JD 140H3, 1970, Case 224, 1975,
Massey Ferguson 12, 1976,
LGT 165 Ford, 1980, and Jacobsen, painted Ford blue, 1987.
Noel
Post your line up,
Nevermind. I forgot that I attached the splitter valve for the mid-lift to the fender. I also have the under-seat rear PTO and those hardlines attached to the fender.ssmewing wrote: ↑Mon Nov 25, 2024 1:59 pm I sold the 4016PS, which was for everything but mowing grass.
I have a cab. I have a newer, more horse 4020PS. I have gone two winters without a cab. I just could not bring myself to drill up original shiny fenders. Then I realized that I did not need to drill the nice fenders. I have old fenders that are already rusty and have holes drilled in them. I can just swap the fenders.
I live in Saginaw, MI., which is not in the northern snow belt. We get snow, sometimes. The last two years, one year I cleared snow twice, and last year it was three times. So, I did not suffer much without a cab on. Also, my driveway is stone. I like to drive on the snow to create a snow shield for the stone.
Still, for me, the time is split with removing the snow being variable, sometimes. I do more getting ready time than I do removing snow. I have electric seat motors for the rotation and the deflector angle. I have quick connects on them. But I have to mount and dismount the motors every season since I lack enough storage.
Me too but my fenders came predrilled. Same person drilled the side of my dash for the cab wiring. Wish they hadn't drilled a good 1/2"+ hole.