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#c farmall
greywuff · 1 year
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thicc-astronaut · 2 years
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Really long post where I rant about farm equipment! Enter at your peril!
So I know a lot of real-life gearheads are into the Cars films due to many characters having robust and in-depth designs based on numerous historically important road vehicles, but I don’t see anyone online talking about the tractors. I’m going to assume that’s just because all the city-slickers who watch animated films don’t have much experience around farm equipment, and all the farmers who watch animated films are too busy farming to talk about them online.
The Tractors seem to based on International Harvester’s McCormick Farmall brand of tractors. The shape of the grille, the exhaust pipe, the two skinny tiny little wheels on a stalk in the front, even the look of the word “chewall” on the side really look like it, I think especially like this Farmall Super C, thought the Farmall B and Farmall H look pretty similar 
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The Farmall was one of the first successful brands of tractor. It was the first mass-produced tractor that was widely available to most farms in America, and it was also very cheap. It is also sometimes regarded as the first true general-purpose farm equipment, versatile enough to replace the horse entirely. 
The open design let the farmer see everything around and under the tractor,  and the narrow front wheels allowed for easy and precise turning.You can almost think of them as having the same impact on agricultural machinery that the Ford Model A had on the automobile: they made it cheap, affordable, dependable, and available to the masses.
I would also like to share this picture I found of what I think is a Farmall 560? Anyways I thought it was neat because the red paint had faded to almost exactly the shade of pink we see on the Tractors in Radiator Springs, and the rust spots only add to the pattern
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sweeptakeskeys · 2 years
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CASE IH Holiday Giveaway 2022
CASE IH Holiday Giveaway 2022
Enter to CASE IH Holiday Giveaway sponsored by Farm Journal Inc. in which you have a chance to Win a Farmall C Pedal Tractor. The interested participate wants to play CASE Holiday Giveaway needs to visit Link to complete and submit your entry form with valid details. CASE IH Holiday Giveaway 2022 Eligibility criteria for Farmjournal Giveaway 2022: Open to legal residents of fifty (50) United…
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vuhaoblog · 2 years
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- Latest Steiger/Quadtrac models with AFS Connect™ and enhanced rear hitch - Preview of new Puma 260 CVXDrive flagship - Upgraded Vestrum CVXDrive tractors - Farmall A and Farmall C series developments - New Quantum Stage V line-up CaseIH_UK_IRE https://t.co/Hn5p0RTNPh
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afx8010 · 4 years
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Red tail hawk on a Farmall C !
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greywuff · 2 years
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deeanputri · 3 years
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$65.0 Only! ~ Farmall Super C WF with umbrella Prestige Collection 1/16 scale #14689, Diecast Farm Vehicles, Farm Diecast Models, Scale Model Tractors BUY HERE! #DiecastFarmVehicles, #FarmDiecastModels, #ScaleModelTractors,
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afx8010 · 6 years
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1950 C Farmall
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greywuff · 2 years
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Putting Mr Gurney to work.
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louparts · 3 years
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[SALE!] $14.5 Farmall IHC original antique tractor engine crank A,B,C CLICK HERE!
