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Showing content with the highest reputation on 12/26/2012 in all areas
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3 pointsToday I got up and was really excited that it was Christmas! I made Mom drag my older brothers out of bed at about 8:20 so I could open presents. I got lots of cool stuff. I was playing a video game when Dad said to get dressed because we had work to do. I went to the shed and saw Mom in there and got curious. I looked to the left and saw a little Wheel Horse! I was speechless! I could not believe that I got my own 'Horse! Dad let me get on it and showed me how the controls worked, so it was time for a ride. I loved it! My 'Horse loves to push snow. My Dad had to move the cars so I could plow the driveway. I had a blast! I will try to get him to let me plow more later. Have a nice Christmas. And a special thank you to Dave! ** I typed the above as Chop is not 'puter savvy enough yet, but those are his words. I was just the secretary! There are pics from the Wife's camera, but too big to download.
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3 pointsI personally would get tired of pushing an NOS tractor on and off my trailer bringing it to shows just so I can say its never been started. I wouldn't work it but I ain't gonna push it around either. I get more enjoyment out of riding them than I do looking at them so fire in the hole.
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2 pointsHere are a couple pictures of the GT 14 after I finished plowing tonight. We had 7 inches of snow out in the middle of the driveway. Not counting the drifts.
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2 pointsAnd when he passes you have to print out a official looking licence and laminate it for him, if he hangs on to it in 20+ years it will be a memory of the times spent with Dad and the tractors.
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2 pointsI know this is a bit but its amazing that no one has been injured at the WH show by a young-un. There are kids of all ages and skill levels tooling around the show grounds weaving thru the crowds and displays with little to no adult supervision. Hopefully no one ever gets run over or injured as that will change the whole show. Mike.........
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2 pointsI have both a 522xi and a 523Dxi. Even though my diesel presently has injection pump problems, I'd still choose it over the air cooled gas tractor. Fuel economy is better and the engine has more power than the 1hp difference would suggest. The biggest mower I have is a 52-inch and the diesel doesn't even know it's there. These daihatsu diesel engines are supposed to be quite reliable. I will say that at least in my part of the United States that finding a shop that specializes in them is difficult. They were used quite extensively here in the US in equipment other than Wheel Horses. Toro used them in some commercial mowers, simplicity used them in their Legacy XL tractor, Exmark used 'em, Cub Cadet...I've watched eBay for them and they do show up being parted out from time to time, but certainly not any more regularly than a Yanmar or Kubota. I say it over and over again and it looks like other guys agree too: The 5xi's were the best tractor to bear the Wheel Horse name. They are very comfortable to operate and are incredibly durable machines. It's a shame they didn't catch on. It's not obvious from photographs, but they are actually quite easy to work on. Sure, the engine is enclosed in sheetmetal but the hood opens wide and the side panels remove without tools. There is a removable access panel on the transmission "hump" and the air intake screens under the steering wheel and on each side remove quickly with a couple of Torx screws. The entire seat and fender assembly is quickly removable too in case you need to access something in the transmission or fuel tank. You can tell these things were designed with solid modeling software. The only frustrating issue I have encountered so far has been on my 522; I needed to access the ignition modules on the engine and that required removing the engine from the tractor. Not a big deal, but certainly not as easy of a job as it would be on a classic C160. You're in Sweden, so this may not apply to you. Implement/attachment availability isn't as great on the used market as for the older types of tractors. So if the seller of either machine has optionally available equipment that you may need in the future, you should consider that as part of your purchase too. I'd go with the diesel. But the gas tractor is a fine machine too. Buy 'em both. Steve
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2 pointsJust a comment, last winter, I rebuilt my first unidrive (5053) trans with the help of steve's video. First off, the job was easier than I thought it would be and the trans now runs and shifts almost perfect. It really surprised me how well it ran with just a diasemble,clean-up and bearing replacment.( all the internals appeared to be good on this trans) I really believe new bearings is what made the rebuild a sucess because i think ,if the bearings are worn things may not line-up just right and cause performance issues.
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2 pointsI will have to say right now im suprised at the number of people that would use the tractor. I feel that if you guy the tractor you are more than likely paying a premium so why ruin something that you can never find again? I would be crazy to say that i am only a Wheel Horse Worker collector. If that were the case i wouldn't need a third of my tractors. I simply own some just for hte joy of owning them. I own signs and other memorabilia from the era and what would be the best display piece but an untouched, unmalested NOS tractors. No matter how great a restore you will never duplicate that piece of history and it simply becomes like all other tractors the moment you start it. Low hours or not its not NOS.
