Many don't recognize the hazard. A friend had bought a nice older building for a transportation business, set up a shop area for maintenance of the vans, good mechanic, but the oily rags were not put in a safe place. I did a lot of work on the building and mentioned this, safety can was in place immediately. Not a good thing to lose your fleet to a fire. At home, I don't use the cloth rags so much as shop towels or what have you. At the end of each job when working on a tractor or such, they are tossed in whatever container is handy, then put in the burn barrel and immediately burned. When cleaning the stove and removing the ashes, they go outside immediately and are usually dispersed at that time. I'm not innocent in following strict safety practice but not foolish enough to leave any of these things inside a building. When doing either, all other things will be ignored until I am done and know there is no concern about disposal or any fire hazard, distractions are dangerous too.
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Today's Featured Article - The Ferguson System Principal An implement cutting through the soil at a certain depth say eight inches requires a certain force or draft to pull it. Obviously that draft will increase if the implement runs deeper than eight inches, and decrease if it runs shallower. Why not use that draft fact to control the depth of work automatically? The draft forces are
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