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Tractor Talk Discussion Forum

I'm gonna quit looking before I find more

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IaGary

09-27-2006 04:33:15




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I told you guys at oats harvest that the combine worked when I put it away last fall so it should work know. No repair needed.

Wellll Ive worked on it two days and still got more to fix.

I rebuilt the drum on the feeder and welded a piece plate in the floor of the feeder.And put new bearings on before putting it back in.

Found a bad bearing on the spreader.

I knew the unload auger tube was thin and had a new one setting here to put on.

When I pulled the tube off the fliting was bad on the auger so I welded new fliting on the auger. And put in new bearings while it was apart.

Saw one of the belts is cracking while under the combine so its next.

And then I'm gonna quit looking before I find more problems.

It worked on oats so why did I fix all those things now.

Gary

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the tractor vet

09-27-2006 08:24:16




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 Re: I'm gonna quit looking before I find more in reply to IaGary, 09-27-2006 04:33:15  
Don't stop now get it fixed now with out the pressure and stress of harvest tryen to work on it . The way this years is going we may not have the leasure of good harvest weather and have to make the most out the time in the field . Combines are like a MISTRESS they always want and need something . But when ya can park your donkey in the seat and just run it with out a breakdown it can be a relaxing time . I realy enjoy running corn it sorta clears the cobwebs out of the mind .

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Steven@AZ

09-27-2006 07:34:02




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 Re: I'm gonna quit looking before I find more in reply to IaGary, 09-27-2006 04:33:15  
I hear ya! We had just a couple of things to fix/check over on our 1460 this summer before harvest (actually before I left to go back to work, gotta use slave labor while it's available). The more we looked at, the more we found wrong. Figured about $250 worth of repairs were needed and it would take 1/2 day...

Spent 3 full days wrenching and spent about $1200 in parts. One of the parts was the harmonic balancer on the engine (about $300 or so) and that part saved a $7,000 engine. Preventative maintenance can be frustrating sometimes, but it will save you in the long run!

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bob farrell

09-27-2006 06:07:45




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 Re: I'm gonna quit looking before I find more in reply to IaGary, 09-27-2006 04:33:15  
Seeing the picture of the combine brought back a bunch of memories. My uncle, Roy Mckee, ran a "string" of combines north to Canada, from Cashion, Oklahoma, during the 1950's. I made the harvest with him from '53-'57. A large farmer from Pine Bluff, Wyoming, John Jessen, had a GMC truck and a Massey combine (14' header) that he would bring to Cashion in early May. We'd cut in Okla. till the wheat in Kansas was ready, then head north. For road travel, we would just drive the combines onto the trucks, swinging the headers above cabs of the trucks. Seeing six or seven of these rigs, along with a pickup or two and another grain hauler pulling the kitchen/office trailer, was quite a sight.

Any of you guys remember John Jessen (about 10 miles north of Pine Bluff, Wyo.) or his dad who used to be known as "the wheat King of western Nebraska"? John primarily used TD-14 Int'l (4 or 5) and other red wheel tractors (one Oliver diesel) for the dirt work. The TD-14's pulled a contraption about 50-60 ft. wide that was called a rod-weeder. Are they still used??

All years I went (except one), I would stay with Mr. Jessen when we got through in Pine Bluff and the rest of the crew would go on north. I worked with Mr. Jessen until early September, baling straw, running the 14's rod-weeding, plowing, etc., then returned to Ok to go to school.

Thanks --- Bob Farrell

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Allan In NE

09-27-2006 06:20:25




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 Re: I'm gonna quit looking before I find more in reply to bob farrell, 09-27-2006 06:07:45  
Mornin' Bob,

Yes Sir, everybody who is anybody has a rod in these parts. 'Cept me, I guess. :>(

So, I borrowed one from a friend this year.

Dunno, maybe it is the old irrigation days in my blood or something, but I just don't like the seedbed they put down.

Next year, I'm just gonna drag a harrow behind the field cultivator.

Allan

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Nebraska Cowman

09-27-2006 04:43:00




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 Re: I'm gonna quit looking before I find more in reply to IaGary, 09-27-2006 04:33:15  
Look it over close. What you fix now will save you great grief before it self-destructs. And if your truck driver is worth a damn he will walk around the machine while you are unloading and look and listen for anything starting to go wrong.



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IaGary

09-27-2006 04:54:04




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 Re: I'm gonna quit looking before I find more in reply to Nebraska Cowman, 09-27-2006 04:43:00  
Yeah I know what you mean by the truck driver but thats me to.

Back when dad was living he ran the combine in corn and I ran it for the beans.

We both told each other and saw what it needed.

Its probably the combining time I miss working with dad the most.

Gary



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dboll

09-27-2006 06:01:37




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 Re: I'm gonna quit looking before I find more in reply to IaGary, 09-27-2006 04:54:04  
When I worked at Case axial flows would come in with + - 3000hrs and required a fair amount of parts but the guys took them home and ran them for a long time. very good machine in my opinion.



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IaGary

09-27-2006 06:16:22




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 Re: I'm gonna quit looking before I find more in reply to dboll, 09-27-2006 06:01:37  
This is my third rotary.

Bought this one with 1500 hrs,its over 2400 now.

This is the first major repair its needed.

Would like to upgrade to newer one but they seem to want to much for the lower houred ones.Imagine that.

Gary



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KRUSS

09-27-2006 06:29:00




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 Re: I'm gonna quit looking before I find more in reply to IaGary, 09-27-2006 06:16:22  
My 1680 has 2460 hrs. (1986) and it is starting to need a few repairs each year. It is going to have to do me, though as their actual cash value is low.



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