Good eye K. peters. It's a 220. We had another one that broke the gear box on the back and then we got this one a short while later. While ours is down, we're actually borrowing the neighbor's 180 w/out tail gate, just to keep it away from the barn. Last year I built a new toungue for it, and several years before the side steel was replaced. Cheaper to fix this one than to buy someone elses used spreader. Kinda funny, the beater that's in this one was in the last one, and Dad bought it used to go in that one. So the beater has been in atleast 3 different spreaders.
To RR- be careful with that pipe. One side on ours busted a few (maybe 10) years ago, and Dad made one up out of pipe the same size. That broke this year, leading into this major unertaking. The neighbor (same one we're borrowing the 180 from) has a spreader that's junk on the ground, that had good idlers. He let us take those off his. The pipe was almost wore through because it's much softer than the original, but it was Dad's weld that gave in. It didn't go as far as yours, but it twisted one slat, and tore up the steel on the floor in the front that holds the poly down.
For Lou- I think it was Applied Industrial. They've got locations all over, this one is in Appleton. If I remember correctly you're clear across the state in the North Western part? Any place that sells industrial belting has the scraps, and most just throw them away (or sell really cheap) because they have so much and they can't possibly get rid of it all. Pretty sure they just let Dad go dumpster diving for the couple rolls he brought home, but I wasn't there so not sure how it worked to get it.
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Today's Featured Article - A Lifetime of Farm Machinery - by Joe Michaels. I am a mechanical engineer by profession, specializing in powerplant work. I worked as a machinist and engine erector, with time spent overseas. I have always had a love for machinery, and an appreciation for farming and farm machinery. I was born and raised in Brooklyn, New York. Not a place one would associate with farms or farm machinery. I credit my parents for instilling a lot of good values, a respect for learning, a knowledge of various skills and a little knowledge of farming in me, amo
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