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1943 John Deere Model A Pulling Stumps in 2022


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I appreciate you sharing! I believe the issue of the plowed ground wanting to fall back into the furrow could be resolved on the side hills if you altered the "tilt" of the plow a little more to the right (using the lever on the plow) and then plowed a little bit deeper. Usually, we would push a little bit deeper than you do in the video. I estimate that it will be around 10 inches deep. In the video, I'm going to guess that you're digging roughly 7 or 8 inches deep. Naturally, that will make the Old G growl a little louder!

When I was growing up, we had a G that my brother would weight down to around 7500 or 8000 pounds in order to pull a 4-16 plow that our 730 Jd struggled to pull, but the 730 was a trailer queen, so we would have had difficulty bolting weights to it. Despite the fact that she was only dressed in her business attire, your G is lovely, and I miss ours.

We can produce 400 bales a day with just my son and myself without passing out from the heat. That involves mowing for the following day and, typically, twice-raking the material we'll bale that day. Even though we have a New Holland pull-type stacker that helps, it still takes time, a little bit of talent, and some chance.

The final summer we operated our dairy farm, I was 13 years old, yet I lacked the strength to stack bales on the cart more than two or three high. My family mistakenly believed that I was acting, but I wasn't. Any improvement that prevents farmers from manually stacking bales on a cart or in a barn and breathing that horrible dust is a fantastic one.

These men farm close by. That was created at home using a few different devices like a baler. They also have a unique stacker that they manufactured themselves. They chose this configuration because it conserves twine and works best with their bale press.


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