As a equipment mechanic who has worked on evetything from 50 year old machiens to ones made only three or four years ago, all I can say is you hit the nail on the head. A post below talks about learning to live with it. While that's true right now, we also need to let our government, the dealers, and everyone else involved that we are tired of all the BS, and that they need to simplify. The problem is all the bells and whistles are great, and 'everyone' loves bells and whistles......until the bells quit ringing, and the whistles stop tooting....Then 'everyone' raises all sorts of he11 and fusses about how all of the things that they thought they wanted, that makes their life so cushy, is now costing them out the a$$ to repair between parts, labor, downtime, etc, etc, etc.
In the end people are going to have to learn to decide which they want more. Do they want a machine that's simple and reliable, or one that does everything from keeping their butt warm to blowing a cool breeze on them while isolating them completely from evething outside, and beyond that doing pretty much everything but wiping their a$$. Once they decide that and let the Mfgs, and our governmental nannys know that we ruleand this is what we want, things just might start to turn around. Until that time.......we just have to contiune to live with all of the overly engineered, overly complex designs being engineered into equipment to do even the most simple tasks such as turning on a light........It's gotten to te point tha Rube Goldburg's zany designs have nothing on the designs of eqipment today.
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Today's Featured Article - Talk of the Town: The Saga of Grandpa's Tractor - by The following saga is from the Tractor Talk Discussion Forum. Someone. The saga starts with the following message: Hey guys I have a decision to make. I know what you all will probably suggest and it will probably agree with me way down inside, but here it is. I have a picture blown up and framed in my "tractor room" of a Farmall M. It was my Grandpa's tractor, of which whom I never got to meet. He froze to death getting this tractor out of the barn to pull a truck out of the ditch before I was born. Anyway my dad and aunt had to sell it at the auction,
... [Read Article]
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