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Today
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All time
November 28 2011 - May 25 2026
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Year
May 25 2025 - May 25 2026
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Month
April 25 2026 - May 25 2026
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May 18 2026 - May 25 2026
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Today
May 25 2026
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Popular Content
Showing content with the highest reputation on 05/25/2026 in all areas
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18 points
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11 pointsMost of you saw the recently posted AI generated video about the history of Wheel Horse. The inaccuracies were abundant and glaring. Having lived a stones throw from South Bend all my life I vividly remember the tremendous amount of manufacturing in the county with Oliver, Studebaker and many others as well as what Wheel Horse went through as it was happening. You hear a lot of conflicting stories about AMC, Munn and then Toro and what they did to Wheel Horse. I stumbled on to this one this morning and found it to be, by far, the most accurate of any I've seen. My awareness started in 1960 as a child but the memories are still there. Sit back and relax. This is just over an hour long but it kept me glued to the puter screen and brought back a lot of memories. The Brand That Big Box Stores Destroyed: The Fall of Wheel Horse I did catch a major error near the end. Since when was the LX420 the last of the models with any Wheel Horse heritage? It had zero. The last was the Classic GT aka 300 Series, aka 315-8, whatever you prefer to call them. Last year made, 2007. Also, many of you want to see the Ireland Road plant on an upcoming visit to the area. No, it doesn't look like this now but you will still recognize it. The picture they used when making that statement was the BACK of the plant. For many years the less faded paint under the Wheel Horse name was very visible.
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9 pointsBack home after spending 5 cold rainy days at my sister's farm in western Pa. Over 3 inches of rain with a 45* high temp. I did manage to fill a spring gobbler tag on Saturday. Sorry, no pictures...wet turkey do not photograph well. Also attended my 65th Meyersdale High School reunion on Saturday. We do something unique, where we have a banquet every year at the high school for the graduating class and every class that graduated on the 5 year multiples of the current year. We had 2 from 1956, 5 from my 1961 class, 8 from my sisters 1966 class, and the numbers increased until a disappointing 8 of the 2026 class attended. The rain did have the forest floors covered in beautiful green ferns. A 340 mile long bike path passes along the farm in Sand Patch, Pa. Probably a 3 day ride for Mike @Sparky. This path begins in Washington, DC and follows the C & O canal tow path to the gap in Cumberland, Md., then follows railroad beds to Pittsburg, Pa going thru several mountain tunnels along the way. Here it crosses the lane into the farm. Stopped by Red Square Corner at the Big Show site on the way home. No bridges out and all roads in good shape leading to the Show.
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7 points
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7 points
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7 pointsMay 25, 1977, Star Wars (later subtitled A New Hope) premiered in U.S. theaters on May 25, 1977, a day that became legendary as it launched the iconic sci-fi saga, opening initially in a limited release of about 32 theaters before expanding to become a massive cultural phenomenon.
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7 pointsMay 25, 1961 JFK announces the US goal of putting a man on the Moon before the end of the decade.
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7 pointsI'll have more pics later..... The Trina person and her momma and me and a friend of ours spent another wonderful weekend at Moose Brook State Park in Gorham NH. Woods walking. Mountain biking. Campfire in the 1930s CCC chimney. We highly recommend that particular park. Trina's mom stayed in the camper. We used our tent.
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6 pointsI hate sheetmetal work. Some idiot apparently used my 701 belt guard on a low mount starter engine. They cut a path for the belt to pass and screwed a screen on the front with self tapping screws. Welding sheetmetal is a pain, but I was able to make it look decent. Not perfect but at least it was on the bottom. My hood was torn all up where it meets the frame up front. So I cut the bad spot out, added a new bottom plate, then made a 1/8 tab that wraps into the sides for extra support. Needs a little filler in the weld gaps but it won't be visible when finished. At least these parts will fit right now. A little more work and they will look good enough.
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5 points1. I'd start off with a voltage drop test to identify potential bad grounds, and then I'd check compression for being in spec (compression release failure) and likely discover the issue somewhere between those 2 tests.
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5 pointsI was 11 years old…and once Star Wars hit the big movie theaters I was able to see it and I LOVED IT! When my son was old enough to watch (he was probably around the same age as when I started watching) we sat home and binged the entire series on VCR tapes.
