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Peter Hendra wrote in
: As the winters are mild in God's own we never used silos but stored bailed hay in open sided barns, grew feed crops for "break feeding" in the winter such as green maize, I've spread manure across snow behind the tractor when it was -40F on a COLD winter's morning. We had a canvas tarp on both sides of the old John Deere's engine compartment so the "cooling" air from the fan behind the radiator would blow in your face to keep your hands from freezing to the steering wheel. The tractor I drove was of WW2 vintage when gasoline was strictly rationed. It ran on kerosene, not gasoline, even though it had spark plugs. To start it, you built a fire under the carburetter (Did I still spell that right in Queen's English?) and boiled the kerosene to vaporize it for consumption before the exhaust manifold was hot enough to keep it boiling when the engine was hot. Then, you opened both cylinder petcocks to relieve the pressure so you could rock the big flywheel back and forth, finally building up enough momentum in the heavy flywheel to shove it over the TDC of the piston, praying THIS time was a charm and it would fire! After several tries, she'd come to life making an awful racket with fire spewing out those petcocks until you got around to quickly close them and raise the compression back up to ?? 5:1??...hee hee. Once started, it would be left running all day until you were completely done with it and parked it back INSIDE the barn with the WARM cows to keep it from freezing solid until spring...ready to start it at 5AM once the milking was almost done. If the power went down, we also had a leather belt-driven alternator, about 8KW, that would run off the old John Deere's outer clutch housing, which spun the belt (and anything else that caught it) when you engaged the big clutch lever, even in neutral. When the snow brought the power lines down, that tractor powered the whole farm for a week, 24 hours a day pulling on that belt. I can still hear that rhythmic John Deere 2-cylinder thumping, 50 years later....(c; I'm pushing 62 in January. Just like the rest of the "almost Altzheimers" patients, I can remember that tractor.....Now, if I could just remember where the damned truck keys are located....(c; Larry -- |
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