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Farmall & IHC Tractors Discussion Forum
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I Don't Get It

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Allan in NE

04-08-2005 16:29:44




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Hi Guys,

I've heard two experienced guys say in just the past two days that their tractors just won't turn correctly while in soft soil.

One fella says that with duals on, the tractor wants to go straight ahead and the other says the tractor won't turn with an implement on behind it while in the field.

This is normal. Arent' we using our brakes?

Heck, I learned that when I was 7 years old and it is an automatic reflex at every spin of the wheel, in the field or not.

I don't get it. :>(

Allan

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Bill in NC

04-09-2005 07:36:35




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Allan in NE, 04-08-2005 16:29:44  
Hey, here in NC where the farms are small and the tractors are small, too, every farm boy knows one of the skill-thrills is spinning a tractor around at the end of the row by hitting brakes, turning wheel, raising hydraulic, managing the throttle and sometimes shifting gears all in a blur and then suddenly going forward (dropping the implement (in the exact right spot!) in the opposite direction without missing a beat. There's nothing like a light-front end 25 - 50 hp tractor with a heavy three-point or fast-hitch implement on the rear to make a sweet looking and feeling darn fast end-of-row turn. That's why as a present day "play" farmer I was really struck by how much quicker my 140 made end of row turns in the garden with new rear tires than the previous 30 percenters. It spun around on the new lugs instead of all the contact area with the worn out tires.

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Allan in NE

04-09-2005 07:46:05




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Bill in NC, 04-09-2005 07:36:35  
Mornin' Bill,

I was thinking about what you just said yesterday.

When I was a wee lad, I spent my summers cultivating corn and spuds with a 2-row belly unit mounted on either a H or a M. If ya didn't spin 'er and have that brake tire walkin' right back outta it's own track, you cut the crop.

Same way when mowin' hay. If ya couldn't make a absolute 90-degree turn, there was he11 to pay when the head of household learned of it. :>)

And, we all remember the consequences of those little ill-advised feats. :>)

Allan

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gordon hulgan

04-09-2005 06:17:52




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Allan in NE, 04-08-2005 16:29:44  
caseyc,I was not thinking about you, sorry if hurt you feeling,



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Hugh MacKay

04-09-2005 04:23:33




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Allan in NE, 04-08-2005 16:29:44  
Allan: Well. I've responded to just about half the guys on this thread. What are you and your band of YES MEN going to chew on today?



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Allan in NE

04-09-2005 05:42:00




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Hugh MacKay, 04-09-2005 04:23:33  
Hurmph,

Let me get this first cup o joe down and I'm sure I'll think of something to get everyone hollarin' at me. :>)

I still think it is a matter of the dry land farming practices vs the irrigated. That along with flotation vs traction. The dry boys turn with the implement in the ground, whereas the irrigators don't; we lift the implement, turn back upon the furrow and drop 'er back in the ground again and go.

Yes, when working a seedbed, I agree, get all the weight possible OFF the outfit and dual 'er up to get that tractor up on top; soft soil against the doubled tires will take care of the traction issue.

Brakes are like a T/A that the good Doc and I were throwin' rocks at each other about yesterday. I simply feel that they both are put on the tractor for a reason; they are put there to use.

And I don't have a "Band of yes men"; everyone here has, and they certainly are entitled to, their own opinion. Lots of us here have tilled the soil.

I just wish we could have a civil conversation without it turning ugly every darned time.

Maybe we never will see eye to eye, I dunno. I just don't think we need to be feuding at every turn because we do things differently; it is a total waste of time and effort.

Allan

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Hugh MacKay

04-09-2005 07:49:58




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Allan in NE, 04-09-2005 05:42:00  
Allan: Paul said well, and my dad always said it was wise to visit other farms, see your own mistakes, learn from others mistakes, chew the rag a bit and maybe you'll both come out with a better idea.

I farmed in a climate wher we always had a 45" anual rainfall, on a sandy loam soil about 8' deep and pure gravel underneath. Water table was always at gravel level. That land would turn 500-50lb. bales of alfalfa hay per acre every season. We rotated with corn grown by cow manure and fixed nitrogen. This is a large continant, what works one place will not work elsewhere.