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4 points
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4 pointsWe mowed my in-law’s yard…. It was looking like a hay field…. My FIL doesn’t care how it looks, but my MIL does. it looks awesome now. My last name is White…. My dad used to comment about how good the yard would look after he/we got finished…. And understand, we have ZERO racial bias….. Dad would say, “Now it looks like the Whites live here again!” And, he’d say, “I like our house and yard to look like we’re LIVING here, not just STAYING here.” I miss my dad….. he was awesome…. And I fell straight down out of that tree!
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4 points
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4 pointsExplaining what "this rig" actually is and some pictures would certainly help
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3 pointsMy 8 year old Grandson wanted to drive Papa's Wheelhorse. His Dad just picked up a 85 314-8 a few weeks ago. We let him drive it in 2nd High range.
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3 pointsover recent months i have been going through my Dads old Navy memoribilia to create a summary and chronology of his service to be passed along to future family generations - he was a WW2 Navy pilot in Pacific flying sea planes in 1944-45 - age 22 - around Iwo Jima - Siapan - Okinawa etc - he then stayed in reserves into the 1960s flying one weekend per month hunting for Russian subs off the Atlantic coast - - it is absolutely unimaginable what these young men did in WW 2 -- to think how incredible my Dad was flying Sea Planes in the black darkness at night over the Pacific at 100 feet altitude at mast level of Japanese ships doing bombing runs or looking for downed American pilots - I only wish i understood as a child what he had done during the war - however, it does grant me respect and admiration for what he and his fellow vets did to protect and save our way of life in America. I am thankful my daughter understands his sacrifice and to honor her grandfather takes my two grandsons to his graveside on these special rememberance days so they can be told the stories - - he was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross Medal - a memory we will pass through the generations - below are some of the planes he learned to fly in --- and flew from WW2 thru 1960s - and his flight jacket my sister did in shadow box
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3 points
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3 pointsThe circus tent is ready! I know 3 's are going to be there. Not sure if the other 2 's are going to cut loose with the cash for fuel and make it. Gonna miss the short walk to the concession stand for a burger.
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3 pointsInteresting observation. But not where I was going with my earlier missive. While it might not compare to the year-round humidity that Charlotte experiences, the bulk of what most would call the Midwest has appreciable humidity. Summertime from Ohio to Missouri is probably indistinguishable ftom the Mid Atlantic to the Palmetto state. What I mean to imply was that two paths for boosting octane and oxygenating fuel were taken in the US. One used MTBE - predominantly the Eastern US - and the other used Ethanol. The corn belt states preferred ethanol. Eventually MTBE was phased out around 2004-2006 as it has other environmental problems, so ethanol introduction came later to the East. Putting ethanol into fuel tanks solublized the water and schmutz that had accumulated and put it into customer’s equipment. This happened a couple of decades earlier in the Midwest than it did elsewhere, so the more recent event trumps our memories of the acute issues that developed. Humidity can play a role though. Some amount of water is grabbed out of the air and dissolved into the gasoline. This isn’t an infinite loop though. It’s highly unlikely a volume of fuel can saturate just from exposure to air since as the water enters the fuel it decreases the affinity for the ethanol laced fuel to grab more out of the air. As the gasoline evaporates though, it can leave the water mix behind. But this isn’t particularly unique to blended fuel as water accumulates in all breathing tanks and evaporation leaves behind an undefined and undesirable witches brew in all tanks. steve
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3 pointsLots of replacement parts are purchased and installed that weren't needed because no one bothered to diagnose the actual problem. You need to take a systematic approach to find the actual problem. Why won’t my starter turn over from the key switch?\ Lets take a logical step by step inspection of your starter problem. Is your PTO in the ON position, a wheel horse will not start with the PTO on. Have you had the battery load tested at an auto parts store? Have you cleaned and tightened all electrical connections including grounds? Are all fuses good and fuse holders cleaned? If these have all been done, we can check components of the starting system as follows; don’t skip a step or you may miss the problem. Be sure the transmission is in neutral and the parking brake is set. Take a pair of automotive jumper cables and connect the black cable to your battery "-" and a good clean spot on the engine. Now connect the other cable to the large post on the starter and touch the other end to the battery "+" terminal, does the starter turn over? If the starter turns over the battery and starter are good. If it didn't turn over try the same steps with the battery in your car/truck, if that cures the problem then the "good" battery wasn't so good. Presuming the starter turned over move the jumper wire from the starter post to the other end of the wire going to the starter which is one of the large posts on the solenoid. If the starter turns over when the battery is touched by the jumper as before then that cable is good, if not you have found your problem. Presuming the starter turned over move that jumper to the other terminal of the solenoid, connect the other end to the battery and use a small piece of wire to temporarily connect the battery "+" terminal to the small terminal on the solenoid, this should cause the solenoid to close and the starter to turn over. If not, the solenoid is probably the problem. If this was successful remove the large jumper cable and use the small jumper wire to the small terminal of the solenoid, the solenoid should close and the starter turn over. If not the cable to the battery is the problem. Presuming all of these have been successful remove the black jumper wire and repeat the small jumper to small terminal, if the starter turns over the ground is good. If all of these components test good then remove your ignition switch, be sure the transmission is in neutral, parking brake on, clutch depressed and PTO off. Use a small jumper to connect the terminals that were connected to the “B” and “S” terminals of the ignition switch. If the starter turns over then the PTO switch and other safety switches are operating properly and your ignition switch may be bad.
