Ha. I guess I posted on the wrong thread. Yeah, magantism makes the most sense, as I posted below, seems a flow of water, electric current, helps, which is how the old times can judge how much water, how deep, by years behind a shovel I suppose. How I or others fine dead lines or empty pipes is the question to me. Funny how rusty welding wires work, but a too dry fruit tree branch doesn't. And, as I mentioned on the Txas water thread, how the heck does the gas company sniffer work? From several feet away with concrete, tarmac or plastic sheet in between. Nowdays with water in the west now hundreds or thousand plus feet down, those old timers still feeling the artesian water viens?
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Today's Featured Article - Field Modifications (Sins of the Farmer) - by Staff. Picture a new Chevrolet driving down the street without it's grill, right fender and trunk lid. Imagine a crude hole made in the hood to accommodate a new taller air cleaner, the fender wells cut away to make way for larger tires, and half of a sliding glass door used to replace the windshield. Top that off with an old set of '36 Ford headlight shells bolted to the hood. Pretty unlikely for a car... but for a tractor, this is pretty normal. It seems that more often than not they a
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