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#1
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What are the odds?
I hooked up my trailer and went the whole way across town and back and saw this when I went to unhook. What are the odds that pin stayed on and didn't fall off in the first hundred feet?
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Tim Pap's 100 Restored 108 1211 Dual Stick 1050 Pap's 100 restoration thread - http://onlycubcadets.net/forum/showthread.php?t=47965 |
#2
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My luck it would have ended up in a tire.
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2264 with 54 GT deck 1641 AKA Black Jack with a 402-E Haban Sickle bar mower JD317 dump truck BX2670 with FEL |
#3
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I had one better. I went out one morning last week, getting ready to head out on a service call. Had a cup of coffee in my hand. Forgot something, so I set my coffee cup down on the step bumper on the back of the van. Got what I was looking for. Then I took off for my service call, 30 miles away. Done the call and returned home. As I was unloading the Van, I seen my coffee cup. 60 miles round trip and the coffee cup was in the same place. Who whadda thought..??
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Roland Bedell CC Models: 100, 105, 1450, 782, (2) 784, & 2072 Buy: Made in the USA |
#4
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This has happened to me numerous times with leaving everything from electrical tape to even roll pins on the step bumper. Sometimes staying all day and not moving. I think part of it is driving style and not accelerating like a mad man.
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(2) Original, 100, 102, 124, 73, 800, #1 and #2 cart, brinly plows, disk, IH184, IH244, 1948 F Cub |
#5
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Same here Mike. Several times I set small items on the bumper of my flatbed service truck when I had it. Like Roland, drove several miles and they stayed right where I'd left them..... and I don't drive like an old man either. I don't run like I'm in a race like I used to, but I get right down the road.
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#6
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I never get that lucky, lost a lot of stuff that way.
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Up to 530 and counting... I give up updating my profile! |
#7
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Lots of people have LOL! I have found lots of wrenches, screw drivers, and all kinds of tools on the road. I found many more left under hoods of cars from previous mechanics tho. I keep them in a special bucket. Its a 5 gallon home depot bucket and its about half full.
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Cooperino 100, 104,125, 126, 2x129's, 804, 1211, 1641 |
#8
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When I was about 10, put my cigar box full of baseball cards on the bumper of my daddy's truck. There were baseball cards for 100 yards up the highway. He helped me pick them all up.
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1572, 1864 x2, 1810 x2, 1863 & GT1554(Dad's Ole Mowers), 1811,782D, 1872 x2, 782DT(Sold), 3235, 1860, 1772 with 3-point and Turbo. |
#9
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Couple weeks ago, I couldn't find my cell phone. Then I had this sick thought of maybe having left it on my step bumper of truck when I left the job site. Got lucky and found the phone among the tools in the truck the next day.
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Two 125's and a 124 all with 42" decks Plow blade #2 Cart QA36 snowthower |
#10
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Ahhh….very good question, but to answer it we need to determine the measurements of the surface it is on and some measurements of the pin. It will require some geometric probability involving area of both the pin and the triangular platform behind the hitch of the trailer. The probability would be the ratio of the 2 dimensional surface area of the pin (since it is cylindrical, rectangular regions will have to be used as an approximation) and the area of the triangular region. Once these areas are put to ratios, then the odds may be figured as "success to failure". In this case, success is area of the pin and failure is area of triangular region minus the area of the pin.
Just a guess by the size relationships in the photo would be the odds of 1:89. Cub Cadet 123
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Still don't know what I'm doing in OHIO?.....If you find me, then please point me back toward INDIANA. |
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Cub Cadet is a premium line of outdoor power equipment, established in 1961 as part of International Harvester. During the 1960s, IH initiated an entirely new line of lawn and garden equipment aimed at the owners rural homes with large yards and private gardens. There were a wide variety of Cub Cadet branded and after-market attachments available; including mowers, blades, snow blowers, front loaders, plows, carts, etc. Cub Cadet advertising at that time harped on their thorough testing by "boys - acknowledged by many as the world's worst destructive force!". Cub Cadets became known for their dependability and rugged construction.
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