Thanks, I wrote an article for our club newsletter about the after market easy-steer options that were available back in the day. Here is a link to it: allis01.com/fossto/Easy-Steer.pdf
@@allis01old_allis. I now have a WD45 and wish that I had the “easy steer” gears in it. I plowed 8 acres this spring and I sure had to hang onto the steering wheel. Growing up with my WD I was so used to the extra turns of the steering wheel that I gave it no thought when cultivating. We even had a front loader on that tractor, and it was easy to steer then.
G day from Ont. I always thought 17 should have 16-9-30 on bought. Boy I was a auction at covid time , Whoever was not interested in buying could not go, after 170 had 16-30 went $2200. I missed that one Thanks
I don't think it's designed for that type of wagon. Poor blower is trying to blow the hay through the beater. I'm guessing that's what plugged up the chute.
The RC was only made a couple years. it shares many parts with the WC and can use all the same implements. It has a 125 cubic inch engine vs. the 201 in the WC, it also shares several parts with the B. Many unique parts seen and unseen.
Now we need to build better anti-Raccoon traps so the birds can have some food to eat. We cant win when it comes to putting out food for the whole wild animal neighborhood. Great video of Mr Raccoon in action. Take care.
If a guy had a tractor to dedicate to bush hogging and snow blowing, it would be real handy to reverse the tractor, so you could drive into your work. 😎
I have friend just recently bought a Allis Chambers 190 a 1973 model. Says it will jump out of 5 gear sometimes. But man the tractor was barn kept ever since it was new. I know the original owner also. We all went to school together. Great video enjoyed watching it . Allis Chambers was the first tractor my dad ever bought back in the mid 1950's and he had a 8n Ford . In 1960 he switched to Massey Ferguson buying a 35 and 65 MF he stuck with the Massey Ferguson's until he retired in the early 2000's
Bossman if don't want the raccoon to have brunch on your bird feeder then you need put a few nails or spikes on the roof so that the birds don't starve to death.
I had one of those self propelled All Crop combines, it was a beast, not user friendly. I used it one year, and, got a mint Case 600 pulltype. Now that was a great machine, especially in small grain. I used a Melroe pickup, and, pulled it with a 4020, and, i would just eat the grain. I alos liked the big spike tooth cylinder, it made the best straw for beddin my cattle.