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26point3andbeyond · 4 years
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Exploring the Northwoods, as we do, taking stock of the various flora & fauna, as we do, reflecting on the meaning of life & relativity, as Einstein did & we do, we happened upon a tractor! Shay said, it’s a Farmall. Bella said, Why? Shay said, the crank shaft, it’s obvious. Bella said, I think it’s an Allis Chalmers. Shay said, Why? Bella said, b/c this metal bar is a remnant of the hand clutch that allowed the driver to stop the tractor w/out shutting off the pto, that’s why. Shay said, Oh, ok. I haven’t the foggiest but I guess they’ve been paying attention when people are talking tractors. Lots of orange in the woods. #burntorange apricot, Amber, ginger, rust, & more - colors of joyful melancholy 😐 #diamondlkphotography #diamondlkgirls #autumnorange #exploremn #oldtractor #futurefarmers #creeklife #blacknwhite #fallvibes #warmcolors #joyfulmelancholy (at Minnesota) https://www.instagram.com/p/CGnjcgKHn-g/?igshid=nvv2ztkey75n
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farmale · 4 years
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💉💊O mecanismo de ação do metotrexato é dose-dependente O metotrexato tem sido usado há muito tempo como tratamento contra o câncer. Quando altas doses são usadas, o metotrexato interfere no metabolismo do ácido fólico resultando em diminuição da proliferação celular. No entanto, quando é usado em doenças autoinflamatórias e doenças imunomediadas, como a doença inflamatória intestinal (DII), o metotrexato é dado em doses mais baixas que oferecem diferentes efeitos farmacológicos. Sabemos que o medicamento é imunossupressor e que tem sido usado para aumentar a apoptose (ou seja, morte celular programada precoce) em células T. Também afeta a síntese de citocinas e mediadores proinflamatórios. Portanto, a dose baixa de metotrexato provavelmente tem um efeito multimodalidade e deve ser considerada como um agente não-alvo, inespecífico, anti-inflamatório ou imunomodulador. 📍 Fonte: ROSH, Joel R. The Current Role of Methotrexate in Patients With Inflammatory Bowel Disease. Gastroenterology & Hepatology, Janeiro 2020 – Volume 16, Issue 1. 📝 Revisor: @doutor_okinga 🎥 youtube.com/c/DoutorOkinga 👍SIGA: ✅instagram.com/farmaleachou ✅instagram.com/alemdii 📌O Farmale é o blog oficial da #ALEMDII 🌐www.farmale.com.br 🌐www.alemdii.org.br #farmaleachoufarmacia #BlogOficialALEMDII #metotrexato #mtx #empoderarpacientes #crohn #doençadecrohn #doencadecrohn #retocolite #coliteulcerativa #retocoliteulcerativa #farmacologia #mecanismodeacao #dosedependente #farmacia
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petrogol · 4 years
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. РAKELO UTTO FLUID E SAE 10W-30. Многофункциональное минеральное масло для гидравлического управления, гидравлических и гидростатических трансмиссий, дифференциалов, главных передач и мостов машин, а также с мокрыми тормозами / сцеплениями. Уровни производительности: API GL-4, Allison C4, Caterpillar TO-2, Case New Holland CNH MAT 3505/3510/3525/3526, Case MS 1204/6/7/9, Fiat Hesston AF-87, Ford FNHA-2-C-200/C201, M2CA-C, Ford M2C-41/43/48B,C/ 53A,B/77A/92A/142A/143/159A, Ford M2C86A/ B/C, Ford M2C134A/D, IHC B-5 / B-6 International Harvester, International Farmall JIC 143/145, JCMAS HK P-041/042, John Deere J14A,C / JTD 303 / J121A J20A 7 J20B / J20C / J20D, KUBOTA UDT, Massey Ferguson CMS M1135 / M1138 / M1141 / M1143 / M1145, New Holland 82948718 / NH410B, NH420A, Oliver Type 55/Type 5J/Q1802, Parker (Denison UTTO) HF-1/HF-2, Renk Doromat 87.3.874A7B, Sauer Sunstrand/Danfoss Hydrostatic Trans Fluid, Sperry Vickers/Eaton I-280-S / M2950, Steiger HTF (SEMS17001), Valtra G2-08 / G2-B10, Volvo WB 101, White Q-1705/1722/1766/1766B (UHTF)/1802/1826, White Farm (AGCO) Q-186. Покупайте только качественные фильтра и масла на www.krivbass-oil.prom.ua Мы работаем для Вас❤️👍🏻🤝 Гарантируем качество продукции🤘👍🏻 👨‍🏫Владислав Гаркуша 📱📧+380676566310 #pakelo #pakelolubricants #pakeloheroes #madeinitaly #motoroil #oil #moto #rasing #baikers #italia #verona #car #pakelooil #pakeloukraine #масло #моторноемасло #пакело #пакелоукраина #кривойрог #кривбассоил #владгаркуша #сто #моемасло #krivbassoil #фильтра #масла #смазки #krivoyrog (at Pakelo Lubricants Ukraine) https://www.instagram.com/p/CA9opL8Heyc/?igshid=18udh9r03js9j
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deeanputri · 3 years
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$65.0 Only! ~ Farmall Super C WF with umbrella Prestige Collection 1/16 scale #14689, Diecast Farm Vehicles, Farm Diecast Models, Scale Model Tractors BUY HERE! #DiecastFarmVehicles, #FarmDiecastModels, #ScaleModelTractors,
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auctiondigz · 5 years
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Tim Benoit just posted an auction on Auction Digz
https://www.auctiondigz.com/auction/pt-cruiser-collectors-tractors-broyhill-furniture-antiques-collectibles-and-firearms-estate-a-u-c-t-i-o-n/
PT Cruiser, Collectors Tractors, Broyhill Furniture, Antiques, Collectibles and Firearms Estate A U C T I O N
Saturday, October 19th at 10:00 a.m. In the event of rain, furniture will be sold in the large garage. PT Cruiser, Farmall “A” and Fordson Tractors Sell at 12:00 Noon 2008 Chrysler PT Cruiser (White) 1-Owner with only 64,400 Actual Miles, New Tires, New Battery, VIN # 3A8FY58B98T154901 Farmall “A...
