jollygreengiant
Well-known member
Happy Birthday!
Happy Birthday!
Happy birthday bud! Enjoy it!
Happy birthday!



'49 is a real conundrum for me. It's inexpensive to own $26/mo for agreed value coverage, and $17/yr to tag...but I've only driven it 2300ish miles since October of 2017. The math ain't mathin'.
Happy belated birthday Marc, looks like you had a great weekend enjoying it.
I was at the same point with our last Harley. I just couldn't justify owning it with as few miles I was putting on it, at least not the last few years I had it, so the thought of selling it became easier and easier.
I love the Camaro, but just don't get a chance to enjoy it as often as the wife and I would like. I keep saying I need to change that, but then I keep taking on side work and not making time to enjoy the car like I intended. I really need to reevaluate things.![]()




That's a clean looking JD tractor Marc. Hopefully it will go to a good home.
Wait, wait, wait.......did you just say you can't justify more horsepower?!? You!?!? Who are you and what did you do with Marc?
It sure looks like it'd be a nice upgrade for your place.![]()
This is Garage Journal for hell's sake, more HP doesn't need to be justified, it's a requirement.Wait, wait, wait.......did you just say you can't justify more horsepower?!? You!?!? Who are you and what did you do with Marc?
It sure looks like it'd be a nice upgrade for your place.![]()
I thought the same thing but didn't want to call him out.This is Garage Journal for hell's sake, more HP doesn't need to be justified, it's a requirement.
Marc.... you feeling okay? No to more horsepower???
Yeah, that was a ballsy comment to make on this forum Marc. Are you feeling ok?
Well...I walked into that one
Yes...I'm okay...I think, haha
For the record...my current tractor was already 10hp more and one frame size larger than I "needed"
And truth be told, I don't think the Deere will fit under the carport...no need to put foolish thoughts in the head of fool, gentlemen! AND then there is that entry price for the JD, yikes!
But if you're still worried about where my head is at, I've been researching an 8.1L swap (that's 496 cubic inches for those watching at home) for my Suburban.
Not to worry, you're only one phone call away from that carport getting raised enough that you could get that nice shiny Deere under it. I think it would be a very good fit for you, that cab with AC would keep you nice and comfortable in your harsh Kansas weather lol.
And an 8.1L swap? Why are you even debating that one? Just put it in already. That would be a fun ride.
Marc,
I'm late to the party, but I'll pile on, having more HP and a nice heated cab this winter would sure be nice pushing the white **** around.
I have to agree on the grill/headlight arrangement on the '14-'19 trucks, coming from mostly GMT 800 trucks where you can change a bulb in under a minute or a grill in 2 to a '14 that takes nearly an hour for a bulb change.
Now having an 8.1L in the Suburban, you have my vote.
JB
I didn't mind being on my tractor with the elements during the summer, but I did have the canopy/roof panel to that helped a ton. But in the winter, I did not like it, of course I'm not a fan of winter anyway.JB, the cab would be awesome for sure!
After watching a few videos at Youtube Technical College, I was not impressed with the "engineering" that GM used in that application. We put all new bulbs in, hoping that lasts until he trades for his next rig.
I want to go back to a 78 or 79 Chevy or ford truck but with fuel injection installed. maybe one day I will get to play with another truck of that age.I didn't mind being on my tractor with the elements during the summer, but I did have the canopy/roof panel to that helped a ton. But in the winter, I did not like it, of course I'm not a fan of winter anyway.
For me it was the two bolts above the frame rails that frustrated me the most. Sometimes I just want to go back to a GMT800, CCSB 2500 6.0 4x4...a man can dream I suppose.
JB
We never had either back on the farm. I think my dad viewed a tractor as a tool and not necessarily a comfortable one. Triple digit heat or single digit cold, didn't matter, either me, my dad or my brother were on one of the tractors either spreading manure, pushing snow, plowing, harrowing, cutting or bailing hay. I was envious of my friends who got to use cabbed tractors with heat and A/C.
To this day when the wife and I are driving through farm country and we see missed alfalfa stalks standing at the corners, my wife will tell me "your dad would have your ***", and I can actually still hear him. God I miss that. What I wouldn't give to hear him one more time tell me to go back and get the ones I missed. 
