I am amazed at how well the Stover grinder works. The model 32 like I have was made from 1883 till 1915, so it is really old, yet works great. Vintage stuff is the best !
A scratch grinder. Never really saw one. Have seen and used the cornmeal was bought in sheller. Don’t know who made it. Windmills were not real popular in the South. We always bough scratch from the mill and did not grind it, ourselves. It came in 50# bags. They might have ground it in earlier years but by the time I came along it was purchased, locally. Every town had a mill. Corn meal was bought in a peck and not in pounds. I am pretty sure my Grand Pa had a corn grinder, somewhere, but I do not remember seeing one or using one. If he had one it would be a big one driven by his A Johnny, justlike his buck saw.
The feed grinder I have was made from 1883 to 1915. They fell out of favor as mills became more prevalent and ground feed was easy to find. Large grinders used on farms were run by tractors or farm engines.
@@mrobsoletesvintagehomestea9156 my grandfather had a Model A John DEERE THAT HE KEPT TO RUN BELT DRIVEN STUFF, LIKE HIS BUCK SAW. He would get a load of slabs from the lumber yard and cut them up with the buck saw. This fed the wood stove and the woo heaters. That they had at the old place. He had a new place built in the mid 1950’s and it was gas heated and had an electric range. Grandmother complained because all of her recipes were for the wood stove. I never thought her biscuits were as good cooked in the electric stove.
I believe that there is a market for chainsaw themed shirts. A few have done them in the past, but due to personal strife in their lives have quit. Go for it !
Another Amazing Video From Mr&Mrs Obsolete 😊😲😀 Making Vintage Stay Alive 😊
Keeping vintage alive is our mission !
Your videos make me look forwards to Tuesdays
Same here J.T.
Thanks.
Wow never seen one that big that is awesome THANK YOU FOR THE VIDEO
Thanks for watching!
I love that old grinder. Sure beats the one I have on my KitchenAid 👍🏻
I am amazed at how well the Stover grinder works. The model 32 like I have was made from 1883 till 1915, so it is really old, yet works great. Vintage stuff is the best !
A scratch grinder. Never really saw one. Have seen and used the cornmeal was bought in sheller. Don’t know who made it. Windmills were not real popular in the South. We always bough scratch from the mill and did not grind it, ourselves. It came in 50# bags. They might have ground it in earlier years but by the time I came along it was purchased, locally. Every town had a mill. Corn meal was bought in a peck and not in pounds. I am pretty sure my Grand Pa had a corn grinder, somewhere, but I do not remember seeing one or using one. If he had one it would be a big one driven by his A Johnny, justlike his buck saw.
The feed grinder I have was made from 1883 to 1915. They fell out of favor as mills became more prevalent and ground feed was easy to find. Large grinders used on farms were run by tractors or farm engines.
@@mrobsoletesvintagehomestea9156 my grandfather had a Model A John DEERE THAT HE KEPT TO RUN BELT DRIVEN STUFF, LIKE HIS BUCK SAW. He would get a load of slabs from the lumber yard and cut them up with the buck saw. This fed the wood stove and the woo heaters. That they had at the old place. He had a new place built in the mid 1950’s and it was gas heated and had an electric range. Grandmother complained because all of her recipes were for the wood stove. I never thought her biscuits were as good cooked in the electric stove.
That is a absolute very cool machine! Don't make em like that anymore! See ya next week!
The Stover grinder has withstood the test of time for sure. The model 32 I have was made from 1883 through 1915, and still works excellent.
Next video: making grits! 😄
I think I will just stick to making food for the chickens. Grits reminds me of chewing on gravel-YUCK !
Have an entire screen printing shirt operation that has laid idle . . the chainsaw hot rods have piqued interest again
I believe that there is a market for chainsaw themed shirts. A few have done them in the past, but due to personal strife in their lives have quit. Go for it !