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fapangel · 7 years
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MSM is spinning the proposed immigration reform as a reduction of legal immigration from the Obama era but I've been unable to find numbers of whether there was an increase during the Obama administration. Nonetheless, I do think a point based system for entry to allow for more skilled immigrant to come is overall a better move for the US rather than just a simple lottery. Your thoughts?
Before anything else, I want you to see what I saw on NBC News tonight - skip the biased article and just watch the 1 minute clip from NBC News’s August 2nd 6PM broadcast. Note Senator Dick Durbin, D-Illinois, who’s commentary I will transcribe for posterity: 
“The biggest flaw in this proposal is the notion that there are long lines of Americans waiting to pick fruit, work in hospitals, and hotels, and restaurants, and meat processing plants; exactly the opposite’s true.” 
Let me boil that statement down to its essence: “we need those spics to do the scut-work white people are too good for.” This phrase, “immigrants do jobs Americans won’t do,” is a common utterance on the Left, but it’s still shocking to see a US Senator admit to it in as many words on national TV. I know people who live in rural, poverty-stricken Red America, and you know where they work? They often work in restaurants and meat-packing plants. Not that this asshole would know - to him and Democrats like him, Hispanic immigrants are just cheap labor to maintain the lawns of their expensive homes, to bring them food at restaurant, and to do all the other scut work of society - and cheaply. There aren’t any jobs “Americans won’t do,” if you pay them what it’s worth - ever seen an episode of Dirty Jobs? But that, apparently, would “wreck the economy,” according to reliable RHINO Lindsey Graham, (whom most Republicans would like to see right behind McCain on Musk’s Mars to Stay rocket.) Good thing we’ve got all those Mexicans to do the back-breaking labor on the cheap, eh? 
It’s not just Dickface Durbin saying this - ABC News, and New York Times have also published passionate screeds attesting to the necessity of that poor underclass to maintaining our way of life. From the NYT: 
Why? Immigrant workers aren’t a “cheap labor” alternative, as so many Americans think. They are the only labor available to do many unskilled jobs, and if they were eliminated, most would not be replaced. Instead, whole sectors of the economy would shrivel, and with them, many other jobs often filled by more skilled Americans.
If the spics don’t pick our cotton for us, who will? Not those fucking Americans!
In 1960, half of all the native-born men in the U.S. labor force were high school dropouts eager to take unskilled outdoor jobs in agriculture and construction. Today, fewer than 10 percent of the native-born men in the work force lack high school diplomas. But the economy still generates plenty of unskilled jobs, and most unskilled immigrants don’t displace American workers. They fill niches — not just farmhand, but also chambermaid, busboy and others — that would otherwise go empty. And they support more skilled, more desirable jobs — foremen, accountants, waiters, chefs and more — at the businesses where they work and others in the surrounding community.
It’s almost like they knew it was a waste of time to finish high school when they could get a job paying good money down at the sawmill - but only if they started their apprenticeship now. But that world’s over and done with - having a high school degree makes you physically incapable of flipping burgers, digging ditches, or picking fruit. True story. 
Just raise the wage, you say, and an American would take the job? Not necessarily, and very unlikely if it’s a farm job. Farmers have been trying that — for decades. They raise the wage. They recruit in inner cities. They offer housing and transport and countless other benefits. Still, no one shows — or stays on the job, which is outdoors and grueling and must get done, no matter how hot or cold or otherwise unpleasant the weather.
