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Lead pouring supplies

Yes I guess small and big are relative terms. I agree I wouldn't mow a "lawn" with it but yard and right away "grass" areas I wouldn't hesitate.
So do you have the GPS hooked up to the steering or is just a guidance system?

Just guidance. None of my tractors are autosteer ready and I don't want to mess with replacing major parts of the steering systems. If my farm was western size, I'd feel quite differently.

I mow about 5 acres of grass on cleared bush areas with a much smaller 700 series lawn tractor. The 5210 would destroy that "lawn" (if you prefer to call it that). But I do mow weed fields, fence rows, access paths, crop stubble, and brush with it.
 
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Just guidance. None of my tractors are autosteer ready and I don't want to mess with replacing major parts of the steering systems
I thought maybe you made yourself a homemade "easy steer" attachment also. (If you are not aware of them, they do not require any replacement of the steering components and adapt to practically anything with a steering wheel). Pretty neat that made your own rtk guidance however.
 
I thought maybe you made yourself a homemade "easy steer" attachment also. (If you are not aware of them, they do not require any replacement of the steering components and adapt to practically anything with a steering wheel). Pretty neat that made your own rtk guidance however.

Yes, I am aware of the systems that turn the steering column/wheel for you. I just don't like them. I am ok with a system that tells me where to steer to instead of steering for me.

Besides, if I had autosteer, I'd prolly spend all day on this forum instead of watching where I was going.... LOL!
 
Yes, I am aware of the systems that turn the steering column/wheel for you. I just don't like them. I am ok with a system that tells me where to steer to instead of steering for me.

Besides, if I had autosteer, I'd prolly spend all day on this forum instead of watching where I was going.... LOL!
Once you've experienced the capabilities of an autosteer system compared to chasing a light bar around you'd never go back. But I imagine it might be similar to cnc machines compared to manually operated ones...they ain't for everyone and some of us like some technology but not too much. ( I still have manual roll up windows in my truck)
 
Once you've experienced the capabilities of an autosteer system compared to chasing a light bar around you'd never go back. But I imagine it might be similar to cnc machines compared to manually operated ones...they ain't for everyone and some of us like some technology but not too much. ( I still have manual roll up windows in my truck)

I don't use a light bar. I use an android tablet with a Satelite map and guidance based on a steering vector. It is much better than chasing lights.

But ya, I'm an old man who spent a large part of his career designing electronic systems to automatically do what mechanical systems did but still prefers manual over automatic.
 
When I was a kid I thought electric window were the coolest thing and we never did have them. Now my kids think my manual roll up windows in my truck are cool because electric windows are now so common.
 
Kids and grand kids are so funny.

I can't begin to count how often they tell me I'm old fashioned and need to get with the times.

Yet I was using txt before smart phones and long before kids thought it was cool, built and programmed my own pc before there were any, forgotten more than they know about how stuff works, and finally know enough to know how much I don't know.

Yet they laugh at me for using a vernier instead of the digital caliper right next to it or a balance beam instead of the digital scale on the top shelf.

I just smile. Their time really will come some day. Just not yet......
 
You remind me of a joke I saw recently. How to stop your car from being stolen. Just get a manual tranny.......
 
Kids and grand kids are so funny.

I can't begin to count how often they tell me I'm old fashioned and need to get with the times.

Yet I was using txt before smart phones and long before kids thought it was cool, built and programmed my own pc before there were any, forgotten more than they know about how stuff works, and finally know enough to know how much I don't know.

Yet they laugh at me for using a vernier instead of the digital caliper right next to it or a balance beam instead of the digital scale on the top shelf.

I just smile. Their time really will come some day. Just not yet......

Do you remember when drug stores sold TV tubes and had a tube tester?
 
Do you remember when drug stores sold TV tubes and had a tube tester?

I remember tube testers and tubes for sure. My old bosses and I argued about the merits of tubes VS transistors many times. Although I did repair tube based equipment, and even built a few kits, I didn't design anything using tubes - not that I remember anyway.

But I don't remember them being in drug stores. I remember a big cabinet with test sockets on top and shelves filled with different tubes under that. However, I can't remember where it was..... Maybe at a hardware store?

Some things I do remember though:

The day we got electricity on the home farm. Just one bulb in the front room and one in the kitchen. Oil lamps everywhere else that were not used much. I inherited my great grandparents fancy oil lamp. We still have it in the corner of our dining room.

The old party-line telephone on the wall beside the table with a crank for dialing. The women used to gather around and listen in on all the neighbour's conversations. I have that old phone now too.

Going to school in a horse drawn caboose.

The ice hut, and the root celler.

Cooking and heating on a stove fueled with dried cow pies.

Two hole outhouse.

The new well, the old well, the first well, and the barn well - all dug by hand by my grandparents. You had to prime the hand pump to get it going and lord help you if you forgot to fill the priming bucket when you were done pumping.

Weekly baths in water shared by everyone else - great grandparents first.

Fresh home made bread. Milking the cows, cream separating, and butter we churned ourselves.

Blood on my uncle's knife that meant we would be eating fresh venison.

The bread man, the milk man, and the coal man when my dad left the farm and moved us east.

Our first black and white tv.

My crystal radio.

And the list goes on.

They are great memories for sure, but let's be serious..... Nothing beats a nice knee mill or a cold toilet seat.......
 
And how could I forget the sheeny man! That guy outlived all the others!
 
Ok I admit it...I have no idea what the sheeny man is?

The sheeny man would have been the forums first member if he lived long enough. According to my mother, he was a handsome devil and all the ladies in the hood took turns spending time with him. I think he might have been @kevin.decelles great great grandfather. Might have been mine on my mother's side too...... I dunno.....

So kidding aside, the sheeny man drove through the neighbourhoods once a month or so ringing a bell. Sort of like the ice cream man's dad. He had some basic machinery equipment and repaired stuff, sharpened your knives, traded stuff, and sold everything from pots and pans to nuts, bolts and screws to snake oil and witch hazel. I remember him as a cool older guy who had travelled the world and seen everything. I know because he told me what was on the other side of the railroad tracks...... Nobody I had ever met knew that much about the world!
 
The sheeny man would have been the forums first member if he lived long enough. According to my mother, he was a handsome devil and all the ladies in the hood took turns spending time with him. I think he might have been @kevin.decelles great great grandfather. Might have been mine on my mother's side too...... I dunno.....

So kidding aside, the sheeny man drove through the neighbourhoods once a month or so ringing a bell. Sort of like the ice cream man's dad. He had some basic machinery equipment and repaired stuff, sharpened your knives, traded stuff, and sold everything from pots and pans to nuts, bolts and screws to snake oil and witch hazel. I remember him as a cool older guy who had travelled the world and seen everything. I know because he told me what was on the other side of the railroad tracks...... Nobody I had ever met knew that much about the world!
Oh. My version of the Fuller brush man I guess.
 
Ya, sort of like that. But the brush guy might have been the sheeny man too. Both (or one and the same) were well before the vacuum sales guys......
 
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