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Andy Martin

09-13-2004 18:13:35




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He must have green equipment :)

Like the popular song says: "I worked ten hours on a John Deere Tractor, never could get it to run"!

"When you're fixin you're not farmin", so put two turns of wire around it before you go back to work.

I've had two days without a breakdown but the wobble head on my haybine got hot today so grease may not fix it this time.




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JRB IN MAINE

09-13-2004 18:34:59




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 Re: YES in reply to Andy Martin, 09-13-2004 18:13:35  
no green on this farm.Red is the only color here.
the man down the road who calls him self an educated farmer spends more time asking us to fix his equiptment and his is green and his hay still gets rained on after he bales it .



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RayP(MI)

09-14-2004 05:00:52




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 Re: YES in reply to JRB IN MAINE, 09-13-2004 18:34:59  
Well, we've got an assortment of equipment here, various colors. Can't think of anything that I didn't have to do some repairs on this haying season. Wear takes it's toll on everything. Proper maintenance may put off repairs, but even with proper maintenance, things are bound to wear and break. Some things are impossible to do maintenance on like sealed bearings - had two of them let loose on me this summer. Only thing you can do is replace when they die. So yeah, if you want to farm, you probably should be a fair shade tree mechanic too.

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Paul in Mich

09-14-2004 06:37:06




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 Re: YES in reply to RayP(MI), 09-14-2004 05:00:52  
Ray, you say "should" be a "fair" shad tree mechanic. I say a feller "needs" to be a "darned good" mechanic if he is going to be successful at farming. I know a lot of guys around here who couldnt afford to farm if they had to pay to have their mechanical work done by an outside source. Welding is another skill that will cost thousands of dollars unless you can do it yourself and do it right. About the only thing our operation has done outside is changing tractor and combine tires. We let the tire folks wrestle those. We also have some machining done outside, although it is in the plans to buy a used lathe and knee mill and start doing as much of our own machining as possible. Farming is no different than manufacturing in that fixing is an integral part of a good preventative maintainance program. Farmers like anyone else who deals with machinery or anything mechanical or electrical tries to minimize "downtime" by replacing worn parts during non critical times. Bearings, chains, sprockets, belts, filters (air, oil, fuel) fluids, could be considered fix it items, but its more a matter of when and how to choose to fix. The worst scenerio is field repairs and breakdowns, as time then becomes more valuable than the cost of repair. In this sense, the guy is right when he says "if you ain"t fixin, you ain"t farmin".

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