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2 pointsI would be taking it to the shows and I'm not pushing it around ether but I would not be working it also . Unless your starting up a wheel-horse museum I would fire her up I believe it still would be a fine example of a NOS wheel horse Brian
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2 pointsThis is a good poll. Its funny to me not to use it. I do not spend my hard earned dollars on anything I am not going to use. Last year at a swap meet I was lucky enough to find a NOS,NBF Golden eagle bow in the box (never been fired) It hadn't even been strung. I probably should have hung it on the wall and just looked at it because it too is a piece of archery history. BUT, I went straight to the archery shop, had them string it up, tune it, and ran several arrows through it. For me it was exciting to shoot it. I mean, I was 6 years old when this bow was first made and I am 51 now. I remember my dads hunting buddy buying one when they first came out and I have always wanted one. To me it is a tool. I wouldn't buy a new $200 dollar torque wrench just to look at it. With a tractor? The first thing I would do is gas her up oil and grease her up and put it to work. I know they are also a piece of history as well. BUT, Imagine in 1958, or 65, or 75, 84, or even later, the elation of that new owner getting it ready. Being the very first person to put his or her butt in that seat and driving that awesome machine for the very first time. No one could ever take that away from them. I guess that means I am not a collector. I am a gatherer. I may even be considered a hoarder. So, if there ever is an intervention, and you guys see me on TV? It won't be for newspaper hoarding. If you ever do see something like that I am sure you all will graciously volunteer to help my wife clean my sheds and house out because there will be alot of used "TOOLS" as I call them. Just be gentle, they are old and USED. JMO Pat
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2 pointsif it was a NOS rj , i would put it in a glass case and use it a coffee table In fact i dont think i could use a NOS tractor , i would have to leave it as it new and just use one of my other ones although the temptation would be so great i dunno if i could contain myself
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2 pointsOh sure...I just got done wishing you a Merry Christmas and now I want to wish you a Happy Birthday. Keep this up and I will catch Craig in Post Count. HAPPY BIRTHDAY JIM :happy-jumpeveryone:
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2 pointsI too am planning to attend the show all the way from UK, so I hope to meet up with all the other members of redsquare
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2 pointsHere he is on his new tractor! He looks very happy. I like the idea about the tire chains might have to build him some. Now i will have a helper when i haul wood. Merry christmas!
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1 pointGuys, I recently found a product offered on eBay EBAY LINK REMOVED that I thought was pretty neat. I needed to add some weight to the rear of my D-200 to offset the weight of my snowthrower. I didn't want to spend a ton of cash and finding the WH wheel weights is a little tough. Then I found this product from Mike Grubb. I contacted him for verification on fit and then ordered the kit. I will install it this weekend. At this point I can say the parts in the kit are very well made. They are heavy duty and of bquality material. Now I'm on the hunt for the round weights to add to the wheels. Some of you may already be familar with this product. For those of you who are not this looks like a good solution to adding weight inexpensively. KT If you're interested, search Garden tractor wheel weight system on ebay.
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1 pointHi guys, my parents really surprised me this year! I was given the really nice 702 my dad picked up about a month ago. This has to be my favorite horse besides the 401. It has a plow, mower deck, and grader blade. Here are the pictures again so you guys can see it again. ~Jake
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1 pointWell I haven't started the snow beast yet still waiting for the storm to past I have about 12 inches with pretty good sizes snow drifts here in Buffalo,NY
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1 pointI'm in Knightstown. Kinda east central Indiana. It might have been deeper in the driveway than in other places. But I checked it with a yard stick. How much did you get in Greencastle?
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1 pointI will disagree with Scot on this. P'Chop started on a battery tractor at 2yrs old, on slow speed. I put out jugs for him to aim for and around and talked him thru the coridination to operate it. He quickly figured it out. When he was about 4, we started on the danger situations and how to avoid them and how to react. He learned to maneuver by the drop off out back safely, watch for traffic by the street, dodge around the dogs and kids in the yard, and back his little trailer around to help Mom with yard work. He has been driving with me on my tractors since about the same time. At nine, he has his own tractor. He knows it is not a toy, how to operate it and how to take care of it from fluid changes to knowing the brakes need adjusting. I have taken the time to teach him, and feel very comfortable letting him operate it. I think a test of basic operation and some what if situations would cover it, like having him driving in the yard and you and mabe a helper toss jugs out to simulate people or dogs in his path. Nothing too complicated. If they drive with their head on a swivel and know what's around them, then they will be fine.