That’s right - American farmers, already laboring in an industry with narrow profit margins, turned their backs on that vast pool of dirt-cheap, asks-no-questions labor and went to the inner city to hire Americans that’d cost them more money, instead. Nostalgia is powerful, but even if the Red South is as racist as Democrats believe, somehow I doubt lots of American farmers were journeying to the inner city and asking the predominantly black youth there if they were interested in picking cotton on their fucking farms. 
And of course, at some point, there are limits to how high a wage a grower or dairy farmer can pay before he is forced out of business by a farmer who produces the same commodity in another country, where the labor actually is cheap. 
Which we could handle easily with import/export controls, if not for those fucking free trade proponents - like most Democrats, eh? Of course that doesn’t do you any good when the cheap labor is already in the country and being used by your own domestic competitors.
But worst of all would be the jobs lost for Americans. According to economists, every farm job supports three to four others up and downstream in the local economy: from the people who make and sell fertilizer and farm machinery to those who work in trucking, food processing, grocery stores and restaurants. 
A harvest-season fruit picker isn’t a fucking farm job. A farm job is a year-round thing, and there aren’t many of them. I live in rural Michigan, a very agriculture-heavy state, and I have a pony. An actual, living, breathing pony, who eats hay, hay that we purchase from a local farmer. He and his wife run a huge farm and they run it alone, as their sons are too young to do any of the serious work. He does this via automation - the shed under which he stores the hay that we buy also shelters two massive farm tractors, three bale wagons, a combine, and various other attachments and heavy equipment. In our own barn we have a Farmall Cub and a Farmall Super C, two crop-row tractors from yesteryear. They’re about one-quarter the size of those modern New Holland tractors. In fact you can watch the size progression, from the Farmall C to the beefier Farmall H to the imposingly large Farmall M. Tractors increased in size as farms got bigger and more corporatized, and as smaller farmers had to reduce labor and increase automation to stay competitive. For those crops that aren’t harvested en-masse by combines, I’m sure we’ll find some way to pick the fruit. That Farmall Super C in my barn was owned by my great-grandfather - the 3-point implements it used to haul around his farm are still in our possession. My mother picked fruit - for a dime a bushel basket - so she could earn money to buy hay for her own pony. Somehow, they managed. Hell, I managed - I was 12 years old when I was helping my folks put up hay we cut and baled off our own property to help feed our animals. 
Arguments so facile that even someone with third-hand knowledge can see through them is one thing, but this is so obvious that the fucking Washington Post, of all places, has a relatively level-headed and informed article covering the matter that perilously resembles actual journalism. It both acknowledges the miserable conditions and low pay of the workers, and dismisses the sweeping claims of absolute economic necessity with actual numbers, provided by subject matter experts.
In absence of established economic necessity, how else are we to interpret statements like Dickface Durbins, but as endorsing class-based systems of oppression? The phrase “jobs Americans won’t do,” the NYT columnist’s equating having a high school diploma with the willingness to do unskilled labor, and Dick Durbin’s own commentary all speak to the same basic hubris: that Americans find these jobs beneath them. I have a 4 year college degree - but I’ve worked manual labor myself, and I never considered burger-flipping to be beneath my dignity. I guess the elite class, the ones that grow up in fabulously wealthy communities and adore their Nature Hikes in the National Parks but let the poor people mow their lawns on a hot day, see things differently. When you combine the Left Wing’s passionate and frequent arguments to the necessity of unskilled, underpaid immigrant labor to supporting our way of life, the inherent elitism that colors their tone and worldview of Americans who “won’t” do these jobs, and above all their unstinting efforts to inhibit the enforcement of immigration law or any initiative to halt illegal immigration, it’s impossible to see their position as anything but encouraging the formation of a permanent underclass of second-class citizens. What happens when those immigrants, or their children, get educated? Get those high school - or even college degrees - that so inhibit their willingness to work menial labor jobs? What happens to our economy then, if we have no cheap, miserably desperate people to exploit for the labor that our economy apparently depends so heavily upon? By their own logic, it would be bad for the country if those poor Hispanics ever worked their way out of the poverty ghetto. 
This is the true import of what Dickface Durbin openly stated on national prime-time television. It’s also the strongest argument I can possibly make in favor of Trump’s proposed immigration reform - it is anathema to the class-based exploitation the “progressive left,” self-anointed champions of the poor and down-trodden, argue for so passionately. 
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