Posted by the tractor vet on May 04, 2008 at 14:59:47 from (99.167.214.147):
In Reply to: Re: H with no power posted by Allan In NE on May 04, 2008 at 14:17:54:
Well since i have only been to your state once to bring one of the largest Gradeals out to a limestone mine don't know much about your soil but we have just about everything and on the tops of the humps and bumps that clay can pull hard. And for some reason this year the ground is hard and even the 1066 with the 710 I H plow is having trouble getting down . Now ya want to talk about alfalfa roots Several years ago i was doing some chisleing with a 3788and a 5 shank DMI turbo Tiger II with the tiger points at about 18 inches deep after we had turned the wick up on the 3788 and added all the iron we had to it we were making one field bigger and went thru some old alfalfa fields and pulled up roots that some of them were over twenty feet long Was just haulen donkey across the corn ground TILL i hit the hay ground and all foward motion stopped except me and i kissed the windsheild then the tractor started to hop and throw me around the cab . never thought i was going to get the clutch down , i swear it was jumping three feet off the ground . We really needed something like a Steiger with more weight then we had . But for the most part there were lots of old M's and H's and C that did the farming in this area . In 68 people thought that my buddy and i were big time because we had two 450D's pulling 540 4x14 semi mounts. There vary few bigger tractors My uncle had a 806 and my old boss had a 806 a few 4020's Couple 1950 G's and T Oil all overs But lots of the A's and B's M's and H's .
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Today's Featured Article - The Cletrac General GG and the BF Avery A - A Bit of History - by Mike Ballash. This article is a summary of what I have gathered up from various sources on the Gletrac General GG and the B. F. Avery model A tractors. I am quite sure that most of it is accurate. The General GG was made by the Cleveland Tractor Company (Cletrac) of Cleveland, Ohio. Originally the company was called the Cleveland Motor Plow Company which began in 1912, then the Cleveland Tractor Company (1917) and finally Cletrac.
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