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Popular Content
Showing content with the highest reputation on 10/18/2023 in Posts
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11 pointsI did not want to intrude on @uglyblue66's post. His Bonanza reminded me that Artic Cat dabbled in the lawn mower business for a while with their Grass Cat. This inspired me to wander off on the web to look up Grass Cat info. In my wandering I stumbled across one of the most corny commercials that I have seen. With advertising like this, I just can't see why the Grass Cat wasn't more popular.
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7 pointsSo i bought this Bonanza for 12 bucks at auction, used a electric mobility scooter drive train and 36 volts , picked up a cheap pwm off the internet. It is not a torque machine but at 26 inches wide and light enough 2 people could carry it, it will be handy to haul for a show rider. It was also something I wanted to do,a conversion. I learned alot and will do any future conversions alot different.
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6 points
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6 pointsDid the ole’ Greasy Pete @peter lena to some “new” “sealed” bearings. Popped the seals and revealed pretty much no grease.
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6 points@KVustrud , to !!! Go get that 520-H ! Here is my 1994… Ihave one question… Have you ever seen a prettier tractor than a Wheel Horse ? I love mine ! If you wind up making a deal and purchasing the 520, I warn you-it won’t be your last Wheel Horse ! That’s how it started for me. I bought my first- the 1994 520-H from a lady who just wanted it out of her yard. Next thing you know, I’m doing a good refresh on it… Then a guy at work found out I had a Wheel Horse and gave me a 1984 Work Horse GT-1600. He said all it needed was a fuel pump, but I went a little further… I am currently working on getting my 3rd Wheel Horse back to a good service worthy condition- a1977 C-160…
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5 points
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5 pointsI grew up surrounded by "vintage stuff" and never realized that it would one day become collectable. Our house was decorated in "Early Yardsale" style and we farmed with vintage museum pieces that were functional. Now that I am vintage I have a greater appreciation for the quality of the stuff we eventually replaced with the latest and greatest whizbang thingamajig.
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5 points@kpinnc Just poking… I should be more observant. I should know more about Wheel Horses, but Wheel Horses are like Jr. High school… I’m having so much fun, I forget to study… 😆
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5 points
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4 pointsMy first time ever owning a wheel horse and I came across a deal on one. It’s a 518H. I’ve always been intrigued with them and finally decided I’m not getting any younger so I jumped into what I consider a starter for me. It has issues that I’m going to be coming back here to receive y’all’s feedback and knowledge. It still has its Onan 18 performer. I’m looking forward to chatting with everyone
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4 pointsWow nice shots @TonyToro Jr. ! One of them don't make it EB you tell BBT she's out the club... I don't care if she opens up a #10 can of whoop @$$ on me... I'll take one for the team... Sylvia's gotta like the B hood!
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4 points
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4 pointsSo today I went for the results of my bone marrow biopsy. Mixed results . Although there is no myeloma now, which is considered present at a 10% value of certain plasma cells, I am at about 8% which is high risk. Essentially anything above 1% is abnormal. So now I have to do a full body PET to look for any other signs. No treatment is required now but I’ll have to continue being checked every 3 months. Any increase and treatment will start. Causes they say most likely environmental such as exposure to solvents. No surprise there. So I continue stuck in the loop of constant tests. I am not a worrier and don’t think about it much but this is dragging the poor wife down, and that gets me upset.
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4 points
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4 points
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4 pointsAlong with hand, head, ear, and face protection! Yeah, takes effort and it gets sweaty when its hot out. On the other hand, it is easy to find examples of bad outcomes from users without good protection. I still consider my chainsaw the only tool I own that is trying to maim me.
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4 pointsThe only constant is change, right? But our choices navigating it make all the difference.
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4 pointsYup, usually associated with rusty "treasure" with a tad of recently applied lipstick on the snout... Another one - "Hurry, won't last long!!" translates that the the rust is winning........ And yes, it probably did run when parked 4 decades ago......
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4 pointsVisiting our woods in Ky. for a few days this week. Got a couple of new toys: A 20" Farm Boss and a pair of safety chaps. I'm working in an area without a cell signal, alone, and several hundred feet into the woods from the street and neighbors. Figured the chaps would be a very god thing to have. Used the saw today take a few of trees down, clean up some storm damage, and work on cleaning up some old tree tops that were left behind when dome logging was done on the property before we bought it. Wore the chaps, but didn't use them - just as it should be. The plan is to start building on the property next spring. A wood stove will be involved, so having some pre cut will be helpful when we (hopefully) winter there next year. With the amount of scratch I'm piling up, it looks like I'll need a chipper sooner rather than later.
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4 pointsI'm using that one! No need for thick skin. I've seen and driven your Work Horse, and it's one of the nicest machines ever in my opinion. I would be proud to own it!
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4 points
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4 points
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4 points
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3 pointsI know I could get a tube and have done it in the past, Just feeling cheap and what to use what I all ready have.
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3 pointsBolt pattern would be the same, all depends on the backspacing of the rim. @ebinmaine beat me.
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3 points
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3 pointsWhen read, does it make me want to take a closer look? I see this word used in many ads for WH tractors. I kind of knew what it meant, but that is according to wine. So I looked it up. The word wears many hats. As a noun it can be as simple as a good example of a style from the past. It jumps up a notch and then it can be quantified as a group of things that were produced during the same particular period. Adjective wise it might be the best use when comparing to our trusty WH’s. Something old of high quality and lasting value. Just some of what I found. I suppose to sum it up, just a fancy filler word that might just get a little attention. Marketing you know. I have a lot of “vintage stuff”……Most people would not even consider paying money for.
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3 points
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3 pointsi think the folks in Marketing Dept should have done a little more customer focus group research before launching the pink/purple product line
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3 pointsWow if that don’t turn on a grass cutting addict, I don’t know what will!
