Nearly went over.

   / Nearly went over. #82  
Loops probably make it convenient to pick, but makes your loader and center of gravity high, and you experienced the results. Is it possible to lift sacks with forks from bottom?

As for (removed), I can稚 understand 50% of what he痴 trying to say, the rest is ok I guess, but it痴 just easier to skip over than putting in the effort trying to decipher. Plus I had a grandfather that died at the Siege of Louisbourg (1758) kicking those Arcadians out of Nova Scotia down into the swamps. So hearing those marbled mouth echos kind of hits a sensitive spot, though it might be time to let the grudge go?

Have you toured the fort at Louisbourg?
It is a wonderfully interesting place.
Only 20% reconstructed, but quite amazing.
 
   / Nearly went over.
  • Thread Starter
#83  
Loops probably make it convenient to pick, but makes your loader and center of gravity high, and you experienced the results. Is it possible to lift sacks with forks from bottom?

I replied to this but for whatever reason it did not load:
Don't have forks only hay spikes and with my operator skills would most likely punch two holes in the bag, because of the ramp on the trailer with strips across (grip for loading/unloading horses) dragging off is not an option, the feed store load with a forklift from the top, through the loops, in future I may try to unload onto a pallet then fork into the shed with the spikes.
Pity we can't buy a pallet of 30kg bags for the same price as a bulker, life would be so much simpler.
 
   / Nearly went over. #85  
You mean ain't sposta test loader & hydraulics by pickin back end off ground? Lotta boys & girls around here gonna be real shocked to hear dat. Neighbor's wife got habit of usin bucket jammed in pile so she can shift middle bender back end over fer fast turn comin out of pile of frozen manure.

Bucket comes down fast as machine protection system. You don't use it machine generally tips back on tires easy enough. Let oil drain back past rings and you good to go.

(removed) is not commenting on unlearned skirt wearing individuals making insulting comments toward (removed). Dey need to complete potty training before dey run big keyboards in violation of Policy as clearly stated by Board Admin just recently. (removed) not even commenting on screwin some people took in so called college and will pay for next 20 years. I am sure der post grad Degree in basket weaving will earn dem great income superior to swamp boy who don't owe a cent as dey stare at screen in 8 x 8 cell.. Do wish dey had sufficient manhood to complain direct to (removed) and attach picture of lady who gestated dem 10 months before dey born preferably in ******. (removed) did get around in his younger days and knew a good number of wimmen. Dey probably got too high Estrogen from public water.

Me personally, I ain't mad at how the (removed)-man does TBN, and I will also say that the clapback he wrote up there made me lolz pretty darned good.
 
   / Nearly went over. #86  
I'm personally impressed with how well people from all around the world communicate so well in the (if I recall correctly, required) English language on this forum - people from Croatia, Portugal, China, and even Australia! (hint - that was a joke at the end there)

I personally don't expect to see someone deliberately make their posts harder to read, and as someone who's done a lot of editing in the past, it got to me enough that I just got hit "ignore" - even if he's an expert in some area (presumably other than his dialect), there're enough other experts here who make an effort to share their knowledge without making it into performance.
 
   / Nearly went over. #87  
The wheel weights and loaded tires do nothing to transfer the weight of the load from the front axle. The front axle remains the fulcrum. This results in the wear and tear of the front axle. It also stress the front tires which results in the tire coming off the rim due to an overload.

Ballast on the rear of the tractor will make the rear axle act as the fulcrum. At this point the larger stronger non-steering axle can hold the weight. The steer axle will now be lighter thus reducing wear and tear as well as reducing the possibility of damage to overloaded front tires.

The weight added to the rear axle allows the tractor to pick up more of a load. However it does not allow the stress of the load to be transferred from the front axle to the rear axle.

A semi truck is setting on a scale and the front axle is to heavy. You can add all the weight you want to the rear axle and the front axle will remain to heavy. Move the 5th wheel behind the rear axle, making the rear axle the fulcrum, and the weight will lighten on the front axle.

This should be made a sticky!
I bought my Kubota in 2015 and had the tires filled before delivery.
I didn’t know much then(and still probably don’t).
The thought was the weighted tires would help offset the FEL.
As time passed, I too learned that the weighted tires were more for traction than counterbalance.

This is a very good explanation of the difference of the effect of weights at the rear axle centerline versus being behind the axle.
 
   / Nearly went over. #88  
I put ballast in my tires mainly for traction. I find that my hydraulics fail before I lift something too heavy for the tractor.

