I think IBC totes are probably the best option and a great investment for someone looking at a long term of using them.
Being ultra frugal, I just wont spend what the market demands.
I like the winter scene in you picture, the mittens demonstrate the cold like nothing else. Enjoy the rest of...
Good thinking! I like the idea, The pallet supply around here has been scant, unless you are willing to buy new ones.
I do have a ton of rough cut lumber from windfalls that were too nice to burn that I will build pallets, and your design of firewood boxes.
Thank you for response!
X
Bruce,
Thanks for your reply! I like your design. It is so nice to have this forum as an aid in finding solutions to problems by great people like you!
Xavier
Thankyou Hunt4570!
During my search I've had the pleasure to read some of your posts. You and others on this forum are a great help in sharing your experiances and opinions. We will probably never meet, but if we did, I'm sure it would be a pleasure on my part.
Xavier
I saw pictures of someone's homemade pallet for storing wood but don't remember what thread it was in. I've gone through the last 400 pages of "Tractors and wood" without finding it. It may have been in a different thread. I don't remember.
The design used one and two inch lumber, the side...
Without reading through the whole thread, I'd like to ask the question;
If you are, borrowing, the truck, what did the owner tell about the truck's operation when you borrowed it?
I keep my "chainsaw" tools in a small ammo can. I wrap my sharp chains in rags and stuff them in with the other tools. The rags cushion the chains, I haven't ever noticed them getting dull.
Slowpoke,
I think that the tow/haul shift points are set the way they are to protect the transmission from the high torque the engine can, (and will) produce. I use the tow/haul when I pull our camper and wince when climbing hills and the engine just screams it's way up the grade. Maybe your...
I love my HF sharpener. It does a better job than I've ever been able to do with a file. I don't believe it takes an excessive amount from the tooth, it takes very little with each motion. As far as I'm concerned, the chains I sharpen cut very close to as well as a new chain. I am somewhat...
SR, That is an interesting grapple hook on your loader, did you build it or buy it? Can you tell me about it, please? Maybe more pictures of it as well if you wouldn't mind
Ok, enough is enough. If you replace the original studs, or lug bolts with longer ones, you don't need the extra complication of adding a stud into the spacer. Keep It Simple.
Mea Culpa
I have not seen pictures of the wheel spacers you described. Your concerns are valid, I wouldn't use something designed and built like them.
The spacers I am familiar with are just a chunk of iron with an appropriately sized hole for the axle hub and having correctly sized and spaced...
If those "Chinese" spacers are made out of any kind of metal, I'd use them. All they do is take up space, the lug bolts clamp the axle, spacer, and wheel together. They won't wear if they don't move. The clamping force is not going to crush them. What is the concern?
My brother is running chains on his Kubota, I don't know the model. The chains were kllunking on the fenders, I suggested spacers, we checked into it and had some major sticker shock! We went to a local steel yard and bought two chunks of cast iron, then took them to a local guy with a lathe...
My brother who lives down the road from me, and I both got our notifications Tuesday, when I used the link to confirm, Bang! They used them "card on file", and the deed was done, now we are waiting for the shipping notification.
I had POA for my dad who lived down the road, so I had his address changed to mine. He was a lifetime member of the NRA; when he passed, I informed the NRA of his passing. They replied asking for a death certificate, I didn't send them one because I had to pay for each one. He was born in 1910...
I too have stuffed the reply envelopes with garbage and sent them back. Recently I re-mailed an envelope from Hughes Net, unopened, it came back about a week later. I re-mailed it four times, and it came back. My daughter traveled to Madison and mailed it from there about two weeks ago, and...
I just caught up on the last ten or so pages of this thread, always good for some laughs, a few pages back people were discussing towing. A few years ago, a guy at work needed a tow and another guy towed him home with a chain. Nothing remarkable except, the guy needing a tow was known for being...
LD1, Ok, I see what you are saying, weight back there increases the potential for increasing the load on the front axle when you lift enough with the FEL. That potential load on the front axle will always be limited by the FEL's capacity to lift.
"Wheel weighs, fluid, and an implement on the 3ph all increase what the loader can lift.....and all also increase the load that is gonna be placed on the front axle."
I re-read your post, NONE of the things you mentioned will increase the weight on the front axle, they will ALL increase the...
Wheel weights or fluid in the tires will not transfer weight from the front axle, BUT they will aid in not letting the rear wheels lift when using the FEL.
Weight on the three-point does aid in transferring weight from the front axle, think of the rear axle acting as a fulcrum of a lever...
