Leaderboard
-
in all areas
- All areas
- Markers
- Marker Comments
- Marker Reviews
- Articles
- Article Comments
- Article Reviews
- Classfieds
- Classified Comments
- Classified Reviews
- Wiki's
- Wiki Comments
- Wiki Reviews
- Blog Entries
- Blog Comments
- Images
- Image Comments
- Image Reviews
- Albums
- Album Comments
- Album Reviews
- Files
- File Comments
- File Reviews
- Posts
-
Custom Date
-
All time
November 28 2011 - September 10 2025
-
Year
September 10 2024 - September 10 2025
-
Month
August 10 2025 - September 10 2025
-
Week
September 3 2025 - September 10 2025
-
Today
September 10 2025
-
Custom Date
07/13/2019 - 07/13/2019
-
All time
Popular Content
Showing content with the highest reputation on 07/13/2019 in all areas
-
25 pointsTook a 400 mile round-trip yesterday to bring this little one-owner home. Tractor has been in the previous owners family, and garage-kept since new. Has a few custom attachments (foot rests and horns under the hood). Previous owner included boxes of NOS parts collected over the years. The engine (K-181) was replaced somewhere along the line, as was the starter/generator. This is my first small hydro since I started collecting in 1993. (I'm not counting my 416-H). Since my 7 and 9 year old grandsons have some trouble with the clutch, I figured a nice little hydro would be great for them. Check out the original HL-5 light kit with original switch. This tractor pick-up was in western Pennsylvania, and my wife and I took the opportunity to side-trip to the Flight 93 Memorial. Walking down to the crash site on a beautiful day, and listening to some of the last answering machine recordings of the passengers brought tears to my eyes.
-
10 pointsTrina, Meeha the dog, and I took a little walk in the woods. Roughly 7 miles. We peaked Cranmore Mountain which is a ski area. Also Black Cap Mountain. Kearsarge Mountain North Moat Mountain I wish I could label this next one. Dead center is South Moat and Middle Moat. To the right of that is the Red Ridge. To the right of that and just above the pine tree is North Moat. To the left of all of these and behind them is Mount Chocorua and The Three Sisters. On the right hand side kind of tucked in between the treetops you can see what is known locally as Cathedral Ledge. We've been on top of every single one of the mountains pictured above, some multiple times. The village in the foreground is North Conway New Hampshire.
-
10 pointsI pass by this lawn in Red Lion, Pa. quite often, but have never seen the mower. Thought I'd share it.
-
6 pointsSo...we had a really fun day up at Iola again this year. The morning started with a dead battery in the Goat but nothing that a little time on the charger couldn’t fix. We then drove into town to pick up Caleb’s buddy from basketball, David. He is a car guy but had never been to the spectacle that is called Iola. He was my shotgun for the trip and we enjoyed the 55 minute drive up to the show grounds through rural Wisconsin. Upon arrival we got staged between two beautiful C series Chevy’s that I know My Bow tie buddies like @WVHillbilly520H and @19richie66 will appreciate. What is cool is the one on the left is restored mostly to original. The one on the right has a modern LS series Vortec and full pro touring drivetrain. They are both awesome trucks. Speaking of trucks...Caleb found this one for his buddy @Sparky per his request last year. Catherine Bach of Daisy Duke game was there signing autographs and there were multiple General Lee chargers there as a result. We took a long look at this one and got a real kick out of it... Where there is General Lee, I guess there must be a General Grant😂! As most of you know, I’m a big Pontiac fan but there were a couple of Ponchos there that I had never seen before... Ive seen my share of 1974 GTO’s but never a 1974 Ventura sprint. Looked like a GTO without the badging and shaker hood scoop. This 1948 Poncho made me instantly think of Richard @953 nut. This one was for sale in the car corral for about $14K and I wanted it so bad. It had such cool Patina that even @Shynon would’ve been impressed. The interior had been completely restored and modified with new gauges and leather seating I would’ve been a fan of Pontiac power in the car but it had a Chevy 350 swapped in for cost efficiency. I have never seen a 1948 Pontiac in person—so yes I was star struck! Caleb loves Firebirds and this one was a beauty... Original drivetrain with some upgrades. It was absolutely rust free and beautiful inside and out. 400 and a 4spd and for sale! Too bad we didn’t have the $24K! The first year that we attended this show was in 1991 and we took my dad’s 1966 Scout. It was just a work truck for us at that time and I was younger than Caleb is now! We saw this beautiful ‘63 and were just drooling. Caleb also likes 1970 GTO’s and this one suited him just fine but it wasn’t for sale! Befoee we knew it, the day was done and we had to get David home. The boys slept most of the drive but when we arrived David said that he really enjoyed his first time at Iola and that he could get used to driving around in a hot rod! Davids favorite car is the Shelby Mustangs of the mid 1960’s and so both he and Caleb got shirts with their favorite cars and called it a great day filled with memories!
