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Messages - vinsond

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76
'round the pot-bellied stove / Western Ohio Update
« on: June 05, 2011, 11:56:34 AM »
Hi Gene, looks like you might have a couple days of good weather to work with--hope you get your hay in while the dry weather holds.  Yesterday was dry and sunny here in Dayton except for a brief thunderstorm that rolled through mid-morning, literally out of the blue, and knocked the power out for a while, and another that rolled through around ten pm.  My route to work takes me past some nearby fields that the farmer managed to get planted between rains a couple weeks ago, and the corn is now looking pretty good everywhere except the next-to-lowest spots--where nothing came up at all.   The lowest areas didn't even get planted, just bypassed on planting day since they were so wet.

Dean

77
ATIS General Tractor Discussion / Pulling the dogwood stump
« on: June 05, 2011, 09:53:39 AM »
Hi Paul.  I didn't get any action shots of the honeysuckle stumps, but here's the pile of stumps after I knocked the dirt off them... :-)

Dean


78
ATIS General Tractor Discussion / Pulling the dogwood stump
« on: June 05, 2011, 08:58:04 AM »
I mentioned this in a post on the email list... in a case of substantial overkill, I used the Super M last evening to pull the stump of a dead dogwood tree in my back yard.  My neighbor and his kids were on hand to watch, and he took this photo.  Kind of neat how the chain is caught in mid-bounce.

Dean Vinson
Dayton, Ohio
http://www.vinsonfarm.net


79
'round the pot-bellied stove / Big Building Move
« on: January 13, 2011, 08:31:39 PM »
A-mazing.  I can get my head around figuring out how to lift and pull such a structure, but how to keep it from tipping... seems like the slightest slope in the road could be disastrous.  Gotta hand it to those folks.

Dean

80
'round the pot-bellied stove / Hey, I'm On Google Earth!
« on: December 14, 2010, 05:00:38 PM »
Hi Ralph.  I took a look but don't see your truck or combine... maybe I need to click on a different view or layer or something?   Still pretty cool to be able to browse across the landscape, though.

Dean Vinson
Dayton, Ohio
http://www.vinsonfarm.net

81
'round the pot-bellied stove / Christmas surprise
« on: December 10, 2010, 12:35:40 PM »
I haven't been active much on the list this year, either this one or the email list, but I do like to check in from time to time.  The email list is familiar and easy.  This one, like any other web-based forum, requires me to take the time to visit the website--and consequently I don't often do it.  Not that it's hard or anything, it's just that life is busy and before I know it another week or month has gone by and I haven't logged in.   Same thing happens with some other hobby forums in which I participate--my activity level rises and falls in cycles, and lately I haven't been doing much on any of them.  Nor have I gotten the Super M out recently, and now cold weather has snuck up on us.  It's still a fine-looking machine and warms my heart every time I go in or out of the garage, but I haven't had anything to post about it since the tractor show in Xenia last fall.  (It was good to see you then, Gene.)  

On the activity front, I'm happy to report that my son returns home from college this evening for winter break, and he seems to be enjoying it and doing very well, really feeling like he's in the right place.  My daughter is still high-school age but looking forward to graduation in a couple years--she's not much of a cold-weather fan and hopes to go to school out in Arizona, where she was born and where her grandmother still lives.  We'll see--that's still a few years away.  I also have a kitchen renovation project to finish, which has been stuck on 99% done for several months now... doggone those last little pieces of trim!

Given the subject line of "Christmas Surprise," I'll close with my Christmas card photo from last year, which some of you will recall.  That nice old workhorse M in the photo has gone on to a new owner to make way for the Super M, but I still miss it.

Good tidings, gentlemen--

Dean Vinson
Dayton, Ohio


82
ATIS General Tractor Discussion / Hi speed road gear
« on: September 04, 2010, 07:28:27 AM »
Thanks, gentlemen.  Charlie, no code letters on the serial tag other than a "J" suffix, which I think means a Rockford clutch.  I think the high gear must be after-market, M&W maybe--I know they made a lot of different things, although I haven't previously heard of a high road gear.  And Paul, no worries about being careful--I don't plan to get it up to that speed often if ever, just too easy to bounce myself right off the tractor if I hit a bump or something.  This test was one thing, short duration in ideal conditions on a known smooth road, but just cruising at that speed would be something else.   Years ago I drove my other Super M to a local tractor show, taking the back roads, and 15 mph or so was more than plenty at times.  This new tractor seems to be in like-new condition, steering tight as can be, good brakes, etc, but still, 27 mph doesn't leave much room to recover if things go wrong.

I also wonder about the practicality of such a high gear to begin with, in a non-synchronized transmission.  I don't think I could start out pulling much of a load, so I wonder what the high-speed transport capability really served.

