Looking4new
Super Member
- Joined
- Apr 8, 2012
- Messages
- 9,902
- Location
- Northern Ontario, Canada
- Tractor
- 2012 Kioti CK27HST w/cab
WOW!!50 years of your woman putting up with you! How does she do it?
I have found in the distant past that a .22 works good for ground hogs. If they are fast use a .303 It is a little overkill, but if you hit them in the head they wont run far.
My first 40 years of trucking was on Dayton rims. The 8 years of dump trucking I changed and repaired my own flats. The only time a 'shop' did them was when I bought new. In those days to tighten up the studs I would use a 3/4" Johnson/breaker bar, first to snug them up, then put a 5' hunk of pipe on it and jump on the end of the bar. When you heard the squawk out of the nut on the stud they were tight enough. The only time I used an impact gun was to remove them. Don't miss those day at all. It is only the past 10 years I have run on Budd rims.
I have found in the distant past that a .22 works good for ground hogs. If they are fast use a .303 It is a little overkill, but if you hit them in the head they wont run far.
My first 40 years of trucking was on Dayton rims. The 8 years of dump trucking I changed and repaired my own flats. The only time a 'shop' did them was when I bought new. In those days to tighten up the studs I would use a 3/4" Johnson/breaker bar, first to snug them up, then put a 5' hunk of pipe on it and jump on the end of the bar. When you heard the squawk out of the nut on the stud they were tight enough. The only time I used an impact gun was to remove them. Don't miss those day at all. It is only the past 10 years I have run on Budd rims.