-
5 points
-
5 points
-
5 pointsThe previous owner just sent me email with pictures that his neighbor took while we were loading up. Mrs. M looks on while the previous owner checks under the seat for loose change. I'm tying her down for the trip home while the previous own looks on. One last ride. Don't worry Greg, I'll take good care of her.
-
5 pointsWell, well... auction finds. Nice to meet you, @Jordanhorse96 and @CasualObserver!
-
4 pointsHi folks, me and the gal pal were on our way to the wheelhorse motherland ( southbend), to shop for some wedding rings. So we go down little country road see a barn sale, turned around cause I spy a wheelhorse. I ask how much , he said 400$, but someone was suppose to be picking it up. Turns out it came with a sickle bar too. My ears kinda perked up then , cause my dad wants on for his 702. They call the other fella, he passed on it, I offered 300$, we settled at 350$. Tractor runs pretty good, lil smoke when ya goose it, but runs and cuts pretty good. I'm hoping the sickle bar will fit my dad's 702, it's a 50 inch bar. Anywho, here's some pics a serial numbers if anyone has some additional info, or point me in the right direction, would be appreciated, thanks!!!
-
4 pointsOuFinally got around to working on the 753. I drove it a while back, but the float hung and she just wouldn’t run. Well, no wonder! You wouldn’t believe all of the junk I cleaned out of the carb. The starter made a terrible roaring sound when running - bad bearings. I replaced the bearings and brushes and it starts great; but it doesn’t charge - the regulator smoked when the guy I bought it from started it, so I expected to have to order a regulator. I put on the 23x10.5-12 tires and weights I got from @sparky. I got the lift link and rod to hold the bar in travel position made and the sickle bar I got from @Lane Ranger is now mounted. I’m quitting on it now until after our summer show. I’m pleased with how she looks though!
-
4 points@Coulter Caleb, that Model A engine would run better if it had these plug wires on it!
-
4 pointshere ya go @ebinmaine @tunahead72 Saturday Morning Most of the guys drifted in around 7:30 to BS around the coffee pot. You normally weren't supposes to clock in until 8 am. But on these "monthly" Saturday mornings, the Shop Foreman would already be scurrying around. Ya'll get clocked in, several customers tractors to be finished for pickup today and you know what else is up. Yea, what else was always up! The Boss always got in quite early and made his calls trying to close sales before farmers and ranchers left the house. So at 8 am sharp...Boss to Shop Crew: Alright, I picked up some goooood tractors and equipment last night, lots of work to keep ya'll on the payroll a little longer. Shop Foreman says Truck Driver called and said he's not gonna make it in this morning, can these pickups wait till Monday. Boss No, No we've got to get them this morning. Boss tells Me, get the big truck ready to go and take mechanic #3 with you, I'll get you the address and map for the 1st pickup. Take it slow since you don't have your Commercial license (it was 1975 in a rural area!) O' and take a wrecking bar and chain saw and remember to take gas with it this time. (yea, I was 17 years old). So as I got the "Big" truck and gooseneck ready, the teasing began. Young-un gets to drive the BIG ONE today, Truck Driver's gonna be ticked at you for putting him out of a job...chainsaw, boy how do you load a tractor with a chainsaw....what's it gonna be a chicken house or another China Berry tree. Out comes the Boss with a map and everyone else shuts up and looks busy. The first ones out on ol Al's place, near Egypt (even Texas has an Egypt) about 45 minutes from here. It's got some small brush behind it you need to cut down so you can winch it on backwards. Remember don't try to start any of em today, winch-em on. O, and take some air bottles, I'm sure