In any case, I'm still happy as a clam with this tractor.  Maybe in a few years when I find a more rural setting I can use the high-speed gear to drive over there...and then use the lower gears for more satisfying work like mowing, fenceline maintenance, hauling kids around in the wagon, etc.  :-)

Dean

83
ATIS General Tractor Discussion / Hi speed road gear
« on: September 02, 2010, 05:53:17 PM »
The Super M I bought earlier this year has always felt to me like it has a fast road gear, faster than the M and the other Super M I'd previously owned, which in my memory would do about 17 mph in 5th.  

I'd been planning to have my son follow me in the car sometime and give me a sanity check from his speedometer, but this week the local sheriff has one of those radar-activated speed signs by the side of the road just a little ways from my house.  So as soon as I got home this evening I got the SM out and took a couple of trips past the sign, full throttle.  28 mph on the slight downgrade, 26 mph coming back up hill, call it 27 on level ground.  

Still feels way fast to me for one of these tractors, and out of concern for safety and wear and tear I won't make a practice of it.  But I'm curious about the high gear to begin with.  I know you could get low-low speed gears, but was there a high road gear setup from an aftermarket supplier or something?

Dean Vinson
Dayton, Ohio
http://www.vinsonfarm.net

p.s.  Since this is the web forum rather than the list, here's a photo!


84
ATIS General Tractor Discussion / Thanksgiving Day tractor chores
« on: December 01, 2008, 06:35:08 PM »
Yes, that is one fine homestead and no mistake.  If there's a place on earth I'd rather be, I can't think of it just now.  I keep hoping to get back out in the country myself, but it'll be hard to find as nice a place.  And yes, the natural gas has been pretty much free all these years, although the oil company guys tell my dad it could quit at any time given changes in the water level or something like that.  But it's been good so far.

Just a trace of snow left up there as of Thanksgiving Day, and none at all down here in Dayton.  Some light flurries during the day today but still nothing sticking.  ;)

Dean

85
ATIS General Tractor Discussion / Thanksgiving Day tractor chores
« on: November 30, 2008, 06:06:59 PM »
Hi George.  Dad actually just got done cutting up and splitting the big tree we'd cut down last Thanksgiving, so didn't need the firewood.  He has a wood stove in part of the house but mostly burns natural gas from an old oil well on the property... never produces any oil to speak of but that gas has been coming up out of the ground for more than 20 years now.  

Dean

86
ATIS General Tractor Discussion / Thanksgiving Day tractor chores
« on: November 30, 2008, 02:41:47 PM »
My kids and I drove up to my dad's farm in northeast Ohio for Thanksgiving, and had a fine time.  In what seems to be becoming a Thanksgiving tradition for us, we cut down a dead tree that had become a nuisance along one of the farm lanes, and then had a great bonfire.  

Big old poplar I think, maybe three feet in diameter and 60 feet high.  To increase the chances that the tree would fall downhill as we wanted, and not onto on the nearby fenceline or back uphill across the lane itself, we tied a very long rope around it up high, notched the trunk on the side we wanted to fall towards, and then my dad used his Allis D-19 to gradually tension the rope as my brother cut the trunk on the uphill side and my son drove in some wedges.  I watched from several feet away so I could gauge which way the tree was leaning and warn my brother and son off if things started to go bad, and used some pre-arranged arm signals to tell my dad when to pull more on the rope.  All went well, and the tree came down with a mighty crash, much to the delight of assorted nephews and nieces watching from a safe distance.  

Dad used the D-19 to drag over some big limbs that had fallen off other nearby trees over the past several months, and we had a bonfire that's probably still got a lot of heat left in it now, three days later.  Tending that fire over the next day or two was a lot of fun, and we wished we had some more vacation days to stay up there.

Motivated by all the fun, once home I got the M out and pulled down the broken-off upper trunk of a tree that had fallen but gotten hung up in the woods behind my house.  It had been out there since the big post-Ike windstorm a couple months ago but I just hadn't gotten around to it.  The crash coming down wasn't near the big one up at the farm but it felt good to do some work with the M, and once again I'm wishing there was more.

Couple of pictures attached...

Dean Vinson
Dayton, Ohio
http://www.vinsonfarm.net

87
John Deere / Green and yellow in an unexpected place
« on: March 12, 2008, 05:37:34 PM »
No political intent here, but I had to chuckle at the mention of John Deere in this military news article, which I received today at work.  

Dean Vinson
Dayton, Ohio

---------------------------------
From: Air Force Materiel Command News Service
Sent: Wednesday, March 12, 2008 1:27 PM
Subject: Air Force Materiel Command News Service for March 12, 2008

Five years later, it’s still known as ‘Mother of All Bombs’

AFMCNS13 — March 12, 2008

By Staff Sgt. Stacia Zachary
96th Air Base Wing Public Affairs

EGLIN AIR FORCE BASE, Fla. (AFMCNS) — What's worse than unleashing on society the wrath of the largest non-nuclear bomb yet to be made? Letting the world know it's out there and ready to be used at any moment.

The GBU-43/B Massive Ordnance Air Blast bomb is a 21,600 pound, GPS-guided munition with precision guidance and architecture to be delivered accurately to enemy forces with the main intention of permanently disabling them. The goal was to put pressure on then-Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein to cease and desist or the United States would not only have the means but use them against the unpopular tyrant.