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1 pointKelly, it will crank a big block v8 with no problem. When you think about it, if it lasts 10 years or more it's actually cheap in the long run.
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1 pointI picked up a N.O.S 1966 Reo RR -46 tiller steer from W.H. Dealer about 10 years ago. It was in an out building and did not look showroom new but it was in very good shape. After having it a few weeks I had to try that Reo-matic transmission and do a little mowing with it, what a blast to drive! I then cleaned it up so you could not tell it was used. I still take it out and drive it around occasionally but don't mow with it. Has anyone seen or do they have an rr-46? I have never seen another one of these and after bringing it to the W.H. In P.A. Several years ago most folks had not either. This unit has handlebar ( tiller ) steer and hard rubber non-pneumatic front tires. Any input on this would be greatly appreciated, as I think I have a very rare piece of Wheel Horse history here, Thanks. Don
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1 pointI like the "Chain Drop" game" (as a part of the test): A 2 or 5 gal empty bucket is buried to level with the ground, a hole. A 10' or 20' chain is hooked to the back (or front) of the tractor, then the tractor is slowly driven forward and back to gradually drop the whole length of the chain into the bucket. A lot of motor & visual skills, plus good judgement & patience. A year or two ago, someone had Wheel Horse Licenses or Certificates for sale on eBay - would be easy to make up a nice one.
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1 pointGoing by the replies here, I would never pay the premium for a supposedly NOS tractor if it is out of the crate. It was probably run at some time which makes it just Old Stock with low hours to me. I would leave it in the crate and display it that way. How many people have actually seen a NOS tractor still in the crate? I do buy dumb $&!T all the time to just collect and look at or display. Hmmm, wonder why there's a storage problem here? I can certainly understand the thrill of running it too so the correct answer is: Buy TWO, run one of them and keep one NOS. Best of both worlds
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1 pointThere is no box for me to check either.... I'd sell it! Let some one who wants to leave it "perfect" pay me the big bucks for it....so I can buy a good tractor! If its in my barn, its getting used!
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1 pointMaybe start off with some type of maintenance check list....doesn't have to be too detailed, but just enough so the youngster realizes these "toys" will last several life-times with proper/routine maintenance. This will be embedded into his mind and he will be ready to do it to his very own car, truck or GT.
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1 pointHi, Mike, and welcome to ! Aside from advertising for what appears to be a nice product, don't be a stranger! Duff
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1 pointBack when my kid was just learning to drive on an MTD rear engine rider I made panic/emergency stops the top priority. He had to be able to stop the tractor as fast as possible with the brakes and turn the key to "off". Mike..........
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1 pointHappy birth day Jim! Who's Craig??? only the "Shadow" knows. :bow-blue:
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1 pointI'm way up in Michigan, Zone 7: in 2001 we planted 20 peanuts, and 19 grew up and produced very well, maybe an average of 10 double-inshell peanuts/plant, of the normal size you get in the store, we roasted them and they tasted OK (not as good as store roasted, but I'm sure we made errors in roasting temperature/time, just slightly raw taste & unsalted). Planted some peanuts last Spring, and not a single one grew out of the ground, (I suspect my source had old peanuts, from eBay). We planted them a foot apart, 2" deep & out-of-the-shell but in the skin, there are lots of kinds of peanuts for growing, follow the "required number of growing days" & planting guidelines from your source. When the plant is a foot tall, it blooms, pollenated blooms send down a taproot, 10" down into the ground (grows down 2"/day), then 2-3" deeper, the peanut or two forms quickly, then we waited for the first frost (Sept 20) to pull. Was a lot of fun watching it grow, we pulled the SOFT soil away often to look at the developing peanuts, then reburied, they didn't seem to mind. Buy from a good seed source, not just some individual like I did last Spring. We grew a cotton plant this Summer, it did very well up here, 4' tall, 20 cotton balls did form and mature (was a very hot summer here), that was also a lot of fun watching it grow. Good Luck, and I think soft organic or sandy soil is important, at least for the top 4-5". Glen
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1 pointin the beginning, there was nothing. And God said, "Let there be light". And there was still nothing, but you could see it. We've come a long way. :)
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1 pointDoesn't matter if its a Senior, RJ, 420 lse etc. I am putting fuel in it and driving it ...no trailer queens here. The older ones (Senior,RJ) would probably just be show/parade tractors and the newer ones would be put to work as they were intended. I get more enjoyment out of using them than I do just sitting back and looking at them.