the tires are low....someone pipe out ..you mean we finally get one with tires on it and there's a shop full of laughter. Off Mechanic 3 and I go, I've only got to drive the "Big" truck under Truck Drivers supervision (nap time). Of course I'm extra careful since I don't have a license for the rig. We pull up to the house and the farmer Al says: well your ol Boss finally got me to sell him that 9N after all these years of badgering. He thinks he stole it from me, laughing. The laughter bring puzzled looks from us and farmer explains. Ya'll don't go telling your Boss, but all us farmers and ranchers have got an agreement that one or two of us will sell him something every month, so we can keep him coming and buying the beer around the county all year long.. So down the pasture we go and sure enough the 9N is parked nose to a big tree and a good amount of brush behind it. Mechanic 3 stutter's I can't cut that brush, I'm allergic to Poison Ivy! So as I cut brush and Poison Ivy, Mechanic 3 backs up the truck, (he doesn't drive on the highway since he doesn't have any kind of license). Then he starts running the electric winch. All goes along and were thankful for the electric winch because the flat tires don't hold any air. As we begin to winch it up red wasp swarm out from under the hood and we scramble to the truck for a few minutes. I laugh, remembering a few months back when a raccoon came out of a tractor on Truck Driver and I, holding his ground and not letting us near the nest of baby raccoons under the tractor hood. Back to winching and suddenly the winch stops. A quick look and the cable on the spool is a big mess. You forgot to hold tension on the cable as you unreeled it I holler. So we unhook from the tractor, get the cable mess un-reeled off the winch, reel it back on straight and finally get the tractor winched onto the trailer. We even got it chained down! Back to the shop we go and make it without more problems. As soon as we hit the yard the boss is hollering where have you been, and giving me directions to take a 3/4 ton truck and trailer with the hand winch (groan) to pick up an 8ft. disc harrow. He tells Mechanic 3 to drag the 9N off the big truck trailer so I can make another run with it when I get back. The shop closes at noon on Saturday, and back in the shop the other guys are teasing ...looks who's getting Truck Drivers overtime he's going to really be ticked off at you now. What, I don't even get paid overtime, I'm the one getting a raw deal (since I only worked part time) So, that's how it went for a typical "monthly" Saturday around the Ford Tractor Shop. Next, stay tuned for: Resurrecting the 9N or Bosses Brew and an Electric Water Heater.
-
4 points@Coulter Caleb hope you get some rest tonight, so you can come hang out with us tomorrow. Would be a shame if you slept the day away
-
4 points
-
4 points@ronwh @prondzy @Shynon there goes the neighborhood...
-
3 pointsI just sold a 1972 raider 10 tractor and mower that I restored about 2 years ago because I need more space. I ended up with the other guys tractor and cash in the deal. I ended up with a 1967 1277 automatic with mower running but running a little rough. So much for having more room. Not sure if I'm going to sell this one or not. I can't break my addiction 🤣
-
3 pointsWe Know, she always does all of the work! Beautiful scenery up there.
-
3 pointsPileated woodpecker makes a noise like you hear in a Tarzan movie.They don't seem to care if they are upside down or right side up.
-
3 points
-
3 pointsSurprised you didn’t stumble onto Julie Andrews playing guitar and singing. 😂 great pictures Eric 👍🏻
-
3 points
-
3 pointsSo you got rid of one and gained another plus cash...... you don’t need help, you need a bigger garage. Carry on.
-
3 pointsI came into your thread, because I wanted to know if I could help. Heck...your doing just fine. You just needed a little change of scenery.
