Trick we used for ripping length-wise was using a pole barn nail and scoring the metal 2 or 3 times. Bend the metal back and forth a couple of times and it will snap like a piece of glass. Be sure to have on leather gloves! Little tougher to do on longer lengths but really fast for sidewall metal. If you can't rent a shear that matches your rib metal to cut in the width direction, use a metal blade - that's what they are made for. A tooth or shard coming off a backward running blade made for wood will still go through a flimsy piece of plastic eye shield like it isn't there. Also, we always cut the metal with the painted face down as the sparks will burn through the paint and can leave rust specks.
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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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