Since coming to YT I have learned something about tobacco farming with SA's in the south, peanut farming in Georgia, corn-soybean in the I states, contour farming in WA, no till, etc. Try as I will you drylanders are awfully tight liped about both irrigation and dryland farming. Remember discussion on here is about broadening our horisions. You seem to be of the opinion, if it didn't happen in NE, it's not worth mentioning.

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Allan in NE

04-09-2005 08:14:31




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Hugh MacKay, 04-09-2005 07:49:58  
You're saying that you raised twelve and a half tons an acre? Per year?

That's two to three year's production of hay here. Irrigated. 'Course we only get 3 and sometimes 4 cuttings 'cause we are so far north and the growing season is so darned short.

One ol' boy told me last summer that he raised 7 ton; I think I'd have to run it across a scale and watch how he was doing it, tho. Almost totally unheard of in this country. Bankers will write on 3 ton per acre, no more.

Allan

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Hugh MacKay

04-09-2005 08:23:12




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Allan in NE, 04-09-2005 08:14:31  
Allan: Takes a lot of pumping to match that 45' natural rainfall. It wasn't all roses, that land with gravel and water underneath was hungry. But man did that alfalfa love that constant water table to tickle it's roots.



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Paul in Mich

04-09-2005 05:59:24




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Allan in NE, 04-09-2005 05:42:00  
Allan, Arguin is half of farmin, aint it? What"s the point of having green tractors vs red tractors if you aint gonna argue about them? Actually, I do believe that a lot of process improvements have come about by having a couple of farmers or maybe even a dozen of them argue which works best. Then going home and trying to prove the other guy wrong. Sometimes we find that we were right, and sometimes we find out the other feller was right. We may not have found a better way if we hadnt argued about it to begin with. I dont think guys here argue because they have a bone to pick, unless they (we) pick it with the government. I think its more that we have a lot of different angles and methods to meet the same end, and that is making farming work. Just my .02. BTW, I enjoy reading different opinions, as they give me something to think about myself, and yours is most valuable, along with a few others here.

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RustyFarmall

04-08-2005 22:31:42




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Allan in NE, 04-08-2005 16:29:44  
Gotta take your side on this one Allan. There is a reason why every tractor manufacture ever known equipped their tractors with individual brakes. They also installed a throttle control of some sort so you could slow down when making those turns. Front weights are added only when there is a need to counter-balance equipment mounted to the three point hitch.



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Hugh MacKay

04-09-2005 03:15:39




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to RustyFarmall, 04-08-2005 22:31:42  
Rusty: To start with, I don't think it is a matter of taking sides. I farmed for many years with 300, 560 and 656. I never saw great problems with front ends until these 100 plus hp tractors arrived on the scene with basically the same front end as the smaller tractors. Yes I agree 66 series were slightly heavier, but only slightly.

My point is, when you start getting into 100 hp plus, it takes more than two tires to put that hp on the ground. The first year I had my 1066, I operated it with single 20.8x38 tires with chloride. Pulling a disk or cultivator, it would leave wheel tracks the disk or cultivator would not cover. Not a very nice seed bed in my opinion, when you watch the double disc openers on corn planter go axle deep.

Second year I dumped the chloride and went to 20.8x38 duals, cured the wheel track problem. Yes you can used brakes turning, but the impact of steping on brakes with 26' cultivator is a far cry from doing the same with 656 and a 13' cultivator. I have seen 1066 front wheel drop in a dead furrow and keep going down. That doesn't even fizz a 1066 with duals, you just dig the front wheel and bottom of spindle from under the cultivator.

My point is those tractors should have been equiped with larger front tires. If your going to 24" tire out front it may as well have power. I have driven newer tractors with front drive and the ease with which they turn under load is unbelievable. My farming operation was done primarily by hired operators, thus you don't get the same degree of care you might give yourself on tractor operation. Cost of operation is the question at hand in my opinion. I don't really see that conventional tractor with front drive as answer. There are a lot of moving parts to those front ends. Articulated is the way to go in large tractors. If one is going to put 6 or 8 pulling tires on the ground they may as well be all same size.