-
3 points
-
3 points
-
3 pointsEven though there are some entertaining comments here, the mounting and dismounting is one of the many contributing factors that led to the demise of the classic Wheel Horse. We were a dealer years ago and we lost more than one sale from unfriendly way to get on and off of these tractors. The tractor is designed for a young nimble individual with total disregard for anyone with limited motion or physical abilities. Their fine when you buy them as a young man/woman, but with a tractor that last 30 years all the sudden the individual is older too and getting on and off is now a challenge. Kinda like getting a adult off and on a Big Wheel kids tricycle. A scary real real life situation took place several years ago to my Dad. He was 79 at the time. He was not in the best shape physically . He was one of those stubborn depression era. WWII Vets. It was a hot day and he decided to get on a C105 8 speed. I had told him several times do not be doing that while he was home alone on the farm. Well I just had a feeling that he was gonna mow that day because of all the rain in prior days. So I headed to our farm in the late afternoon to help him mow. When I got there I found him setting on the tractor next to one of are cattle chutes. I went up to him and noticed right away he was not looking very well. I asked him what was wrong and he did not speak. I finally kick my little feeble brain in gear and ask him if he could get off the tractor. He nodded that he couldn't. I finally devised a way to list this very stout man off the tractor. After I got him inside, finally got it out of him that he had been setting there for over two hours in the hot sun and could not get off the tractor. I do believe we were lucky that day. Now a challenge getting on and off. Try getting all your winter gear on and trying to get on a 8 speed C141 with a cab on. Now that's a challenge. Getting off after siting there for a extended period of time is even a bigger challenge. I do believe I looked like a monkey #%*$'en a football. One time I actually slipped while getting off. There I half laid. One leg over the shift levers and the other slid out from under me on the ground. I did the proverbial splits. There I was hung up because my Carharts were caught and couldn't get my leg down. It was a "Americas funniest video" moment.
-
3 pointsShowers are fixed and there is a waiting line. (Background of pic 2) meanwhile, the tub rat gets a bath too.
-
3 pointsFor a 10 HP and above S/G equipped Kohler engine the NAPA 25-7345 belt works well.
-
3 pointsWith the Iola Car Show behind us, Coulter Caleb and I are getting a couple horses ready to go... Caleb had to remove the mowing clothes from JackRabbit and put on the AG’s otherwise Zach wouldn’t let him take it Once he is cleaned and ready, and GhostRider has the dust and dirt from Jim’s PD last fall cleaned up, they’ll be ready to join Vader to be loaded up. We are excited to come down and hang out with you all!
-
3 pointsFish on! Thank you so much Jim, Dan, Cindy and Ryan for the fish, slaw, beans and apple pie!
-
3 points
-
3 points
-
2 pointsLeft eye cataract removed and new lens installed this morning. Right eye scheduled In 4 weeks. Maybe I'll be able to drive at night again.
-
2 pointsAs I've mentioned before, I worked in a Ford Tractor Shop during my impressionable high school years. Seems like everyone there was a character of sorts. All sorta good small town characters. This will be a running thread that I add stories too as I'm inspired, so check back in if you see the title pop back up. Owner/Boss was a talker and a very conservative/tight old German business man. Parts-man knew his part numbers by memory but was quite a smart-alex....smarter than anyone else in the shop he thought Top Mechanic #1 He was a really good mechanic, short-thin wiry guy, when he got mad his foul mouth would light off and if was really bad large wrenches would fly across the shop and hit the shop walls with a bang. Drank too much Friday nights at the beer joint! Mechanic #2 was just a quiet hard working guy. Mechanic #3 talked with a bad studder, not the sharpest guy, but did a lot of new equipment assembly and general mechanical PAINT Shop Old Guy he had a bit of a foul mouth, but took me under his wing and always told me to go to college and "not to be like all the other clowns that worked there". Delivery Truck Driver Mid-Twenties young guy that got teased about having to make late afternoon deliveries to neighboring towns....had a girl friend in every town. drove the BIG 11/2 ton truck with goose-neck trailer Office Lady A sweet lady that keep everyone's time, part charges and job work orders straight I left off Me High School Shop Flunky - worked afternoons and summers, steam cleaning filthy tractors, helping whoever hollered.. git your *!