urbancase
Well-known Member
- Location
- Southeast Indiana
never went to them for a tractor part, but fittings ,roll pins ,tarps, baler twine i do. i do agree they cater to what makes money and if you don't you will be out of businesses.
Same here. They sent out the Blue Book every year. Pretty much all tractor parts with eight to ten toy tractors. That was always the page I looked for as soon as it came. I only remember two locations in Michigan in the mid 60s, one in Lansing and one in Grand Rapids. We mail ordered about everything from them, but I remember going to the one in Grand Rapids with Dad to get a new pair of rear tractor tires. We were in Lansing one time and needed some overhaul parts, so we stopped in and ordered them in person at the counter.I remember when tsc was a small company with a few stores in the Midwest. They had the same logo. I used to mail-order from them. Now nearly every town in my area has one.
Don't disagree at all. Like I said, they're not the only source of tractor parts that we lost. The market changed. Farming changed. The number of farmers and tractors has dropped 50 fold.I am, and all they're doing is changing with the market. Pretty smart way to do business.
Don't by any means forget "Pet Food".....and some pets weigh several hundred pounds and whinny!Toys Shoes and Clothes.
How many more times does the TSC horse need to be beat??? Same old drivel anytime this subject comes up. View attachment 141672View attachment 141672
How many times have you heard the same stories from old farts?Give 'em a break man, that's more than long enough for the bashers to forget about their last reports.
I'm not sure these rants are "old farts" I think it's a lot of fake nostalgia by people who are too young to have actually lived it and remember it. Gotta try to fit in by wanting to bring back the days of blood poisoning, being drafted in the army and pitching horse manure.How many times have you heard the same stories from an old farts?
A "senior forum", that might be, but that post a few weeks ago about who had actually farmed for a living or does now was real eye opening. The number probably figured out to about 3%. The number of folks who ever knew TSC as a real source of tractor parts is probably just a fraction of that 3%. Is there anybody else on here who remembers them having just a few stores, where you went up to a parts counter like you do at a dealership? I doubt it. It's just piling on based on how little TSC has now with no memory of what they used to be."too young to have actually lived it"......I doubt that. With the exception of a few, I think this is a very senior forum.![]()
TSC carries pretty much today what I remember them having when I was a kid. I'm in my late 50s. I don't remember them ever having a parts counter. Their inventory when I was a kid in the 70s and 80s was farm related but not tractor specific. They carried common ignition parts, fuel system parts and mufflers, but most of those parts fit a number of common tractors.A "senior forum", that might be, but that post a few weeks ago about who had actually farmed for a living or does now was real eye opening. The number probably figured out to about 3%. The number of folks who ever knew TSC as a real source of tractor parts is probably just a fraction of that 3%. Is there anybody else on here who remembers them having just a few stores, where you went up to a parts counter like you do at a dealership? I doubt it. It's just piling on based on how little TSC has now with no memory of what they used to be.
I think he was referring to Kentucky Gardener who is in his early teens."too young to have actually lived it"......I doubt that. With the exception of a few, I think this is a very senior forum.![]()
I drove milk truck for the first two years out of high school. I had a stop where the patron told me he didn't want to milk cows for another winter and was going to sell them. He gave me a price, I went to the bank and got the money to buy them. They almost doubled the size of my herd and I never had to work for anybody again.First TSC store, 1939.....I wasn't there for the opening. I think they have about 2400 stores now & my state has over 250. Farmed for a living (3%) is probably about right. Most of us had more than one job to get ahead. Thank goodness I never had to totally rely on farming or cattle to get by. Didn't you drive a milk truck of something else to subsidize farming?
The few locations they had were like an auto parts store for tractors and combines. There were some self serve parts, but you went to the parts counter, paid and got a hand written receipt. They were kind of like Sears though, most sales were mail order.TSC carries pretty much today what I remember them having when I was a kid. I'm in my late 50s. I don't remember them ever having a parts counter. Their inventory when I was a kid in the 70s and 80s was farm related but not tractor specific. They carried common ignition parts, fuel system parts and mufflers, but most of those parts fit a number of common tractors.
Just another example of a thread going off the rails, over a cliff, in to an orphanage and bursting in to flames. The original post wasn't even about TSC. It was about some low life thief stealing something from TSC.C'mon now, it's been what, a couple of weeks maybe since the last TSC bashing thread?
Give 'em a break man, that's more than long enough for the bashers to forget about their last reports.
There was a TSC in Saginaw on M46 and I 75 in the early sixties, I remember when it first opened. My Dad would make a trip,50miles, once or twice a year and we would come back with a bunch of supplies, many of the items they no longer carry.Same here. They sent out the Blue Book every year. Pretty much all tractor parts with eight to ten toy tractors. That was always the page I looked for as soon as it came. I only remember two locations in Michigan in the mid 60s, one in Lansing and one in Grand Rapids. We mail ordered about everything from them, but I remember going to the one in Grand Rapids with Dad to get a new pair of rear tractor tires. We were in Lansing one time and needed some overhaul parts, so we stopped in and ordered them in person at the counter.
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