John Deere 6620. Cylinder thrashing. Around 16-17 inches of concave in a linear sense to get the bean loose from the pod. Even on a fresh set of rasp bars/concave the rotary guys could always work certain days that I could not. I know what you are thinking. Just replace the 6620 and in a lot of ways you are correct. Due to the soil productivity and needing to put some money into the household budget things are slow to be replaced around here. I know I don't need fancy for the acreage (around 300) so I would be open to an IH 1460- 1020 flex as long as it was not a money pit. I just finished up paying on some equipment I bought a few years ago so probably an upgrade for the combine should be next. Depressing to think that my 6620- 915 Flex is probably only worth 5-6 thousand being in pretty good mechanical condition so I might better keep it as a backup to whatever comes next.
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Today's Featured Article - Tractor Generators - by Chris Pratt. As a companion to the articles on three-brush and two-brush generators, it seemed fitting that we should provide our readers with a description of how a generator works in lay terms. The difficulty with all those "theory of operation" texts is that they border on principles of electricity or physics and such. Since I know nothing of either, you will have to put up with looking at the common sense side of how generators work which means we "
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