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3 points
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3 pointsAlready done Richard... steel wool rust remover and alot of elbow grease. It's kept oiled and covered now. The 111 on the shop was defective. When it went through rollers the machine that applied material down skipped a beat for lack of a better word. It left horizontal voids. Bugs then went in it. Wood peckers then went after the bugs. Some instances right through the sheeting. Try that on steel Woody! Manufacturer Louisiana Pacific pretty much told me to pack sand. Wished we woulda had social media back then I'd left em smoking. This is RB & B style but same thing as 111 just grooved different.
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3 pointsWere made by General Appliance Manufacturing. To my knowledge they were branded as Bonanza, Gambles, Maverick and Arctic Cat.
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3 points
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3 pointsHere is my 701 I restored in 2022. This is one of my favorite tractors I own. (no, it's not for sale)
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3 pointsYou're definitely high quality Ed. Don't sell yourself short on the other 2
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3 pointsWow now there's something you don't see every day Lane. A 701 being used as meant. I plan on dropping mine in a furrow Dan ever gets the bugs worked out...
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3 points
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3 points@Jayzauto has on a coat and long pants an @ebinmaine is in shorts and a t-shirt. Someone forgot about the changing seasons.
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3 points
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3 pointsJust for giggles I finally used my Harbor Fright buffer to get the last wet sand swirlies outta my 523-H hood. The few light spots are actually reflections from the ceiling, so it definitely works! Before and after below. Had a little haze left over from the original paint job. All gone now.
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2 pointsTrina and I have been looking for a tractor for friends of ours. We've had several people contact us. We decided to go with this GT1800 from @Jayzauto Here's me Bear 🐻 EB driving it outta his shop. We picked up a cab and wheel weights for this rig as well. Also got a Single Stage Tall Chute Snowblower for me to try out. We already have a Dual Stage Snowblower that @PWL216 was nice enough to drop by the house last week. Our friends machine will be outfitted with that. I'll supply a 48" mowing deck too. They'll have a good complete outfit... And even better.... BBT as the Lead Maintenance Technician. Trina started tearing into the GT1800 today. Here's a pile of pics in no particular order. We'll have a few questions coming up as we've had VERY little experience with the 80s rides.
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2 points
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2 pointsClever, and nice resto-mod. Did you document any of the actual build? I'd love to see a write up on that. Always thought those little tractors with a trunk were kind of fun. Would make a nice little flea market/swap meet runabout.
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2 pointsWhat! Not my fault that you haven't insulated the underside of your roof. I could do a virtual resurfacing - I will give you instructions over the phone and guide you through the process! Next best thing to being there beside you. That is why we went with Hardie Plank siding on our house and workshop. The house we had in Florida had T-111 when we bought it and I replaced it with 1/2" CDX and Hardie Board. The fifteen year old T-111 was so soft it wasn't hard to remove, get one edge loose and pull the whole sheet off by hand. Twenty years and many hurricanes later when we sold the house the Hardie Board looked like new.
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2 pointsI generally set my skill saw about 2” from the ridge on either side and rip away. Not a ton of precision in that cut. Once the steel is on, there is a very spongy synthetic ridge vent roll. On my pictures above, they were stabbed through by my shop broom. These had a sealant strip on them and stuck to the steel. The ridge cap then goes over that and smushes it in place. Bugs cannot penetrate and apparently water doesn’t either! One thing to think about, and the value is priceless as well, is a few hand tools needed for steel. I have an assortment of hand shears, and a 4” hand brake. My work shop barn has a lean to off the back of it. The roof line is 36’ long. The steel supplier recommended a 6” overlap if I chose to put up two panels. I went with a 19’ panel, which yielded 2’ overlap. Overkill? Yup. Worth the extra $112.20? Absolutely!
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2 pointsonly 2 I know it’s common practice to lay furring strips down and roof away, but I would never recommend that, even to my evil neighbor. Well…. Reason being, is metal will condense with temperature swings. Condensation will run down the underside of the steel, then hit the furring strip dam and eventually rot it out. Research local code, what is acceptable for going over, total layers, etc, then decide what to do. I don’t know about your average summer heat index, etc and too much heat is never great on structures. On the other hand, if it isn’t leaking and you go over it, it’s essentially another layer of protection. I prefer a premium underlayment no matter what I am roofing, it becomes the waterproof membrane. If insurance is paying for it and you’re doing the work, you can surely afford a good underlayment. This stuff I recently used was a foil backed bubble wrap type stuff. No matter what you decide, do not cheap out on ventilation! It is as important as the roof itself!
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2 pointsI'll second that ... No room for trailer queens on a working ranch & I'ts all smoke & mirrors anyway ...
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2 points
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2 pointsI kept busy the last three days " helping" a top flight roofing company for my house. I will show you some of their equipment in use. First is the use of aluminum pump jacks . The picture also shows the project is cut up into many planes and shapes. Then there is the roofing buggy. A self propelled platform that also opens to put a pickup truck full of roofing material. Then it can dump that material directly into a dumpster. Because I also had the company install soffet and facia, they furnished new 2x6 gutter board and framed suitable 2x2 support to level soffet back to the house. By combining pump jack supported walk planks and a knuckle boom man lift, they had two crews at once replacing rafter tails where needed and making my tired old house as straight as a rifle shot. Their equipment trailer was full of Milwaukee battery tools of every description. As a retired carpenter who is now off the ladders, I can recommend them for any exterior remodeling in the Preble Darke Miami counties. You find crews like this by asking at a locally owned lumber yard. I will be happy to refer them with a PM Three days with plenty of men all staying busy. They put in two twelve hour days to get the roof dried in with approaching rain