IH creeper gear

If you are looking to go slow for live plant transplanting or other non PTO work, the Hydro creeper is the answer. It uses hydraulic power from the pump, or an engine driven front pump, to drive the PTO shaft with a hydraulic motor. The Throwout bearing is taxed from blocking down the clutch pedal to allow the trans to work. A ball bearing Throwout bearing is used, not the graphite style.
I know of no gears that can be used in the trans. Jim
 
If you need a creeper gear you need to get a power unit with a creeper gear built in. The A, B, C, H, and M and their offspring just were not built for that job. Often the right tool might not be the one you have in your hand.
 
I will add to this correct statement that the Hydro creeper systems are really not to be found. They can be made with a bit of hydraulic ingenuity and engineering. In addition, they are not used for pulling a tillage implement that requires even a small part of the engines power. Jim
 
The hydro creeper will do that very well (if it is allowed) one could be made that could be made to go 10' a day. A small hydraulic pump, and a large displacement hydraulic motor.
A variable displacement (Hydrostatic drive pump) would be where I would go. Jim
 
If you want to go slow make sure your tires are original 10x36 and worn down some surely not new ones you want to go slow. Next would be getting the engine in good tune-up mode gov up to snuff linkage set correct and that engine will turn some pretty good low rpms almost stopping.
 
Better check the rules. You may waste a bunch of money building yourself a hydro creeper only to find out that it's against the rules.

Even if it isn't you'll only get away with it once. Next year there will be a "gear drive only" rule or a "factory transmission only" rule. That once might be worth it, but if you plan on dominating the slow races for years to come, forget it.
 
I am considering buying a machine to part out that may have what you want. It is an industrial machine designed as an asphalt paving machine built on a Farmall 140 from the factory. You can drive it around like any other tractor. But when you are paving, you put the tranny in neutral, put the PTO in gear, then there is a lever you move to set your creep speed. You can go at a walking pace or barely move. The creep is fully hydraulic. Although you may be able to plumb it in to run on the tractor hydraulic, this machine has a separate hyd tank and pump(s) for most of this machine's functions.
 
(quoted from post at 08:30:29 02/06/14) I am considering buying a machine to part out that may have what you want. It is an industrial machine designed as an asphalt paving machine built on a Farmall 140 from the factory.
I'm curious about this machine. I know that Piper & Paine made paving machines using IH skid units, but never seen one based on a 140. If it is, the serial number would probably include the letters "PP". Have you looked that closely at it? There was one at RPR a couple years back that was built on a bigger tractor.

http://www.yesterdaystractors.com/cgi-bin/viewit.cgi?bd=farmall&th=363300%3E
 
My neighbor has a Ford industrial tractor with a hydraulic creeper.The tractor originally had a trencher on the back,he removed that and installed a tiller.You can set it to move so slow,you can't hardly tell it's moving.
 

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