"The goal is to have the pressure be so great that Saddam Hussein cooperates," said then Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld in a March 2003 interview. "Short of that - an unwillingness to cooperate - the goal is to have the capabilities of the coalition so clear and so obvious that there is an enormous disincentive for the Iraqi military to fight against the coalition."

While the history books have well-documented the day of MOAB's final day of testing - March 11, 2003 at 1 p.m. a huge mushroom cloud could be seen from 20 miles away - much of the design and ramp up for producing it have been little talked about.

The MOAB, nicknamed the Mother of All Bombs, was rapidly produced in-house at the Air Force Research Laboratory Munitions Directorate here. It started out simply as an idea and quickly made its way to the lab for prototype production. The request came during Thanksgiving 2002 and was originally designed as a replacement for the BLU-82 Daisy Cutter. One unique characteristic would later define the MOAB from the Daisy Cutter: it was satellite guided or a "smart bomb."

"We were asked to generate a prototype and we were asked to work out the bugs so that it might evolve into something that could be produced (for the warfighter)," said Robert Hammack, AFRL Munitions Directorate Munitions Fabrication Facility (or Model Factory) team chief.

When the model shop was first tasked with the bringing the idea to reality, the lead model maker, Joseph Fellenz, made many of the parts himself and helped solve the fabrication issue associated with bringing the prototype to a full-scale operational munition. Also on the project was Al Weimorts, the late creator of the BLU-82.

"Every technical glitch or roadblock we encountered was worked out by Al," Mr. Hammack said. "Our team was filled with engineers and other people with deeply important skill sets necessary to pull this off."

The reason this project remains so significant to the model shop workers is it was the first project they were not only asked to focus on solely proving theories but implementing them into reality.

"The shop was filled with such excitement and the morale immediately went up," Mr. Hammack said. "The enthusiasm went through the roof and we went on two 10-hour shifts a day until the project was completed."

The model shop crew was given carte blanch to get the prototype built and that included selecting the people they needed to get the project rolling.

"When this project came to us, everyone immediately came on board," Mr. Hammack said. "Many people willingly came out of retirement for the chance to work on MOAB because it was a chance to work on something different -- a cradle-to-grave project."

Unlike any project before or since, the model shop was solely responsible for coordinating the logistics on material acquirement and engineering the new munition. It was designed, built, tested and refined all in one location.

After each weapon was assembled, it was individually loaded onto a rented flatbed truck, secured and covered by tarps. The munition was then transported to the Naval Ammunition Depot at McAllister, Okla., where it was filled with explosive materials and painted and catalogued for the inventory.

"A little known fact is why the MOAB is green,” said Mr. Hammack. "Since we were in such a rush to get the weapon into our inventory to send over to aid the war effort, resources were limited. The weekend the MOAB arrived, the only color available in the amount we needed was John Deere green."

The 16-hour expedition was a sensitive undertaking -- one which saw the drivers making the trip in one long haul stopping only for gas.

"Once I was stopped by a Texas State Trooper who was curious about our cargo and wanted a peek," he said. "Apparently he had stopped one of our drivers the week before and had some idea of what we were carrying."

Once the television networks broadcast the detonation, the American public became very supportive of the drivers' long hauls.

"We started getting thumbs up by passersby on the highway," Mr. Hammack remembered.

Five years later, the event is remembered more with a sense of awe and sense of unequaled accomplishment.

"At the time we didn't think too much of what we were doing other than our job and aiding in the war effort," he said. "After we delivered the weapons, it soon became clear the magnitude of our efforts -- what we had actually helped create."

Patriots come in all shapes and sizes. Their contributions, however understated at the time, can send ripples felt throughout the world -- even if the contribution is the largest non-nuclear weapon in the Air Force inventory yet to be used.

"The most amazing thing about MOAB is it's the most powerful bomb ever built and has done its job -- deterring the enemy -- simply because they know about it," Mr. Hammack said.

The first MOAB was delivered into the operational theater for the Global War on Terror April 1, 2003. To date, none have been used in combat.

The GBU-43/B Massive Ordnance Air Blast bomb sits in theater of the Global War on Terror waiting to be used should it become necessary. The MOAB is also called "The Mother of all Bombs" by scientists and the community alike. (Courtesy photo)

88
'round the pot-bellied stove / Croatian heritage?
« on: December 29, 2007, 05:32:53 AM »
An old friend of mine is a first-generation American of Croatian descent.  I'd like to get her something special, a gift that would have some meaning in her parents' country, perhaps the way an upright horseshoe or a four-leaf clover are considered good luck here.  Or perhaps a certain flower that's especially symbolic of Croatia, or a traditional craft item made there?  Would anyone on the list have any information that might help?

(By the way, one of my favorite photos of this woman is of her driving a Farmall M, so you *know* she's something special... :-)

Thank you,

Dean Vinson

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