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RustyFarmall

04-09-2005 06:53:42




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Hugh MacKay, 04-09-2005 03:15:39  
Hugh, I will not argue the benefits of FWA versus non FWA. There is no comparison. This is something that really should have caught on 40+ years ago.



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John A.

04-08-2005 21:51:12




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Allan in NE, 04-08-2005 16:29:44  
Allan, Back in the panhandle when I was there My cousins and I would tag team our largest tractor (a JD-8640 w/ a 35 ft Big G double-offset) in-a-Bind Times. We would take turns plowing for 6 hr each/da. While the other two did the normal work in theie off 12 hrs. hence all the plowing got done an everybody land and all regular work got done too. It isn't hard to put 100hr a week on a tractor. At a 100hr /week it doesn't talk long to rack up the hr.
As for brakes....We farmed in throughs, not in a Land fashion so turns are not a problem!! No brake troubles. For what it is worth...
Later,
John A.

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Hugh Mackay

04-09-2005 04:19:12




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to John A., 04-08-2005 21:51:12  
John: Exactly, doesn't take long to rack up hours on the meter with 2 or more operators going round the clock. On many ocasions I've seen one of my tractors rack up 22 hours on meter in a 24 hour period. Tractors soon get old when your doing this, thus cost becomes a big factor. As Allen says you can use brakes turning with a 1066 just as easily as you can with a 560, that alone doesn't make it efficient. The ease with which these articulateds turn under load is amazing, plus you have 4 or more big tires under you which smooth out the ride.

Right after I bought my 1066 in 1975, I noticed a neighbor with 500 acres of snady loam, flat as a foot ball field, buying 4x4 tractors. First it was a 80 hp Ford, then a 150 hp white. I asked,"Why are you buying 4x4 tractors, you don't have a hill anywhere, your soil is as firm as it comes, duals (which by the way he had for the White) will provide traction for much less money." His answer," They ride smoother and turn much easier under load." Plain and simple, two wheel drive big tractors are from the dark ages. You don't put the wheel of an Austin Mini on a Cadilac. A Farmall SM had 16" front tires as did a 2 wheel drive 1066, width don't matter a damn, diameter is what counts.

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Paul in Mich

04-09-2005 05:47:37




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Hugh Mackay, 04-09-2005 04:19:12  
Rear doals are about the only way to transfer 100 or more hp to the ground. Single rears will take hp, but provide little traction by comparison. Traction and compaction becomes an even bigger issue with no-till. We no-till soys and corn, and we use 4x4 articulate tractors on everything except a 6 row JD 4820 planter which we pull with a 1456 International with duals. The 12 row planter has a 4-210 White articulate with 3208 210 hp Cat. The 30 ft JD 750 no-till grain drill has a 4568 (280hp) International articulate, and a 20ft JD 750 with a Massey 1500 210 hp 3208 cat. The 1456 will pull the 6 row, but even with the planter out of the ground, requires a lot of braking on the turns because of the rigid tongue. I used the same tractor yesterday to transport the 20 ft drill 10 miles to the maintanence shop, and noticed that the drill wanted to steer the tractor. Yep, it could use a set of brakes even tho they were serviced 2 seasons ago. The articulated tractors are much more forgiving for no-till as they compact the ground much less. In fact, we notice more compaction from seed wagons and fertilizer tenders than we do the big tractors. Articulates also do not tear up the headlands nearly as much as conventionals, and of course there is no braking. We have a neighbor who uses an 8400 JD front assist on his 30 ft grain drill, and while the FWA does provide additional traction and reduces diging on turns, it is not nearly the match for the drill as our 4568 articulate. Once tractors reached the 150 hp range, it created a whole new set of operating circumstances. HP is one thing, but you are correct in that it is how it is applied to the ground that becomes critical.

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oliverfan

04-08-2005 21:09:54




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Allan in NE, 04-08-2005 16:29:44  
Allan, Everyone is forgeting what the swinging drawbar is for.

If you are pulling a trailing disk, etc., just take out the pins and let the drawbar swing. That was what it was designed for, to help turn.



