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Michael Miller
sweetcorn70 at hotmail.com
Wed Nov 10 08:39:36 PST 2004
Farmer,
THANK YOU
I have some tractor type stuff going on. Hopefully tomorow I am bringing
home my new 234 mounted corn picker. I am really excited. First I need to
get the MTA ready, though, slide the wheels the rest of the way out, fix the
lights so I can pick at night when its frozen, mount up my super snoot,
change the oil again and the hytran also, drop the drawbar, and mount the
brackets.
I can't wait to get another camera and get some pictures of this picker. It
is a little dinged up, but has picked around 500 acres total, and never been
left outside. All the bearings I could get to seemed to be good.
The subframe and lift that he had was the rockshaft style which uses the
Fast Hitch to raise and lower it. I was looking at getting a fast hitch and
putting on the SMTA, because my uncle has some implements that I could have
used on it too. A look at the going price for them in my area($450+ for a
good tight one, $400 for a used one) had me looking to regroup. The seller
knew of someone with a picker they were parting out, and it just happened to
have the other type of lift.
He originally wanted $500 for the picker, but his grandson is using the barn
its stored in for a shop for his lawncare business and he wants it moved.
He talked the owner into selling it for $200 if he could find someone local
who'd use it and not scrap it. Considering it weighs over 2 tons according
to the book, that is what it'd bring as scrap. That subframe cost me,
better than half the price of the picker. It has 2- 2 1/2"x8" hydraulic
cylinders, tho, so as long as those are good I got a good deal. I haven't
seen that yet, hopefully it's ok. I have 3 hydraulic implements and only
one cylinder, so I figure I can take those cylinders off the frame when its
stored for offseason and then I wont have to fool with switching one
cylinder from plow to disk to planter and back again.
I know of a friend with another 234 that he doesn't use, he got a good deal
on aNI mounted picker and a SMTA that he leaves the frame on all the time.
He said the 234 was too heavy to use on the SMTA, and it took a day to get
the 706 ready to mount the picker. He told me that he'd give me his if I
wanted it, but I haven't yet decided if I am going to take it. I don't
really have a place to store it.
I know of another real nice picker with 4010 brackets, along with a sheller.
If I were to hit the lottery tomorow, I'd buy a nice 826 Hydro and a 4010
or maybe move up to a 4020 powershift and restore both, along with a
picker/husking bed for one and a picker/sheller for the other. I think that
would be a BIG hit at shows. I think I am going to show the picker I am
buying in its "as found" state at our local show, regardless. Need to
build a tractor pulling hitch that can stay in place with the subframe
mounted tho.......Just drop the picker off in 20 minutes and hook onto the
sled:-)
The only problem I can see with wanting to show a picker is the fact that
its tall(have to take the elevator off to trailer it) and HEAVY. Between
the tractor and the picker, the SMTA rig will tip the scales at better than
5 ton. That isn't something to haul behind a 1/2 ton pickup with a V-6. I
Don't think I can legally haul it behind my heavy 3/4 ton even. I would
really like to show it at the RP show that is coming up in Mansfield I think
in '05, which is about an hour from my house.
On another note, I sold my dad my '51 Farmall M and a feed grinder.
Hopefully I'll get my Farmall A tore the rest of the way apart so I can get
the machine work done, then put it back together. That would be a nice
project to get done. Its been apart about a year.
Thats enough rambling for now. If anyone has any stories about picking corn
with ANY picker, I'd love to hear them.
Mike
>From: Robinson <robinson at svs.net>
>Reply-To: Antique tractor email discussion group
><at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
>To: Antique tractor email discussion group <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
>Subject: [AT] Back
>Date: Wed, 10 Nov 2004 09:59:41 -0500
>
> SNIP
>
> OK, I'm done. Is anybody doing anything tractor-wise?
>
>
>
>
>"farmer"
>
>I am the list owner of the following public email lists:
>Allis_Chalmers
>Budget_muzzleloading
>Cheap-Shelters
>Cheapcomputer
>Cheapcritters
>CheapPower
>FrugalFunWoodworking
>FrugalRuralLiving
>NoNonsenseHorse
>Smallfarmshop
>truck-blab
>
>Some are pretty quiet, some are very busy. Member counts range from 32 to
>570.
>All are on Yahoo Groups and can be found with a search at:
><http://groups.yahoo.com>
>
>Also a newly created one called "100 Acre Farming" targeting folks who
>operate farms from about 75 acres to 150 acres. Those are not iron clad
>numbers. Midwestern farms in this class require a full line of farm
>equipment unlike much smaller farms but have only a little in common with
>the much larger farms common today.
>
>
>Francis Robinson
>Central Indiana, USA
>robinson at svs.net
>
>
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