Posted by Leroy on December 23, 2014 at 06:43:56 from (69.88.207.185):
In Reply to: Re: Scrap Iron Price posted by Keith Molden on December 22, 2014 at 17:48:48:
I would like to know what were the rakes and spreader you took in. Steel wheel hay rakes and steel wheel manure spreaders are hard to find and bring good money. This past summer I bought a steel wheel New Idea hay rake that is what most would call scrap or parts at most for $150 80 mile from home, 2 trips first to look at it and second to get it. With parts I have from other rakes it will be next summer ready to go on the dealers sale lot to go back into the field. Currently rebuilding a New Idea 10A 4 wheel spreader on steel that frame was rusted away, owners are very ancious to get it back for use. Then up are 3 more New Idea steel wheel hay rakes for same dealer and a 1928-29 model New Idea No. 8 spreader for the brother of the owner of the 10A spreader, also a second No. 8 & No. 9 spreaders. That 10A spreader was built between 1940 and around 1950. Have 3 12A New Ideas for parts that fit the older 4 wheel spreaders. Had to pay at auction $140 for one of them just for parts. What a lot of people think is scrap and just haul to yard is the raw material that we need. This past summer add in paper for rake, called as soon as it came out, he had decided that no body would want it because of a broken hub, Big deal right, NO WAY. JUST A MINOR THING. From what he said would have paid him $250 or more for that rake he scrapped for possibly $80.
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Today's Featured Article - Old Time Threshing - by Anthony West. A lovely harvest evening late September 1947, I was a school boy, like all school boys I loved harvest time. The golden corn ripens well and early, the stoking, stacking,.... the drawing in with the tractors and trailers and a few buck rakes thrown in, and possibly a heavy horse. It would be a great day for the collies and the terrier dogs, rats and mice would be at the bottom of the stacks so the dogs, would have a busy time hunting and killing, all the corn was gathered and ricked in what we c
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