#* over here and hold this, backup (small) delivery repaired lawn tractors Shop Manager Poor guy that ran around looking lost all day trying to keep people getting there work done and not killing each other. Customers Many that had day jobs and ran the inherited family farm after hours and many full time and many Full time Farmers and Ranchers . Good country folk and some outstanding characters among them. New Customers Houstonites buying these new 10-20 acre ranchetes Location La Grange, Tx settled by Germans, Czechs, Bohemians, all good conservative people. A little over an hours drive from Houston, which was booming in the 1970's Speaking of conservative: Whats the difference between a German and a Czech: One's got homemade sausage for supper and the other has got still has the first dollar he ever made.......I still cant figure out which one is which. 1st Story Bosses Monthly Friday Afternoon - Saturdays Challenge About once a month the boss would leave early Friday afternoon. Parts-Man would come back in the shop and holler "Boss just cleaned the cash out of the safe.... ya'll get ready for "Saturday Morning"! Then he would tell the nice office lady: you better call some customers to come pay there bills - in cash - we need some! So I believe on Sunday afternoon's the boss would drive all the country back roads in the county. He knew every tractor or piece of equipment that hadn't moved in a few many years. Prime candidates for purchase. So on these monthly Friday afternoons the Boss would drive to a corner of the County and make the rounds of the areas' Friday evening social gathering places aka local Beer Joints. With pockets full of cash he would buy rounds of beer and socialize. As the evening wore on I can just hear: Hey ol Joe, you haven't used that Ford 8N up on the fence row in a few (many many) years, how about fifty bucks cash for it. Hey ol Al, you haven't used that Ford 9N and plow under the chicken house in awhile, how about a hundred bucks cash right now for it. Boss goes to next area beer joint and repeats Boss goes to next area beer joint and repeats Saturday Morning 8am Boss to Shop Crew (to be continued this evening)
-
2 pointsKinda makes me think about a man named. Euall Gibbons ! Remember the grape nuts commercials? Ever eat a pine cone? Many parts are edible!! 🤪
-
2 points
-
2 points
-
2 points
-
2 points
-
2 pointsCarb. cleaning, new fuel lines and filter wold be a good start. And Sparky types faster than me...
-
2 pointsMany moons ago I bought a fresh rebuilt engine from a guy I worked with and dropped it in my truck. I didn't change out the plug wires on it when I got it because they were newer than the ones I had on the old engine, but right away it ran like crap, blew black smoke on heavy accel, and missed at idle. After a month I gave up on it and figured it would break for real eventually, and started messing with other stuff on it. One day I was laying over the fender adjusting a power steering hose while it was running and brushed the coil wire and got bit. Ran to the garage, grabbed the oil coil wire, and BAM, fixed.
-
2 pointsI don’t see anything wrong with that little guy! Both yours and @rmaynard’s are sweet machines! I’d be proud to own either one, or even better, both!!
-
2 pointsHard to turn down that little beauty. If you have to downsize, that one is worth keeping, even if you have to get rid of another to make room. Good side-trip to the memorial. I have to get there some day. Jim
-
2 pointsI just bought one yesterday from OReilly's auto parts for $12, they usually have the one for mags too. Have also seen them at Advance - probably other parts stores ... NAPA, etc
-
2 pointsThose Trains..... @Shynon I’ll listen to Bear toot his horn all day if those trains would give it a rest at night!
-
2 pointsRest in peace! Lol! The definition of electrocution is being killed by electrical shock. Yes, I had to be a smart-aleck. If it runs at all I can't see the coil or plug wire being the culprit. It's not lean if its puffing black smoke! Have you had the carb apart lately?
-
2 points
-
2 pointsI've done it before with great success... just keep turning the rag to a clean area before you reapply the carb cleaner. Then, like I said...quick applications, don't rub in one spot to long, getting the area too "hot" with the carb cleaner.
-
2 pointsHere you go Eric...see if you can figure what this super old but common inline engine is from...
-
2 pointsLot of empty pie jars. Looks like them cups are getting a workout.