pat32rf
Veteran Member
One secret was using a 3' section of 3/4" pipe as a handle for you to hold while your helper ran the trigger.
Haven't you guys heard of baling wire??
Where is your American Farmer spirit!!
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Just as the bit is about to break through drive a tapered punch in to finish the hole and a large percent of the wrist twisting will be avoided.
Wooden gates my father made were sort of hinged without any hinges. They would slide or swing by setting 2 posts off set a little with a couple of short 2x4s across the posts and the gate rails rested on the 2 sets of 2x4s. The gate closed at a slight angle but things weren't built for looks in the early 1900s.Excuse my ramblings.....
We never had a "hung" gate. Everything was dragged on the ground. Mostly wooden gates built from native lumber sawn 1/6. As a kid, they were a load.
Went and stayed with my Uncle Ray for a month or so in Northern Iowa. He didn't have a gate that wasn't hinged. Most of his gates had an ingenious latch mechanism with a bumper in the middle of the gate. They were hung so they would always swing shut. Bump it with the tractor and it unlatched and swung open. Drive thru. Gate swung shut and latched. I thought my Uncle Ray was a "GOD".![]()