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3 pointsFinally got around to putting on the new tires. New hose are on the steering cylinder. When the wheels are turn to the right and the axle is tilted up the left front tire just touches the front cylinder fitting. Not sure if I am going to mess with it or not. Have to start working on fuel line, pump and sheet metal . Painted the wheel with Krylon metallic paint/primer. Not a restoration grade job but they look okay.
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3 pointsAn electric clutch for the PTO to drive a mower deck would be easy to do and depending on the engine use in the repower may also be the best. If you are thinking of an electric clutch for the drive clutch for the tractor ; don't do it.
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3 points
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3 pointsMy cleaner has a 30 minute cycle. I typically run carbs 3 times. More on really dirty ones.
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3 pointsNot knowing what attachment you're intending to run makes it difficult to have an opinion. Mechanical clutches are plentiful and serviceable. The sudden start of an electric clutch is what turns most folks off. Soft starts are available but add $150 or so to a build.
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3 pointsI didn't do much, as is typical of a Sunday. The boy and his GF were told by her mom yesterday that they couldn't hang after church today because there was too much to do to get ready for their Memorial Day cookout. My son volunteered to go over and help, and I made sure both kids knew that as soon as her mom thought he was being more of a distraction than a help she was going to call me to come get him. I never got called, and went to pick him up at the pre-arranged time, and was told that him being there got her (the daughter) to work harder than she normally would have. So I guess I did something right with him.
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2 points
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2 pointsMy heart goes out to you Bill. My father was a 18 year old farm boy, when on D Day plus three he and many other young men and women went into Europe to stop a mad man. He was a Army combat Medic and served through 1945. Also my father-in-law was a 16 year old farm boy ( he got his aunt to sign for him ) when he volunteered, and was deployed to north Africa. he was an Army cannonier. I know that Tom Brokaw was right when he called that generation the Greatest Generation, not taking anything away from ALL service members men and women who have served and are serving,some giving their All.
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2 pointsI have the Vevor 6 liter. If I were to make one recommendation, it would be to buy the biggest one you can afford.
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2 points
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2 points
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2 pointsMy home weather station recorded 2.75" of rain for this holiday weekend. Finally stopped so I can get some lawn trash to the curb!
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2 pointsClean the starter mounting pads on the starter and where it bolts on the engine. Check and clean the ground cable.
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2 pointsI’ve never owned a manual choke road vehicle, though I’ve had ones with the vent, clutch, and crank windows! Our family’s '63 three-on-the-tree International Travelall, on which I learned to drive and took the test, had one.
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2 pointsIf it’s going to be a worker and not a showpiece I’d run it as is. Then, if it gets bumped or banged it won’t spike your blood pressure. 🙂
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2 points
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2 points
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2 pointsThe HD 2.5L timer has a max of 8 minutes with or without heat. The worst carb took four sessions with some manual cleaning in between on stuff loosened by the machine. I must also point out that the tank is barely deep enough for full immersion of the K181 and B&S 12hp carb bodies so if larger items are in your plans, you might need separate passes in different orientations. To me, though, keeping the lid on while it’s cleaning helps avoid evaporation of the solution.
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2 points
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2 pointsThe unit I posted a picture of above has a timer for 35 or 40 minutes. On an average cleaning I'll do 3 or 4 sets of that. I've had particularly nasty cases where I've left a carb in the lacquer thinner for a couple weeks and cycled the machine a dozen times or more. The usage alone will generate some heat. Not much, but definitely a noticeable change. I do NOT use the additional heat because of the fire potential.
