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-   -   It's In the Air (https://parkerguns.org/forums/showthread.php?t=2120)

John Dallas 07-13-2010 07:40 AM

Canola is grown for its seed, and the resulting oil extracted from the seed (canola oil) Your wife probably cooks with it. It's also called Rape seed (no idea why). We used to plant the stuff in a pheasant flight pen at our dog club. When we released the birds into it, they ate every leaf and stem down to the the stalks.

Jack Cronkhite 07-13-2010 10:24 AM

Calvin: What John said. Hadn't noticed there was a second page.

Canola is the yellow flowered crop those bucks are standing in. It can get quite tall as you can see the deer are standing and the crop is to their shoulders. The yellow flowers give way to seed pods. The pods become quite long and filled with small seeds around the size of #6 shot. That is the crop to be harvested. The plant stems are thick and the combine is set fairly high, leaving a stubble that is tough to walk through for the dogs, as it pokes them in the chest and without good hunting pants your legs below the knee can take a beating. (Pheasants love the canola too, but they do not live in this particular area). The canola seeds are pressed for their oil, which is sold in the same grocery aisle as olive oil, corn oil, sunflower oil etc. It is a healthy edible oil, which can replace butter or margarine in a favorite recipe. Canola is the new name for rape seed.

The hay side of things was straight forward alfalfa, done up in the large round bales. I had never been involved in farming but when he injured his back, the only healthy person left was his 90 year old father - still farming and healthy as a horse. Once they determined I could actually drive a tractor, I was set loose with the large bale wagon with instructions on operating its hydraulics and picking up 8 bales and bringing them to the spot chosen for stacking. I was having a hoot until I forgot the first instruction for the wagon. Once two are loaded, a pusher is engaged to move them towards the rear. First instruction - don't forget to bring the pusher forward before loading another bale. Well I ended up with the pusher sitting between the last bale added and the ones pushed back. He just laughed and pulled it off with his front end bucket. Beers on me that day. All in all an enjoyable experience for a "city slicker". It did give me a new appreciation of what is behind the sites we see in rural agricultural areas. I'll be getting another tractor fix in August, so I guess he got over it - or enjoys free beers.

Cheers,
Jack

calvin humburg 07-13-2010 10:42 PM

Jack,
you did well. I would probably of busted something on and had to go to the shop and fix it. We farmer ranchers never say to much about goof ups because we could top you on brain farts I am the king!:banghead: thanks ch

Francis Morin 07-14-2010 12:07 AM

Fixing Busted Farm Equipment - huum
 
What kind of arc welder and welding rod do you use for that, Cal? 95% of the farmers I know (and I know a lot) have a Lincoln red buzz box- either the older 180 or the later 220 amp output- will operate on 220 60 amp stove current- the older ones with the copper windings are the best- IMO:bigbye::bigbye:

calvin humburg 07-14-2010 07:05 AM

Yup red lincoln ac with hard to start 6011. few years back Dad bought a genarator welder ac dc it welds like a dream but you have to start it so I mostly use ol red. also got some blue rod that starts easy and welds nice. theres a true master in town I go to if its serious.

Francis Morin 07-14-2010 09:18 AM

Hard to start 6011?
 
6011 is basic 6010 pipe rod- but stabilized to run on AC- 6010 (Lincoln 5P) and 7010 (Lincoln HYP- we called it "Hippie Rod" will only run on DC reverse polarity- 6011 will run on AC, also DC reverse and straight-

If you are having trouble starting an arc- first make sure you have a good clean area for the ground on the metal- grind off the paint, grease, cow poop- and check your leads (both ground clamp and stinger)- also make sure the brass teeth in the stinger are clean and free of slag and crud- keep the rod clean and dry, wet or rusted welding rod- no good- then watch for one of the three most common mistakes rookies make in SMAW (1) too "cold" a setting on the machine- AC rods require more amp. for their dia. than comparable DC reverse rods- but AC has a great advantage- no magnetic arc blow- (2) too fast a travel speed, undercut usually is the dead giveaway to that, along with bead shape after slag removal (3) too wide a 'weave" pattern-better to make many interlocking passes than try to do a one shot 'cover pass'

Save some money here- "Blue" rods?? use Lincoln 308-16L stainless rod instead- I've even weldedcast iron with it--
:bigbye:


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