I lost a chisel plow about like that off of a trailer once. We never did figure out how it got off.
I'd been to a consignment auction and bought a 3pt, six row cultivator and the chisel plow. We loaded the cultivator onto the trailer first and boomed it down. We then had them set the chisel plow on top of the cultivator. The way it sat down between the shanks, and frame to frame with the cultivator, I thought, "That thing can't go anywhere".
One of my wife's brothers was with me, and after about 50 miles we made a turn in a junction to go to his house. Somehow in the middle of the turn that chisel plow fell off the trailer and rolled over to the curb. Didn't even hurt it. We didn't try to reload it. I just pulled it home behind the pickup and came back for the trailer with the cultivator.
That was over 30 years ago, and to the day he died several years ago my BIL referred to that corner as the "chisel plow corner".
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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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