The beet juice does more than "flavor" the water, it prevents the water from freezing in cold climates.
That being said, I called a local tire company about "rimguard" and was advised that their sister store sold a product derived from a byproduct of the ethanol process. which I now have in the...
I have heard of horror stories about the IRS.
Over the forty-plus years I've been filing, I have made mistakes in math, which they corrected and adjusted my refund accordingly. Once I neglected to file a 1099 to show distribution of funds, I got a nasty letter with a court date for that one...
Today, with you tube, if you have any mechanical skill at all, the average person can do most non-critical work themself. Some people prefer to have others work for them, even oil changing. If I was wealthy enough, I might even hire someone else to drive my tractor;)
I've always done my own taxes. The hardest part is gathering all the information, which you have to do, even when someone else is paid to put it on the forms.
If you goof, and I have, the IRS will find it and let you know.
One year the county where my daughter was attending college was...
I've always maintained all my equipment, anything with moving parts. One thing about doing it yourself, you know it's being done right.
Sometimes the people doing the work don't do it right.
I also have a King Kutter, it seems to be well built, and works well. I was surprised by the depth it tilled, about 6 inches. I would like it to be deeper, but the garden grows just fine being tilled at that depth. It does a nice job of grinding the dirt up, I usually overlap, so in effect...
I have a Massey with a 911 loader with a joystick, mine broke too. I can't tell from your pictures if yours broke the same way or not. I called my dealer and asked if it would be covered under warrantee and it was. The tractor was less than a year old at the time. I took it apart, took the...
I've owned my 2605H with the 911 loader for about a year and a half and I wish I had bought it long before. I bought chains for working in the woods in the winter, but haven't needed them yet, even with a foot of snow.
I bought a MF 2605 H about a year and a half ago, I really am glad I did. It is built tough and rugged, starts in the winter, and seems to be economical to run.
Before I bought it I visited a Mahindra dealer whose main business was selling trailers and lawnmowers. I drove one of them, before I...
I borrowed a neighbor's 1/3 yard cement mixer, so it was several small pours. I'm frugal, I used 1 part portland cement, two parts sand, and 3 parts 2" gravel, (aggregate). An easier alternative would be a ready pour bag mix available at most box stores.
Here are some pictures, we built a box form out of plywood, I was concerned that it might sag out from the weight of the cement, so we ran #10 wire through the sides and twisted them tight. i use some exhaust pipe for the lower mount to the 3 point arms, I insert a drawbar through it. For the...
I want to add my 2 cents. About 50 years ago the neighborhood was out on a snomobile ride, we had about ten different brands, (when there were about 80 or 90 manufacturers). I was running a Scorpion with a 268CC (I think) Sachs 2 stroke engine. It was a warm day and to keep up I was usually at...
I have 3 GM vehicles, a 10 Camaro, a 12 Impala, and a 16 3/4 ton truck, I use the "dexos" labled oil required by GM in them, I have no brand loyality when buying it. I used Shell Rotella when I changed the oil in the Massey when I changed the oil in that at 50 hours. I use 30 weight in my...
I used Amsoil in the early eightys in a Plymouth 318 with around 30,000 miles, when I switched back to conventional oil the engine started using oil. I run full synthetic oil in my vehicles now but, I would not reccomend Amsoil to any of my friends!
I would guess that the difficulty you are having finding parts is a reflection of the quality of the tractor; if parts aren't needed, nobody is going to sell them. That being said, you might have to bite the bullet, and go the OEM way, once it is fixed, the tractor will be there as long as you...
Wow, that's tough! I am not familar with Cub Cadets at all. That being said, just about anything is repairable, depending on whether or not you think it is cost effective. Are there salvage yards with a complete engine for sale? How mechanically inclined are you, sometimes you can save...
Looking at that garden rake with the tines up gives me a headache! I can still remember the melon-striking-sound my skull made last time I stepped on one.
Nice pictures, thanks! Without your equipment in the shot, the trees, don't look that big. I'd sure enjoy watching you work for a day, that stuff is huge.
Sawyer, Have you considered using a metal detector, if you are concerned with hardware?
I was given some pine that the owner said had hosted a tree house, we were able to locate the nails with a hand held metal detector, no harm to the saw.
g8erh8er,
Thanks for letting us know how things worked out for you.
looking at the top picture you posted, it looks like some green loctite left on the two studs. If it is, that might be what caused your trouble. Whoever assembled it was, they used an excessive amount; when using loctite, you...