Those engines worked in tandem with another to plough. The engines would drive across the headlands on opposite sides of the field and used that underslung cable drum to pull a multi-bottom plough across the field from one engine to the other, one engine winding up its lead , while the other played out its line. When the implement got to one end of the field, it would be reversed (most ploughs had two sets of opposite facing shares and you raised one gang and lowered the next, or you physically tipped the entire plow, raising one set and lowering the other). Then the process went in the opposing direction as the engines slowly advanced across the ends of the field until the entire plot was turned over.
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Today's Featured Article - A City Guy's First Tractor - by Fred Hambrecht. After living in apartments in Atlanta for more years than I care to remember, the wife and I decided to move to the country. Humming "Green Acres is the place for me..." we purchased a 29 acre tract about 60 miles south of Atlanta. Next came the house, I could talk about that ordeal for another two weeks... But, I want to talk about my tractor! We didn't even own a lawnmower, and all of a sudden we had enough grass to feed all the starving children of the bovine world. Naturally, I talked
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