You guys talking about having cabs to keep the sun off in the summer and cold out in the winter crack me up. That's what hats and coats are for.We never had either back on the farm. I think my dad viewed a tractor as a tool and not necessarily a comfortable one. Triple digit heat or single digit cold, didn't matter, either me, my dad or my brother were on one of the tractors either spreading manure, pushing snow, plowing, harrowing, cutting or bailing hay. I was envious of my friends who got to use cabbed tractors with heat and A/C.
Hell, I remember spreading that sloppy manure in the late fall and early spring out of the corrals out into the fields and my dad would get pissed at me when I would disconnect the PTO on turns in the field because I didn't want to get hit by flying ****. He'd tell me to keep the augers and conveyor going until it was empty, period. Yuck, I hated spreading manure. I would much rather have been my brother or dad on the loader in the corral loading up the manure spreader.
In the summer when bailing hay, that rocking motion of the plunger would almost rock me to sleep. I can think of a couple of times that I caught myself on a turn before I missed it. And don't even get me started about cutting hay. If I left anything standing at a turn, my dad would chew my *** and tell me I'm being wasteful. I tried to make a game out of the corners seeing how far I could go past the turn before I had to cut the steering and cutter brake to swing the swather back to just grab those last few stalks of alfalfa that were standing before I'd miss anything.To this day when the wife and I are driving through farm country and we see missed alfalfa stalks standing at the corners, my wife will tell me "your dad would have your ***", and I can actually still hear him. God I miss that. What I wouldn't give to hear him one more time tell me to go back and get the ones I missed.
![]()
Well, I remember working in the carports repairing all the family vehicles in the gravel driveway or in the stickers, or as some call them goat heads or sand burrs, covered yards while on my back getting those stickers buried in my back because I slid off the cardboard I had placed down.
Now look at us working in climate-controlled garages with lifts.
I will admit that current society has made us soft since we can now make task more comfortable a lot easier then back in the days. What I would give to have these portable fans and fancy digging equipment back in the days when I used to have to dig fire bunkers and trenches in the oil field pastures with a shovel in the hot West Texas triple digit heat wave with no shade, which to us was just another normal day.
I know the feeling. If I can't fix it standing up in the driveway, I will push a dead car into the garage before I work on it.Agreed Cody. Hell, I will postpone jobs or shuffle things around to avoid having to use jackstands these days but 20+ years ago it was nothing to have a car on jackstands in the shop and another outside getting work done, and I was just thankful my tools were inside the shop. Now I refuse to work on anything outside and if I can't fit it inside the shop, it can wait until I can.![]()
After we finished the fence we were moving some equipment into one of his other barns and discovered he had a auger for the tractor, we asked why we didn't use that to plant the post he said it was good for us...or unsafe, whatever. 
Can I ask how well the Ghostshield sealer and Densifer worked out?
Would you use it again?
Thanks
Thanks.
I followed your truck build over on the 67-72 fourm.
I have a thread over there for the build or most of the build of my 50 5 window.




Sounds like a nice weekend Marc. I don't know what it is, but making Sunday dinner and letting it cook all day making the house smell good, is something that I really crave these days. My wife put a roast on yesterday complete with potatoes, carrots and onions and by late morning the house smelled so great. We went on a walk early afternoon as we had such nice weather, as soon as we opened the back door of the house the smell hit me like a brick and my mouth instantly began to water.
Next weekend it is supposed to be cold and wet and I asked the wife if she'd put a soup or stew on for Sunday dinner. Already looking forward to it.![]()
Mike, I use the crockpot A LOT, always fun to come home to dinner 90% done, and as you said, a house smelling wonderful!