We had 3 of these wagons. 112s. We chopped a lot of silage with these wagons. Trouble free! We had 1 that was roofless. Picked a lot of ear corn with it
Did your wagons have the control box that reached out to the tractor? Since I watched the video, I wondered how close that control gets to the tractor when pulling through a ditch.
@@ikonseesmrno7300 We had the control box on the side. We used to break the lever off all the time, and would put a vice grip on it, until we welded the control arm back on.
I have a 125 on a 6x6 I still use as a backup feed truck! Reliable
We had 3 of these wagons. 112s. We chopped a lot of silage with these wagons. Trouble free! We had 1 that was roofless. Picked a lot of ear corn with it
Did your wagons have the control box that reached out to the tractor? Since I watched the video, I wondered how close that control gets to the tractor when pulling through a ditch.
@@ikonseesmrno7300 We had the control box on the side. We used to break the lever off all the time, and would put a vice grip on it, until we welded the control arm back on.
Thanks for sharing!
I have a 68 Auger Wagon that my dad bought new
Have you used the auger wagon to mix grain, as shown in the video? Curious if that's really that effective.
@@ikonseesmrno7300
I mix protien in feed and it does a pretty good job
My grandpa had a Chuck wagon or two
Still have and use 4 Chuckwagons as well as a 68 augerwagon.
How have they held up? Are some parts still available?
I'm glad to see seven the 1962 models go out being worked in the fields and farms today