Re shingles sticking together in the bundle, no expert here but several years ago, I helped a friend re-single his house. He had bought the shingles on a pallet the fall before but the weather turned cold and it never got done and the pallet was stored in his shed over winter, forward to the next spring and I and another friend help him do his roof. We had a lot of problems with shingles stuck together in the bundles. Some were stuck so bad that you would crack the shingle trying to get them apart. The other friend had worked for a roofing company in his younger years and he said they would drop the bundle of shingles on the roof at an angle and that would loosen the stuck shingles but there were some bundles with shingles that were stuck so bad that the dropping method didn't work. The solution was to lay the really badly stuck shingles out in the sun on his lawn for an hour or so and the sun would heat the upper shingle enough to loosen it from the one it was stuck to.
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Today's Featured Article - Hydraulics - Cylinder Anatomy - by Curtis von Fange. Let’s make one more addition to our series on hydraulics. I’ve noticed a few questions in the comment section that could pertain to hydraulic cylinders so I thought we could take a short look at this real workhorse of the circuit. Cylinders are the reason for the hydraulic circuit. They take the fluid power delivered from the pump and magically change it into mechanical power. There are many types of cylinders that one might run across on a farm scenario. Each one could take a chapter in
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