Finding new life in an old combine
Monday, August 21, 2017
A restored combine is the result of a partnership between a regional Case IH dealership and a local 4-H group
By Jennifer Jackson
When Craig Smith, co-owner of O'Niel's Farm Equipment Ltd. in Binbrook, told Robert Meier, Territory Sales Manager for central and eastern Ontario for Case IH, about a 1930s A-6 Case combine that was up for sale at auction, it wasn't long before the pair set a plan in place for the piece of equipment.
The combine needed to be restored and Meier knew the right team for the job: the local 4-H machinery club.
Along with Smith and Clint Burrows, leader of the 4-H Machinery Club in Hamilton-Wentworth County, Meier hopes the completed project will showcase the hard work and dedication demonstrated by the 4-H members, as well as the agricultural industry's history and progression.
Here, Better Farming provides further highlights from the restoration process.
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Smith found the combine for sale online in an auction. An individual involved with the project snapped a photo of the 1930s combine at the start of its journey, leaving the grounds of the Grey Roots Museum & Archives.
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The combine sat untouched over the winter of 2016/2017, while Meier and Smith started to plan the combine's restoration. The pull-type combine features a galvanized metal body, a six-foot-wide head and an innovative grain unloading system.
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Once the combine arrived at the farm of Clint Burrows, the Hamilton-Wentworth 4-H Machinery Club got to work. This was one of the six meetings where the members fixed, rebuilt and painted the combine.
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Photo credit: Hamilton-Wentworth County 4-H machinery club photo
The 15 4-H machinery club members range in age from nine to 21 years old. Members with all levels of skill and familiarities with machinery had ample opportunities to contribute to the project.
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Photo credit: Hamilton-Wentworth County 4-H machinery club photo
Part of the group stands for a photo after a night of hard work. The meetings each lasted for about two hours and, according to Burrows, the 4-H members are all very enthusiastic about the project.
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Photo credit: Hamilton-Wentworth County 4-H machinery club photo
The 4-H members had many opportunities for hands-on learning – the kind of learning not acquired with a computer program, says Smith – through such responsibilities as cleaning, the completion of structural work and painting. BF