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Hugh MacKay

04-09-2005 03:25:51




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to oliverfan, 04-08-2005 21:09:54  
oliverfan: Pulling those pins and letting the drawbar swing worked fine on 40, 50, 60 and 70 hp tractors pulling up to 13' cultivator. You try that with 150 hp on 26' cultivator, the results will be expensive. I've seen a tractor with side broke out of rear end casting, from just such actions.



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Hugh MacKay

04-08-2005 18:11:27




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Allan in NE, 04-08-2005 16:29:44  
Allan: I guess I am one of the guys of which you speak. Let me assure you I know how to use tractor brakes in turning as well as the best of them. You are taking what I said completely out of context. I was in no way refering to my ability to handle a tractor, when I told you about duals and steering problems.

I was pointing out to you that 4 wheel drive and particularly articulated 4 wheel are far more efficient and cost effective when you get into 100 plus hp tractors. That is precisely why all these old 1066, 1466, 1086, etc. are sitting around with few hours and selling for $4,000. to $6,000. That is precisely what they are worth to commercial agriculture. You may not realize this but there is one awful big difference between a 966 and a 1066. 966 put out the rated hp for the most part. Most 1066's came from factory turning 150 plus.

I rebuilt brakes and front end on my 1066 every year, and at the end of every year the crap was beat out of them. I also had an articulated unit, about same weight and power, one set of center swing bushings in 13,000 hours, and no front end rebuilds nor were the brakes ever apart.

I'd offer you a tractor driving challange as I did George Willer close to two years ago, but for one reason old George at 72 was worthy of it, I'm not sure you are.

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Sloroll

04-08-2005 18:37:00




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Hugh MacKay, 04-08-2005 18:11:27  
Brakes every year? did you remember to release them after the turn?? :? )



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Hugh MacKay

04-08-2005 19:30:02




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Sloroll, 04-08-2005 18:37:00  
Sloroll: I bought my 1066 new in Sept. 1975. In May of 1983 it turned up 10,000 hours on the meter. Unlike some of you folks we bought tractors to work, not to look at.

To all you folks running around with a 1066 with single wheel 18.4x38. You are merely playing with that tractor. There is no way two 18.4x38 tires will put that kind of horsepower on the ground, in a field situation. Maybe if you want to load it down to 20,000 lbs and put up with soil compaction from the dark ages.

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Sloroll

04-09-2005 06:50:28




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Hugh MacKay, 04-08-2005 19:30:02  
Hugh, that was either a joke or one of the stupidist things I have seen tell on this board. I'll give you the bennifit of the doubt this time. there are a lot of "Play" Farmers that if they have enough left in them at the end of the day I'm sure would bloody your nose if that was a truely a hart felt ignorant statement on your part. You lose a lot of credibility with crap like that. Bill Owen

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Hugh MacKay

04-09-2005 08:13:29




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Sloroll, 04-09-2005 06:50:28  
YES, Mr yes man, it was no joke. If the truth hurts, so be it.



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Allan in NE

04-08-2005 19:48:45




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Hugh MacKay, 04-08-2005 19:30:02  
Hi Hugh,

How in the world did you put that many hours per year on that tractor? I know there are some big outfits up there, 'cause I've seen 'em. Fields that just go on for days.

But, you guys must farm around the clock up there in your country.

1250 hours a year figures out to just under three and half months of absolute non-stop 12-hour days. Did you fuel and eat on the run or what?

I’m not being combative in any way whatsoever, just wondering.

Down here, 400 to 600 hours per year is pretty darned heavy and will catch both ends of the season. ‘Course every outfit usually has a number of tractors too. I can’t even imagine running one tractor 1200 plus hours a year.

Allan

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Hugh MacKay

04-09-2005 02:09:56




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Allan in NE, 04-08-2005 19:48:45  
Allan: Besides my own farm work, I used to do a lot of custom work, especially in the area of land clearing and mechanical rockpicking. I also had a contract with one of the major oil companies to spread bio sludge. I have seen my 1066 with 2 operators, work round the clock, for weeks at a time.

One of the machines I had for custom work use behind 1066 was a Dika root windrower. This machine could take every bit of hp 1066 could deliver. I would poke close to 10 gal. per hour fuel through 1066. I had two guys want to hire just the machine, 966 and an Allis 200. They both unhooked after an hour.

