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Many
years ago, farmers invented pulling as a challenge to prove who owned
the strongest and fittest team of horses. Tied to a wooden sled piled high
with bags of wheat, grain, or sand, the owner's team would pull the sled to
see whose could move the sled the greatest distance.
As steam and gas powered
vehicles began taking over the work done by horses, so it was that these
early machines found themselves in the pulling arena.
Today, tractor
pulling has become one of the most aggressive forms of competition as a show
of brute power and strength. Unlike most other forms of vehicular
competition, such as racing, where a racer may rely on speed and his ability
to handle such speed to be first in his category of competition, a puller
will rely on POWER, along with training and instinct to get the most out of
his vehicle. As in days past,
a puller's prime objective is to pull a weighted sled the furthest distance
possible along a given straight course. However, the sleds of today are
unique themselves in that as the sled moves, so does its weight.
Starting towards the
rear of the sled, a weight box moves forward, creating even more down force
and friction for the puller to contend with... and hopefully overcome.
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This site was last updated 07/19/08