Weathered and deteriorating metal is not nearly as dangerous as the BS the government and environmentalists are putting out! When I was a kid I would ride to town every Saturday with Dad to deliver eggs. While he was catching up with the latest at the feed and seed store, I would walk about a block down the street to the bridge over the railroad. Then most locomotives were still steam powered and after two or three trains went through town, you couldn't see across the street for the coal smoke! People in cities heated their houses with coal and late in the afternoon you could smell kerosene in most neighborhoods because many used kerosene cook stoves. And they are concerned with pollution now?
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Today's Featured Article - Identifying Tractor Smells - by Curtis Von Fange. We are continuing our series on learning to talk the language of our tractor. Since we can’t actually talk to our tractors, though some of the older sect of farmers might disagree, we use our five physical senses to observe and construe what our iron age friends are trying to tell us. We have already talked about some of the colors the unit might leave as clues to its well-being. Now we are going to use our noses to diagnose particular smells. ELECTRICAL SMELLS
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