I think I will throw my oar in the water on a fellow poster and the rest of you as well. You guys roasting (removed) should all remember that to the best of my knowledge there are no doctors of English here. Almost every post I have ever read in these forums requires me to mentally correct spelling and grammar as I read the post.
People who live in glass houses shouldn't throw stones. 'Nuff said.
 
   / Nearly went over. #89  
There's a difference between doing the best you can with the communications skills you have, and deliberately faking an entire "persona" in the name of "performance art" or whatever excuse strikes their fancy in the moment.

There's enough fakers and posers across the internet as it is. We don't need to tolerate that garbage here. It's not cute, funny, entertaining or necessary. And it sure as h#ll doesn't make him "original".

"Oh look, a totally fake person on the internet. How original"... Said no one, ever.
 
   / Nearly went over. #90  
There's a difference between doing the best you can with the communications skills you have, and deliberately faking an entire "persona" in the name of "performance art" or whatever excuse strikes their fancy in the moment.

There's enough fakers and posers across the internet as it is. We don't need to tolerate that garbage here. It's not cute, funny, entertaining or necessary. And it sure as h#ll doesn't make him "original".

"Oh look, a totally fake person on the internet. How original"... Said no one, ever.

Agreed 100 percent. If he was doing the best he could I wouldn’t say a word. But he’s intentionally doing it.
 
   / Nearly went over. #91  
Agreed 100 percent. If he was doing the best he could I wouldn’t say a word. But he’s intentionally doing it.

Neither would I, I assure you. It's not about "different people", it's about fraudsters and trolls.
 
   / Nearly went over. #92  
Agreed 100 percent. If he was doing the best he could I wouldn稚 say a word. But he痴 intentionally doing it.

He IS doing the "best he can"!
His is a bit off from the true Cajun dialect, but it is all about the concept.
 
   / Nearly went over. #93  
There's a difference between doing the best you can with the communications skills you have, and deliberately faking an entire "persona" in the name of "performance art" or whatever excuse strikes their fancy in the moment.

There's enough fakers and posers across the internet as it is. We don't need to tolerate that garbage here. It's not cute, funny, entertaining or necessary. And it sure as h#ll doesn't make him "original".

"Oh look, a totally fake person on the internet. How original"... Said no one, ever.

He is who he is though. I find translating his posts annoying so don't do it. Yet I'm starting to find it equally annoying when people go off on a tangent complaining about his writing style. There are certain people who I skip over for various reasons, but try not to comment about it overly much. I will admit that often it's my loss.
I am sure there are also members here who ignore me... that's their privilege.
 
   / Nearly went over. #94  
He IS doing the "best he can"!
His is a bit off from the true Cajun dialect, but it is all about the concept.

Sounds like maybe you didn't get a chance to see this thread he started, 2010, before the fakery started:

https://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/welding/167793-gloves-welding.html?highlight=

And I quote his opening post in the thread, verbatim:

---------------------------

I been looking into this welding thing for a while now, and luckily I have a neighbor Harrison who is quite a welder. He has a torch thing and some kind of arc welder calls a stick machine, and one called a mig machne, and he even has this mig machine he just recently got that runs from a rechargable battery. Now right now Harrison's on vacation visiting his second son's family in Arkansas, but when he gets back he's going to start teaching me welding.

Thing is I want to be prepared, I mean the man is going out of his way to teach me, and using his machines and cornsumables whatever they are, so I figure it's just right for me to be prepared to learn when he goes to teaching me. To that end I went over to the school and tried buying one of the welding books from back when they taught welding, only to learn they won't sell the books even though they no longer use them. I tell you I got a little riled over that, and got a whole lot more riled when not a single one of them school employees was anything near helpful. Good lord they got that dang school set up like a prison now, you gotta know who you want to talk to before the guard at the door will even let you in. How did I know who I wanted to talk to. Took the better part of 2 hours before the guard let me in to go talk to some fellow in the office. No wonder the kids don't learn in thse places.

Well, as I was saying, I want to be prepared, so I'm thinking I need some good welding gloves. Harrison has several pair and from what I've seen, he seems to swithc gloves doing different jobs of welding. I know I probably should have asked before he left, but I didn't so I'm hopeing you fellows know something about gloves and welding here.
Now I also have what could almost be described as a fear of electricity, and most of them welding machines seem to be electric, even the battery driven one. Just always seems to me a ounce of precaution beats the snott out of a visit to the Emergency Room over to the hospital, so I'm wondering if I should get rubber gloves like them linemen fellows wear when they ride them fancy boom trucks. I've talked to a few of them fellows a time or two when the wife's sister worked there, and they say them gloves are good for thousands of volts. Now how many volts does a welder have? Would them rubber gloves be sufficient and would they be a good idea?
Of course them lineman gloves are a bit bulky, and I do have small hands, so they just might be too much if a welder don't have thousands of volts. That being the case might be I could get by with them rubber dishwashing gloves. They'd fit my hands better being that they make em for wimmenfolk hands.

