Posted by JOB on March 17, 2013 at 04:10:05 from (74.36.135.38):
In Reply to: PHOTO ADDS (again) posted by jm. on March 16, 2013 at 17:13:03:
Some people are just really proud of what they have. I know of a guy who bought a 165 acre parcel for 165 thousand. The previous owner paid $35,000 for it and had to build a half mile of road to get to it. Put it up for sale with a Realtor for a year and could not sell it. Put it on an online auction and bid against potential buyers until it got up to what he wanted and found a sucker. Now this sucker and his partner built a small pole building on it and is trying to sell it to a bigger sucker for $250,000.00.
This property has twenty acres of high ground on one corner another five acres of high ground for the access getting to it and five more acres or so of high ground that we call hog backs running through it. The rest is swamp. Hunters from the cities come and pay a ridiculousness amount of money for this hunting swamp land and put a big smile on the TAX assessors face. One of the ladies in the assessors office told me it is the highest valued swamp land in Mille Lacs county, MN.
Put the tractor on a on-line auction, bid against potential buyers just like E-Bay, and a sucker will pay the price. You find more suckers at auctions than any other place.
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Today's Featured Article - Oil Bath Air Filters - by Chris Pratt. Some of us grew up thinking that an air filter was a paper thing that allowed air to pass while trapping dirt particles of a particles of a certain size. What a surprise to open up your first old tractor's air filter case and find a can that appears to be filled with the scrap metal swept from around a machine shop metal lathe. To top that off, you have a cup with oil in it ("why would you want to lubricate your carburetor?"). On closer examination (and some reading in a AC D-14 service manual), I found out that this is a pretty ingenious method of cleaning the air in the tractor's intake tract.
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