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1 pointI have a d160 with blower ready for the snow. Supposed to get 3 to 5 inches today.
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1 pointCraig, I myself at am 18 now and there may be a 19th in the next month or two but its not a sure thing yet. My dad has 26 or 27 I believe? ~Jake Geeze, must be like walkin' into a museum over there.
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1 pointI personally hate it when I see something stuffed and mounted and never used for it's intended purpose. You go to a big museum and see a steam engine or other item cosmetically restored (painted all pretty) rotting away from the inside out due to disuse, if they would actually fire it up once a month or so it would actually last longer and look better. Plus the fact that seeing a piece of equipment being used for it's intended purpose tell a much better story then it sitting under a roof somewhere collecting dust and rust. Fill er up run it but use it lightly and clean it after use to keep it showroom condition.
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1 pointWe had Christmas at our house last evening. I opened a small box from Santa (I think it was really my wife), and here is what I found, along with a motel reservation for the Big Show in June!. She will be accompanying me.
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1 pointThat is exactly how i feel and the same thing i told my father in law. I understanding wanting to mow with a great looking machine.... Buy one that is fully restored you will have the nicest one on the block but chances are you will never find another NOS .... I don't care if it is a Raider or no rare tractor ... if its NOS it is in a rarity of its own
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1 pointNo matter what, if it is NOS, you probably paid a price for buying it that way...and there is a reason you bought it. Just like with painting them...IT IS ONLY NOS ONCE. What the heck...why don't you just part it out??? I think if you have to start a NOS horse up, then you should not have it and sell it to someone that appreciates it. RickyV had about 4 of them at his auction last February that I got to see...they are very special and beat the heck out of just being able to say..."they are original". :bow-blue:
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1 pointEd...good question for sure. There is one thing common with all of these transmissions that I have recently worked on...they are not mine and I have no previous knowledge of them. That warrants tearing them down just because of that. The ones you are talking about are yours and you have a feel for how they are, what they have been doing and how long they have been sitting. That means a lot, but it is no guarantee. Two or three of the seven I had were locked up, two had a growling noise or grinding just turning by hand, one had water and clumps of oil draining out when I pulled the plug...one was OK (no water, oil looked OK, everything turned nicely by hand). The first transmission that I ever got into was my 702 with a # 5025 transmission. I started it up in the garage one day and was letting it warm up when I heard a ping come from the trans. I immediately shut it down and knew that I was going into this one. The #1533 bearing had come apart and the gears were shooting the ball bearings around inside. So, you just really never know. About the only good thing I will say about flushing a trans at this point is...it makes it a lot easier to clean the parts if you can slosh some kind of cleaner around inside and then drain it out. You do not keep a transmission running for 60+ years by being lucky.
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1 point12"+++++ here and I have to work also. May end up coming home and putting the blower on the 160 and taking the blade from it and put it on the 704
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1 pointCraig, I myself at am 18 now and there may be a 19th in the next month or two but its not a sure thing yet. My dad has 26 or 27 I believe? ~Jake
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1 pointI can see it has a 8hp engine, so it's a B-80 they never made a C-80 if you look under the fender you can see it has a tool box not just a fender support, toolbox was 75 and older, on those tractors the fender flipped up, in 76 and newer the fender was solid mount, and the seat was mounted on a flip up, last year for the chrome hood ornament was 76, a few ways to help tell the years. And to tell it's a 8hp from these hard to see pics is the coil is mounted on the back of the engine on a plate sideways, I can kinda see the riser plate under the oil pan, and the exh. comes straight out the side not at a angle like the big Kohlers.
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1 pointExcellent Brian...this needs to go in one of the save this thread sections for sure. :)
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1 pointI had an nos set (or may have been installed for a short period of time) that I sold to another member here. So everyone knows, these are all plastic (even the clear lenses).
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1 pointThey are the HL-22 light kit from 1961-62 I have a pair that I was thinking of putting on my 701, if you are interested in selling them let me know, one of mine is pretty chipped around the edges.