It appears that plow parts are like chicken lips - none to be found. Had no idea that parts as simple as these would be so difficult to come up with. Got a Feguson "TYPE 16-A" single bottom plow that has a worn landside and rear furrow wheel has a tear in the edge. Read somewhere that someone removed their whole rear wheel assembly and replaced landside with a longer landside and it actually worked better. Not wanting to sink incredible amounts of time and money into a plow that will always have future part-getting concerns, I was wondering about using a heavy piece of angle iron, I happen to have a piece 22" long with 4" tall side on one side that I could drill mounting holes in to match old landside (which is approx. 15 1/2" long), so the only cost would be time and bolts. Does anyone see why this would not work? I do realize there would be the other side of the angle iron riding under the plow on the ground - but unless that affects the plow operation - would that be a problem? Would bolt heads not being countersunk be a problem other than looks? If this would work it would be a cheaper repair, so even if it were to wear out quicker it would not be a huge deal to fix again (not sure how angle iron metal quality compares to landside metal). Also, if anyone needs rear wheel assy I am probably going to sell that part of the plow if my repair works. Thanks in advance for any help.