What do you fellows think?
Am I being overly cautious?


-----------------

End quote.

Notice any differences in communication styles? "(removed)" typed all of that, presumably all by himself.

There are more. Many more. But you get the point. Look them up yourself, or don't.
 
   / Nearly went over. #95  
Sounds like maybe you didn't get a chance to see this thread he started, 2010, before the fakery started:

https://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/welding/167793-gloves-welding.html?highlight=

And I quote his opening post in the thread, verbatim:

---------------------------

I been looking into this welding thing for a while now, and luckily I have a neighbor Harrison who is quite a welder. He has a torch thing and some kind of arc welder calls a stick machine, and one called a mig machne, and he even has this mig machine he just recently got that runs from a rechargable battery. Now right now Harrison's on vacation visiting his second son's family in Arkansas, but when he gets back he's going to start teaching me welding.

Thing is I want to be prepared, I mean the man is going out of his way to teach me, and using his machines and cornsumables whatever they are, so I figure it's just right for me to be prepared to learn when he goes to teaching me. To that end I went over to the school and tried buying one of the welding books from back when they taught welding, only to learn they won't sell the books even though they no longer use them. I tell you I got a little riled over that, and got a whole lot more riled when not a single one of them school employees was anything near helpful. Good lord they got that dang school set up like a prison now, you gotta know who you want to talk to before the guard at the door will even let you in. How did I know who I wanted to talk to. Took the better part of 2 hours before the guard let me in to go talk to some fellow in the office. No wonder the kids don't learn in thse places.

Well, as I was saying, I want to be prepared, so I'm thinking I need some good welding gloves. Harrison has several pair and from what I've seen, he seems to swithc gloves doing different jobs of welding. I know I probably should have asked before he left, but I didn't so I'm hopeing you fellows know something about gloves and welding here.
Now I also have what could almost be described as a fear of electricity, and most of them welding machines seem to be electric, even the battery driven one. Just always seems to me a ounce of precaution beats the snott out of a visit to the Emergency Room over to the hospital, so I'm wondering if I should get rubber gloves like them linemen fellows wear when they ride them fancy boom trucks. I've talked to a few of them fellows a time or two when the wife's sister worked there, and they say them gloves are good for thousands of volts. Now how many volts does a welder have? Would them rubber gloves be sufficient and would they be a good idea?
Of course them lineman gloves are a bit bulky, and I do have small hands, so they just might be too much if a welder don't have thousands of volts. That being the case might be I could get by with them rubber dishwashing gloves. They'd fit my hands better being that they make em for wimmenfolk hands.

What do you fellows think?
Am I being overly cautious?


-----------------

End quote.

Notice any differences in communication styles? "(removed)" typed all of that, presumably all by himself.

There are more. Many more. But you get the point. Look them up yourself, or don't.

I don't quite understand why TBN of 2010 must be compared to today.
The TBN post dates I have been reading recently were from 2020, and 2021.
I consider 2010 TBN info to be ancient history.
 
   / Nearly went over. #96  
Sounds like (removed) is living rent free in a lot of heads around here.

I think the block feature would work better if it blocked a particular person 100%. I blocked someone about a month ago and I just had to take a peek when he posted in a thread I was viewing.

Anyway, this person wasn’t the oaf I thought he was so I unblocked him. Lol
 
   / Nearly went over. #97  
He IS doing the "best he can"!
His is a bit off from the true Cajun dialect, but it is all about the concept.

No he’s not. He could write normal 11 years ago and sometimes slips up and writes normal now. I don’t think trolling was his original intent but he’s being quite successful at it.
 
   / Nearly went over. #98  
Funny thing is how many of those complaining about (removed)'s dialect make consistent grammar and diction errors or never complain about others who do. Only (removed) seems to get them worked up. Must be just jealousy.
 
   / Nearly went over. #99  
Okay guys, I apologize, I am wrong. When he gets annoying to me I will block him.
 
   / Nearly went over. #100  
Funny thing is how many of those complaining about (removed)'s dialect make consistent grammar and diction errors or never complain about others who do. Only (removed) seems to get them worked up. Must be just jealousy.

Wow.....a very appropriate point.
Much of the grammar used on this site would not pass a 3rd grade English exam.
 

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