[AT] New Question
magreer67
magreer67 at gmail.com
Wed Oct 30 13:17:08 PDT 2019
Cecil,You are right on the money about gas. Ethanol is in most passenger car gasoline and it WILL give you problems in small engines. I only use ethanol-free "Rec 90" gas that we can buy here and I don't have problems with these small engines. It is expensive - almost $4 a gallon. In addition to all my Stihl chainsaws, I have a Stihl brush cutter, a Stihl string trimmer, a Stihl blower, and a Stihl pole saw. Feed them right and they will work hard for you. Feed them garbage gas with ethanol, they WILL fail, it's just a matter of when.Sent from my Verizon, Samsung Galaxy smartphone
-------- Original message --------From: Cecil Bearden <crbearden at copper.net> Date: 10/30/19 3:14 PM (GMT-05:00) To: at at lists.antique-tractor.com Subject: Re: [AT] New Question
I have 3 Poulan 18in pro series saws. Bought on sale at Tractor
Supply. My Mexican friends used them to cut out 1/4 mile of
hackberry and Cedar trees grown in a fence. I had 6 chains that I
kept sharp. I stayed busy sharpening chains. Ran 2 of the saws
for 3 days 8 hrs / day hard. I can still pull those saws off the
shelf, gas them up and in 3 pulls they are running and ready to
go. I have a Stihl top handle and an Echo that I keep for
personal use, but the go-to saws are the Poulan. I had 3 survey
crews running a few years back. We had stihl, Echo, Poulan and
Red Max saws. Those Cheap Poulan Saws just kept on running. I
think the 2 biggest problems with a chain saw is a sharp chain and
keeping the carburetor dry. Never use ethanol gas, use only the
highest grade non ethanol. and run the carb dry if it is going to
set for more than a week.
Cecil
On 10/30/2019 2:00 PM, magreer67 wrote:
Wow! I run chain saws quite a bit and my
experience is nothing like that. I cut 8-10 cords of firewood a
year plus another 3-5 full days of cutting to maintain a 155
acre wood lot and some logging roads. Some of that cutting ends
up as logs I drag out to have sawed into lumber and the rest
just gets moved off the logging roads and nature eventually
reclaims it. I mostly use commercial grade Stihl saws and they
never let me down. Buy once, cry once. I have an 026 Stihl (18")
that was my Grandpa's firewood saw. Also have an 009L (14") that
gets used for trimming and days when I'm cutting grapevines all
day, an MS260 (18"), an 038 Super (24"), and an 046 Magnum (32")
I occasionally drag out if I need to cut something big. The
MS260 is the one I use most. Somewhere I still have an 028 Wood
Boss that was my first saw. I got it half worn out from a
co-worker about 30 years ago and ran it for a long time. A wrist
pin retainer clip let loose about 10 years ago and locked it up.
I have another piston and big bore cylinder for it but need to
find a new ring set and put it back together one day.
Sent from my
Verizon, Samsung Galaxy smartphone
-------- Original message --------
From: Jim Becker <mr.jebecker at gmail.com>
Date: 10/30/19 1:05 PM (GMT-05:00)
To: Antique Tractor Email Discussion Group
<at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Subject: Re: [AT] New Question
You got it half right with "chain". My vote goes for chain saw.
They are
heavy, noisy, dangerous, the exhaust is usually blowing back on
you, and
they throw saw dust everywhere. It was almost guaranteed they
would have
some sort of starting/running issue on every job. Besides all
that, they
are impossible to run left-handed. I know, some of you are going
to say "My
Xyz brand saw is great." Fine if you had good luck with one. But
there has
been somebody to say how great nearly every brand of miserable saw
I have
been around is. Maybe some are just less terrible.
I was glad we finally cut down every black locust tree on the farm
and had
to start buying fence posts.
Jim Becker
-----Original Message-----
From: Spencer Yost
Sent: Wednesday, October 30, 2019 11:38 AM
To: Antique Tractor Email Discussion Group
Subject: Re: [AT] New Question
Chain harrow. Used it during reseeding a hay field and it was
great.
Intended to use it in established pastures based on advice from a
good
friend that raised cattle. Turned out to be less than useful and
that chore
seemed to be a fuel burner without benefits.
Still have it though....
Spencer
Sent from my iPhone
> On Oct 30, 2019, at 11:13 AM, szabelski at wildblue.net wrote:
>
> We don’t have a really large garden, but we never had an
issue using
> spring tooth harrows like you indicate.
>
> I have three sets that I would gang together, two side by
side, and the
> third one centered behind them. Pulled them with our 50 Cub.
I got them
> free, along with some other free implements when I purchased
our Cub.
>
> I would set them for a shallow cut and make my first pass.
Then I would
> set them about half way and make a second pass. Then a third
pass with
> them set all the way down. I would drag them in multiple
directions to
> break up the clay as much as possible.
>
> I no longer use them since I started to amend the soil and
went out and
> brought a three point rototiller that I put on the 42 H.
>
> We have semi heavy to heavy clay in our area, but it never
clogged the
> rototiller to the point where I had to stop and clean it out.
The
> rototiller will have some clay packed in the housing, but I
just clean it
> out when I’m done.
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Greg Hass <ghass at m3isp.com>
> To: at at lists.antique-tractor.com
> Sent: Tue, 29 Oct 2019 23:05:47 -0400 (EDT)
> Subject: [AT] New Question
>
> Have been tossing this around for quite a while and would
like list
> opinions from those who have farmed or been around the farm.
What
> machines or implements are you glad to see disappear or be
used much
> less than before? While I could list several the one that
stands out in
> my mind by far is the spring tooth harrow. While still being
used some,
> and while they do a real good job of leveling, they were also
a real
> pain in the a$$. Growing up into my 20's thats all we had and
all they
> did was plug. We had probably the worst brand ever made, a
Case
> harrow. It had 2 runners between every section and if it saw
a
> cornstalk 50 feet away it would start plugging before you got
there. In
> either corn ground or sod the results were the same. We
always worked
> our fields what we called double kitty corner. In a 20 acre
field, we
> would have to stop at all four corners and unplug the harrow
by hand. We
> used a IH Super C and 3 section harrow (8 foot) and if not
plowing we
> had a four section we pulled with an IH 350. In later years
we bought an
> IH 401 harrow and 3 section equaled 12 feet and pulled it
with an IH
> 504. We though we had the world by the tail as it plugged
much less but
> that was soon to end. That harrow did not have replaceable
ends; the
> next years model did, but my dad being stupidly cheap would
not get new
> teeth but cut an extra notch for the handle allowing it to
dig deeper
> but with the tooth being shorter, cut the clearance making it
plug as
> bad as the old Case harrow. For the past many years we have
used a
> field cultivator which almost never plugs and I have no
desire to go
> back to a spring tooth harrow.
> Greg Hass
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