$100 Ideas: Go-Anywhere Compressor

After years of hiring someone to repair pivots, Donald Schmidt decided he could do it himself.

After years of hiring someone to repair pivots, Donald Schmidt Donald of
Schuyler, Neb., decided he could do it himself. After a three-day and $180 investment, he made an air compressor that can go anywhere in the field for pivot repairs. Schmidt owns the Ah-ha Ranch and says he’s semi-retired—he rents his farmland and works as a farm manager.

“With a PTO shaft from a junked feed wagon, a used air compressor and scrap iron, I made an air compressor that attaches to any tractor’s three-point hitch. I specifically use the air compressor to fill tires on center pivots. In building my mobile compressor, I sized two pulleys to power the compressor and also included a relief valve. There is a V-shaped panel that fits over the PTO shaft for safety.”


Preventive Measure

To keep planter wires and connections from breaking, I mounted a wire holder to the rear of the tractor.

I cut off a 1" section of 4"-diameter pipe and wrapped it with a piece of hose so it wouldn’t rub against the wires. Then I bolted it to a 16" piece of tubing, which is connected to the tractor.

Joseph Glanzer
Doland, S.D.

Lefty Loosey, Righty Tighty

During harvest, I keep the combine moving and my wife unloads wagons. It’s a challenge for her to open and close the stubborn wagon doors, so to make it easier I increased the leverage of the lift wheel. I cut a piece of pipe so it extends 6" past the standard wheel on each side and attached it with self-tapping screws. Finally, I used a grinder to round off the ends of the pipe so there aren’t any sharp edges.

Jim Hobart
Emmetsburg, Iowa

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