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Jim Becker

04-09-2005 07:38:06




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Hugh MacKay, 04-09-2005 02:09:56  
Does a 1066 have a mechanical tach/hour meter? A lot of them will clock more than an one hour per hour under heavy use because the engine will run more rpm than the rated clock speed.



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Hugh MacKay

04-09-2005 08:06:49




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Jim Becker, 04-09-2005 07:38:06  
Jim: Yes the 1066 does have the mechanical meter, if I remember correctly it was hours at standard pto speed. So yes, it was possible to clock more than one hour on meter in one hour clock time. Howerver, we usually found when you take away fueling, minor adjustments, greasing, etc., you just don't hit clock time with meter. My tractors worked by the hour on custom work, and at end of each day operators had to have an hour invoice signed by the land owner. The best they ever did on meter was 23 hours in a 24 hour period. Billing time usually came very close to meter.

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Allan in NE

04-09-2005 08:37:16




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Hugh MacKay, 04-09-2005 08:06:49  
So,

I'm assuming that you used the regular 100-hour oil change intervals?

Just can't get my mind wrapped around changing the oil and filters in a tractor 12 times per year and fueling up to 5 or 6 times a day at 10 gallon an hour.

Were your hired men responsible for their own oil changes too or did you have other people in charge of the maintenance end of things? The oil barons must have loved you. :>)

Really tryin' to understand how you operated, ‘cause the biggest operator I ever knew ran 14 hired men across 15,000 acres in Iowa, Texas and Brazil. He used more than one tractor tho.

Allan

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dan67

04-08-2005 21:07:05




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Allan in NE, 04-08-2005 19:48:45  
We've got a to25 at work that gets approx 1500 hrs a year. The parts do wear with that kinda time. But thats life



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r4etired

04-08-2005 17:45:08




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Allan in NE, 04-08-2005 16:29:44  
I grew up with the F series farmalls they did the braking for you. The old regular only had one hand brake if I remember right. when you mounted the 22B picker on it you had to take the lever off.When they put foot brakes on the last 20's I thought that was great,



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Nebraska Cowman

04-08-2005 17:11:51




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Allan in NE, 04-08-2005 16:29:44  
it's NOT an automatic reflex Allen, it has to be LEARNED. Same as reaching for the choke when the engine starts to die. Watch a guy that grew up on a diesel and he will let his gas engine die every time he lets out the clutch.



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Allan in NE

04-08-2005 18:01:47




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Nebraska Cowman, 04-08-2005 17:11:51  
Yeah, I know.

Shouldn't have even brought it up, I guess.

But this one feller is wanting to hang a bunch of weight out on the front of his tractor to make it steer right again.

Just caught me off guard, is all. :>(

Allan



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gordon hulgan

04-08-2005 16:43:30




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Allan in NE, 04-08-2005 16:29:44  
allen.you are dilling with weeking farmers they think brakes or to stop the tractors.you now what I mean sport.



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Allan in NE

04-08-2005 16:52:11




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to gordon hulgan, 04-08-2005 16:43:30  
Hi Gordon,

Well, I didn't wanna mention any names, but these two fellas are regulars on here and I really respect and enjoy reading what they say.

It just surprised me is all.

I can remember my dad teaching me that the very first time I was ever on a tractor and rakin' hay.

'Course in row crop, every blessed turn is a sharp turn. :>)

Allan



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Jay (ND)

04-08-2005 16:48:40




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to gordon hulgan, 04-08-2005 16:43:30  
I tend to agree - although I don't farm, I've helped on the farm enough to make the brake use almost as automatic as breathing.



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Allan in NE

04-08-2005 16:54:30




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Jay (ND), 04-08-2005 16:48:40  
Yep,

Everytime ya go into a turn, your foot just automatically "goes" to the brake.

Oh well, and so it goes.

Allan



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gordon hulgan

04-08-2005 17:35:28




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Allan in NE, 04-08-2005 16:54:30  
allen.good eveing .I know the two guys you are taking about .hay if tractor run over them going the road they wood notknow what hit them.



