txflyer
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Fly it like you STOL it ♦
hhmmm, I guess this city boy doesn't get it.
The rear wheels shouldn't be half way in the ground. IOW ... I'm stuck.
I broke the cardinal rule and tried to plow uphill in sand.
ok, stuck, I get that. next question........why does one drive a plow through sand in the first place? are you 'tilling' so you can plant something in the future? is there a revenue-generating reason why you are tractoring there in the first place? clearly, I don't know squadoosh about being a farmacist. your response will drive my next set of questions lol.
ok, stuck, I get that. next question........why does one drive a plow through sand in the first place? are you 'tilling' so you can plant something in the future? is there a revenue-generating reason why you are tractoring there in the first place? clearly, I don't know squadoosh about being a farmacist. your response will drive my next set of questions lol.
I have a disc just like that!
You need 4 wheel drive, or learn to hit the clutch before you bury the tractor up to the axle.
That is feral hog damage I'm trying to repair.
If you disc it and cult-pack it in (the big heavy roller behind the disc) the grass won't die. It will pop back out with a rain.
The roller on the same load,,,
may have been a mistake. :wink2:
ok, I goggled 'feral hogs' and found out the damage they can do. I'm still working on the rest of that stuff u said but basically you're trying to repair the damage done.
you see, when someone on PoA starts talking in-depth IFR on me, I can go bust out a manual and start reading up on it but when u go all Texas on me, I'm just lost.
I guess what I would have done in this situation is say "fk it, I'm goin flying, that tractor will still be there tomorrow" hahaha.
Need a Deere to pull you out?Over 50 years of driving tractors and I'll never learn...
I rocked it a little bit trying to get out, but it sank just sitting there. The sand was wet below the surface and once you break through it's like quick sand.
The rear wheels shouldn't be half way in the ground. IOW ... I'm stuck.
I broke the cardinal rule and tried to plow uphill in sand.
Need a Deere to pull you out?
How much of that stuff you do? I know it's really overkill on equipment, but a big plow tractor with AWD and high floatation wide single tires can be bought really cheap and do that specific job really well. One guy put his freaking cattle out on the hayfield in the winter rains (even though our haying contract specifically indicated he wouldn't.) and turned a perfectly smooth high speed hayfield into a WWI no man's land. I picked up a well used 450hp Stieger that had logging tires on it for $9k (I had some other uses like pulling chains, root plows, and grubbing, on a 100 acres of mesquites) and pulled a rig nearly identical to yours to fix it. You just can't beat the high floatation tires on an all wheel drive plow tractor when it comes to smoothing down a field or doing any dirt work in soft soil.
Your runway needs some work there.
Provide long/lat coordinates for thee Fly-in.
That is one stuck Farmall and I see the hog damage.
You are making me homesick with that picture.... Where ya at in Tx?
Is that a welding repair on the frame at the front? 2 out 3 Farmalls, at least the H models needed the frame welded right at that same place.
Yeah, you got too much hanging but you knew that.
I took the OP as work to be done and wouldn't ya know it's a perfect day for flying.
Provide long/lat coordinates for thee Fly-in.
Brazos river bottom between Hearne and Marlin.
...
1200' turf? I could get my Bo in there.
once.... mmuuuuaaaahhahhahahhahaaa! Then it's parts. If those trees weren't down at the end, I could get out on a cold day with a short load of fuel. Prolly.
Small world. I was born and raised in Bryan, just sold my house in Bryan this week. I have friends in Hearne and Reagan area.
my first tractor experience was a Farmall B (yeah, it was almost new then) - those narrow front ends where a bit scary on hillsides...
1200' turf? I could get my Bo in there.
once.... mmuuuuaaaahhahhahahhahaaa! Then it's parts. If those trees weren't down at the end, I could get out on a cold day with a short load of fuel. Prolly.
B/CS has gone nuts with growth. We thought about building or buying a home there but the land values and prop taxes are insane. :
It's 1200' from trees to trees. Really about 1000' of sweet spot. It's kind of tight but the wagon does it with good room to spare. I won't try it at gross on a hot day!
B/CS has gone nuts with growth. We thought about building or buying a home there but the land values and prop taxes are insane.
Tractor safety is my top priority. They can kill you in a New York minute.
Yes it has. And that growth is faster than the city can keep up with. Bryan used to be a quiet little farming town with a great QOL. I miss what it used to be.
What I don't miss is the humidity.
Bo <> Wagon, that's fer sure.
I was just down at CS a few weeks ago, and they are building like mad in the surrounding areas. Redoing the fwy, etc. If it weren't a college town I'd like it a lot more.
First thing I thought of when I saw it buried was cringing at flipping it over. It's happened too many times to count. Need one of these:
http://justtractorparts.com/rops.aspx
A few more suitcase weights and it'll pull right out