I remember the shocking process was to further the drying of the corn to preserve the ears until they could later be removed for storage and the dry fodder was used as feed. I remember the dry stalks and fodder being chopped at the barn and blown into the dry mow to later be fed to the cattle and it also contributed some to the animal bedding.Green Shcks were brought to the ensilage cutter set up at the silo and were fed into the cutter and blown into the silo to make silage. So two processes were applied to shocked corn.Dryer corn being shocked to further dry down of the ears and the saving of the fodder for feed and bedding and the cutting of greener corn to make ensilage. I don't have any idea how the cutter bundled the stalks and tied them and then tripped it out for later shocking. It was a noisy machine and I was very young so it was and amazing thing to be around. Dad pulled it with a AC UC model tractor and I thought it was the prettiest Tractor in the neighborhood.
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Today's Featured Article - Tuning-Up Your Tractor: Plugs & Compression Testing - by Curtis Von Fange. The engine seems to run rough. In the exhaust you can hear an occasion 'poofing' sound like somethings not firing on all cylinders. Under loaded conditions the tractor seems to lack power and it belches black smoke out of the exhaust. For some reason it just doesn't want to start up without cranking and cranking the starter. All these conditions can be signals that your unit is in need of a tune up. Ok, so what is involved in a tune up? You say, swap plugs and file the points....now tha
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