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caseyc

04-08-2005 20:24:58




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to gordon hulgan, 04-08-2005 17:35:28  
i'm not sure what i ever did to offend you but that doesn't sit well with me. we only know what we've been taught. i was not taught to use the brakes to steer. i was taught to use the brakes to assist with steering when nessecary. i'm not saying that the way i do it is right, just the way i was taught. i have to make do with what i ahve and right now my 766 likes to dance alittle when pulling the disc so rather than relying on my brakes to steer i prefer to hang just enough weight in the front to help control alittle more, and no the disc is not to big. if it is a crime to hang weights on the front for better control then why are there even brackets and weights? we are all here to talk and swap ideas and opinions and to find out how things are done in different parts of this great world and to learn from others what we do not know and can possibly improve on. once again i am sorry for anything i may have said to have deserved that post from you.

casey in SD, yes, the guy that wants to hang some weight on the front of his tractor.

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caseyc

04-08-2005 21:05:40




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to caseyc, 04-08-2005 20:24:58  
hi allen, no that post is not for you, you can't control what other folks are gonna say or feel. i'm not here to make enemies but when i see a name that i don't recognize slam me in two posts in a row i get alittle upset. gordon, if you weren't refering to me then i am sorry for the rant, but if you were refering to me, please inform me as to what i have done wrong.

casey



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Allan in NE

04-09-2005 05:51:39




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to caseyc, 04-08-2005 21:05:40  
Hi ol' Pard,

Sorry I drug you into this mud-slingin' contest; sure didn't mean for it to go south like this.

I just read that you wanted more weight out front to make 'er turn better. Maybe that is how you drylanders do things, I sure don't know.

I just had a knee-jerk reaction from my own experiences and thought to myself that this was in total opposition to the way I would do it.

I'd be for dualing up and getting the weight off and I'd be standin' on those brakes at every turn. But, that's an irrigator's view; we lift the implement on the turns. You guys don't.

You hang all the weight ya want on 'er ya want; its your tactor and your operation. You know best, that's for sure.

Allan

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No Brakes

04-08-2005 18:58:47




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to gordon hulgan, 04-08-2005 17:35:28  
I think that you and Allan are just trying to blow smoke up someones *****! If either of you did any real farming you would know that you only use brakes "when required", not automatically.
But then I guess if you are only used to cultivating "Grandmas" garden patch you would have to hit the brakes to keep from running over the raspberries!



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Allan in NE

04-08-2005 19:17:34




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to No Brakes, 04-08-2005 18:58:47  
Naw,

It's not Gordon's fault. I'm the guilty one that brought this stupid subject up and I should have keep my big yap shut yet once again.

I always forget that things are different in different parts of the country, or in different parts of the world for that matter, and I just wanted to help a young guy out is all. Sure didn't mean to get all the fur flyin'.

So, hollar at me, not him. :>)

Allan

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No Brakes

04-08-2005 19:58:34




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Allan in NE, 04-08-2005 19:17:34  
Aw, gee Allan, didn't mean to holler at anyone, just thought I would take the "other side".

But you sure have some nice friends, here is an email I received as soon as I posted my comments:

""The following message is being sent to you via the Yesterdays Tractor Co website. It is in response to the discussion forum message titled "Re: I Don't Get It" posted on the Farmall Forum. Name: Ben Phone: 902-566-4358 Location: Redgranite, WI Message: To scared to psot your name when your talking shit?""

No, I'm not afraid to post my name. It shows in my email address. Maybe you, Allan, would prefer to continue this conversation off the Forum?

Robert

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JOSSETTE

04-08-2005 19:28:40




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to Allan in NE, 04-08-2005 19:17:34  
its ok allan. every midwest boy was yelled at if you didnt use the brake..some people went to school, others stopped at the creek and threw rocks...



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Ken in Idaho

04-08-2005 20:48:30




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to JOSSETTE, 04-08-2005 19:28:40  
I think all you guys need to stop and let your brakes cool off.



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Sloroll

04-08-2005 19:01:03




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 Re: I Don't Get It in reply to No Brakes, 04-08-2005 18:58:47  
Man, you don't farm the ground I grew up on... There is a reason the early tractors had automatic brakes. Granny used em too.



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