Henro:
<font color="blue">I never really considered those two-wheelled thingees tractors...but now do... </font>
Well, good. I just posted a couple pics in the thread on 2 wheel tractors buying/using of the seed bed produced in one pass by a rotary plow on a 2 wheeler. You asked (if I recall) in another post about the difference between the so-called "garden tractors" and 2 wheel tractors. The pic isn't very good quality (I took it from literature), but you can see a nice raised bed, all fluffed up and ready to seed. There's another photo of a 2 wheel tractor baling hay on a 20% slope (and it can do it on much steeper slopes). For a person with smaller acreage who needs a do anything (except heavy lifting, although I guess you could put a scoop on one - Gravely had scoops) these are real tractors.
<font color="blue">Most people do pretty much know what a tractor is. </font>
But if they disagree on what a tractor is, it helps to have a definition, doesn't it? (Remember the bet thread?)
I repeat my challenge. Most people like sitting on their tractors (I do anyway). Go out, sit on your tractor, have a cig, or coffee, or whatever, and reflect on what makes your machine just like the old steam traction engines from the late 1800s, the Happy Farmer tractor from the 1910s, the Fordson or Waterloo Boy from the early 1920s, the Farmalls of the late 1920s, the 9ns of the late 1930s, etc, etc. Your machine is a direct descentant of those machines. What makes them unique? What traits do they have in common that other machines do not?
JEH
<font color="blue">I never really considered those two-wheelled thingees tractors...but now do... </font>
Well, good. I just posted a couple pics in the thread on 2 wheel tractors buying/using of the seed bed produced in one pass by a rotary plow on a 2 wheeler. You asked (if I recall) in another post about the difference between the so-called "garden tractors" and 2 wheel tractors. The pic isn't very good quality (I took it from literature), but you can see a nice raised bed, all fluffed up and ready to seed. There's another photo of a 2 wheel tractor baling hay on a 20% slope (and it can do it on much steeper slopes). For a person with smaller acreage who needs a do anything (except heavy lifting, although I guess you could put a scoop on one - Gravely had scoops) these are real tractors.
<font color="blue">Most people do pretty much know what a tractor is. </font>
But if they disagree on what a tractor is, it helps to have a definition, doesn't it? (Remember the bet thread?)
I repeat my challenge. Most people like sitting on their tractors (I do anyway). Go out, sit on your tractor, have a cig, or coffee, or whatever, and reflect on what makes your machine just like the old steam traction engines from the late 1800s, the Happy Farmer tractor from the 1910s, the Fordson or Waterloo Boy from the early 1920s, the Farmalls of the late 1920s, the 9ns of the late 1930s, etc, etc. Your machine is a direct descentant of those machines. What makes them unique? What traits do they have in common that other machines do not?
JEH