[AT] OT: Flashback - Early Farmers Building County Roads

H. L. Staples hlstaples at mcloudteleco.com
Fri Jan 27 12:30:58 PST 2006


Larry it isn't practical for most of us, but you can buy three point blades
that can be hydraulically controlled about any way you like.

 http://makeashorterlink.com/?P23E43A8C

Take a look if you like. scroll all the way down.

H. L. 


 
-------Original Message-------
 
From: Larry D. Goss
Date: 01/27/06 14:10:51
To: 'Antique tractor email discussion group'
Subject: RE: [AT] OT: Flashback - Early Farmers Building County Roads
 
And of course the problem with the design of the current 3-point
attachments is that you can't adjust the cut on them "on the fly".
That's why people have trouble getting them to work right while moving
forward.
 
Larry
 
-----Original Message-----
From: at-bounces at lists.antique-tractor.com
[mailto:at-bounces at lists.antique-tractor.com] On Behalf Of Ronald L.
Cook
Sent: Friday, January 27, 2006 10:21 AM
To: Antique tractor email discussion group
Subject: RE: [AT] OT: Flashback - Early Farmers Building County Roads
 
Larry,
         You have described the whole thing exactly as I remember it.  I
 
was too young to run the horse drawn slip, but I watched.  Not an easy
operation.  My Granddad replaced his with a Dearborn or maybe Ferguson
slip
that went on his 9N.  By the 50's, everyone but my Dad seemed to have a
Tumble Bug.  You can still find a Tumble Bug occasionally on a farm
sale,
but not often.  All the Sears equipment is fast becoming very scarce.
 
Ron Cook
Salix, IA
>The first image at the site Walt mentions shows an item similar to what
>I thought was originally asked about on this thread.  That's only the
>second one I remember seeing that had a double tree on it though.  What
>I remember seeing in use back in the 40's was narrower, had two handles
>(for one man operation) and was set up for a single horse or mule.  My
>grandfather used one of the non-patented slip scoops to excavate the
>basement under the farmhouse in Colorado in 1905 with a mule.  They
were
>dangerous because you really needed three hands to operate one.  You
>adjusted the tilt with both hands on the handles.  That meant that you
>had to buckle the reins together and sling them over one shoulder or
>around your neck.  That was OK as long as the harness didn't break.  We
>borrowed George Gilleff's slip scoop and one of his Belgians to do some
>leveling prior to adding to the barn.  Dad made my brothers and me work
>as a team with one on the handles and another on the reins because if
>something happened to the hitch or the harness you could end up dead
>real quick.
>
>I drive by TSC and see that they have recent incarnations of that tool
>for sale that are set up for three-point operation.
>
>The rotary type that Sears used to sell was always a tractor-drawn
piece
>of equipment and I think its actual name was Tumble Bug.
>
>JM2CW
>
>Larry
 
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