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2 pointsAgreed. Here in Maine we also have to consider the VERY wide range of temperatures we see throughout the year. We can see 25⁰ below zero and 95⁰ above within a 4 month period and that's without consideration for extreme weather. And also.. This is definitely true. We've experienced it several times over the years. We use non ethanol fuel here because we have many combinations of potential issues occurring. Different machines, tank/line materials, usage rates, etc. AND... because we have good access to reasonably priced non ethanol fuel. Sta-Bil does not negate the issues ethanol causes. It slows the decomposition of the fuel. We've never even used a stabilizer until we got the big generator. And quite frankly only used it then because we took some Stabil home from my late father's stuff. I wouldn't have bought it. I've seriously considered using it in my truck as well due to the limited running time that'll get. No ethanol. No additives. No problems. If/when an additive becomes available that does actually work to eliminate the issue with ethanol and be cost effective simultaneously .. only then we'd allow ethanol fuel.
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2 pointsI never thunk of that. Less humidity likely makes ethanol not nearly as troublesome with carburetor equipped machines.
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2 points
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2 pointsSearch box upper right hand corner. Type in 753 then use the more options drop down to and click on files and hit the search button. You will find lots more including engine manuals.
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2 points
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2 pointsWatch which solvents you use. Many common ultrasonic solvents are caustic to aluminum. There is one on Amazon that is aluminum safe. Not cheap, but better than ruining the carb you are looking to save. https://www.amazon.com/Ultrasonic-Solution-Carburetors-Cleaning-Immersion/dp/B09KK6KR3Z/ref=sr_1_1_sspa?crid=MW4TT953L7DP&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.Hf_fBUuXW1HjooHlm4YwrBUClH2-3mM_H0HsbKVuqsEr6xWToJl7pLZH2SE2-xMxl9-GXlWUOxmOjCVfWK65n1QUWwDHE-Ig7OIPL9WTQ7WVsFmSWxodHSxVfb-U8qD0SaaO8UlL2IsXuXlpV38sxnOn_rDrwLSlySXPMKkzkZbrvs8yh8oPNdujjtpF7PlnBxsgibVw3D4OY6A5Qbz4ibIW5qZgP3SpbVhX0xBIJ4io4_dLZ6zXkrlj3nl2biQYHbtYIvG4K-00gcY69oNCZULueCRC2vA5DavITXrx-r4.8PaEza685VoiKldJEjDUbJ954mL2_u1HO3n2B5tZcj0&dib_tag=se&keywords=ultrasonic%2Bcleaner%2Bfor%2Bcarburetors&qid=1779653786&s=automotive&sprefix=ultraso%2Cautomotive%2C157&sr=1-1-spons&sp_csd=d2lkZ2V0TmFtZT1zcF9hdGY&th=1
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2 pointsWheel Horse 522XI with Ark loader. 500 hours on tractor, little smoke on starting 22hp Kohler v twin runs great. New tires with Rim guard in the rears. Wheel weights are not included. Has a weight box on back full of scale weights. Loader has new pump and cylinders. Quick attatch bucket and forks. $3500 OBO cash only pickup in Medford Mn.
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2 pointsGreat running into a few of you guys yesterday early. Spent the day over at the garden tractor pulls. When we first started pulling there were 3 wheel horses and my son was bringing 2 of them. Yesterday at one point we must have had close to 12 to 15 of them. I decided last year to give @WheelHorse_Kid the choice to show or pull. My thinking was he only has a few more years pulling in the youth pulls and I have I hope a bunch of years to sit at shows. He chose pulling this year and last. We had a great day and pulled well after everyone had left. We were packing up at 7:30 last night. We had a record number of stock class tractors and a few newer 1000lb class tractors. Great to see the hobby getting a little bigger. Sadly the only wheel horse to take 1st was my old 14-8speed that I literally dragged out of the bushes last weekend for my son’s friend to use in the stock class. While he drove it around at the show after the left axle decided to widen the stance a little bit. So now I need to tear it apart and figure that out. But all in all the 2 boys that I brought came home with 4 trophies and it was a great day. Here are some pics from over where we were. I added some of the non wheel horse ones but I think you guys will enjoy. Ben who runs the pull built that cub cadet that you will see has multiple drivers on it in the pictures. He built it for himself with a hand clutch since he is paralyzed but he lets kids use it to try and get more into the sport. I believe it had 4 different drivers yesterday. Also 2 dads suited up and stole their kids tractors for the 1400lb class. Let me tell you that 13’3” I pulled felt like forever. But was super fun. I may have to build one for myself. ScreenRecording_05-24-2026_14-35-14_1.mov
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1 pointYeah, an interesting science experiment or demonstration. I couldn’t be bothered with the tediousness for any regular usage. Disposing of the “water” with its uncertain chemical composition would trouble me, as well.
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