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Tractor Talk Discussion Forum

Tractor Gurus

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New-Gen

12-02-2006 05:44:58




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Sometimes I like to go to tractor shows just to listen to the tractor gurus spout their knowledge. No matter what the make or model on display, there never seems to be a shortage of knowledge.

I know a guy who made a loader tractor out of an Oliver 1850 by installing a front axle from a semi, along with a heavy sub frame, adding some kind of heavy duty loader (can’t recall the make), ending up with a kicka$$ unit for his efforts. One year when the local club was featuring Oliver, he took it. I happened to be standing nearby when a self appointed guru was telling a small audience all about when he used to be a field rep for Oliver, and how this was a one of a kind prototype produced at some out of the way secret location. (Maybe he got this from reading about the John Deere New Generation project, who knows?)

I have also seen, (and since heard much about from faithful guru disciples), a combination of the rear half of a Farmall 300 attached to the front half of Super H, creating, with some fancy custom decal and serial number plate work, a one of a kind Super HTA.

I have also heard of, (but not actually seen), the same thing done with a late model John Deere 4020 powershift grafted to the front of a 4320 to create a 4320 powershift.

Does anybody know of any more of these legends floating around in coffee shops and on internet discussion forums?

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mj

12-02-2006 07:25:24




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 Re: Tractor Gurus in reply to New-Gen, 12-02-2006 05:44:58  
Yeah: There was a guy over somewhere west of Pea Green that took two David Bradley walk-behinds a and made the worlds' first.....OK, maybe second, articulated twin-motor, all-wheel drive garden tractor that would fit in the back of a Crosley station wagon. He gained a fair amount of notoriety from as far east as Marble and west to Bedrock. It all came to an end one day when he started out from Fort Crawford for Log Hill and ran into a freak spring snowstorm in Colona. He knew he was going to get frostbite if he didn't get some kind of cover so he used the little tractor to uproot the only phone booth in town and parked it behind the DB. He had a small chain and hitched the phone booth to the tractor and found some baling wire out behind Jims' Texas-Style Barbeque along with some 2 x 4s from a salsa shipment which he attached to the bottom of the booth with his MacGyver knife. After knocking out the lower panel of the phone shack so he could reach out to the handlebars and controls he headed up hill, never to be seen again. Legend has it that on cool spring mornings in early spring if you sit quietly along the Log Hill road you can hear hear the little DB working its' way up-country accompanied by the sound of 1950s' elevator music. You see, the guy was was put on permanent hold by the Mountain Bell phone cops. Other than that: There was this preacher that inherited a ..... .....

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Ultradog MN

12-02-2006 07:14:42




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 Re: Tractor Gurus in reply to New-Gen, 12-02-2006 05:44:58  
Ask the folks here to tell you about the Essex Tri-Directional.
Now that was an interesting tractor!



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Dan-IA

12-02-2006 07:33:52




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 Re: Tractor Gurus in reply to Ultradog MN, 12-02-2006 07:14:42  
Actualy, there was a pic on here some time ago of the Essex Tri-directional.

Oh! Here it is!

third party image



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mj

12-02-2006 07:47:20




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 Re: Tractor Gurus in reply to Dan-IA, 12-02-2006 07:33:52  
Ahh, somebody went and painted it the wrong color! According to Caleb J. Finkenbinders' book 'How to Get Semi-Rich and Remain Below the Phone Cop Radar' ALL Essex Tri-Directionals were painted with Ralph Lauren brand hues of Ouray Puce and Sawpit Desert Purple. I can understand why they did not use the original paint however as it is only available from the Colona branch of Gateway Mercantile and they don't have a phone anymore.

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casey has returned

12-02-2006 19:19:53




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 Re: Tractor Gurus in reply to mj, 12-02-2006 07:47:20  
you sound like casey stengel. whad he say!!!!



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Dan-IA

12-02-2006 18:11:49




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 Re: Tractor Gurus in reply to mj, 12-02-2006 07:47:20  
How odd. Where'd you find such a literary treasure? Amazon hasn't even heard of Caleb J. Finkenbinders. Weird.



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mj

12-02-2006 20:34:49




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 Re: Tractor Gurus in reply to Dan-IA, 12-02-2006 18:11:49  
It was a VERY limited edition as I understand. My late uncle, Major Hoople, left it to me in his will.



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Steven@AZ

12-02-2006 07:43:43




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 Re: Tractor Gurus in reply to Dan-IA, 12-02-2006 07:33:52  
I wonder if that is the same one that I have seen in operation at Rollag, MN?

third party image



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55 50

12-02-2006 11:37:14




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 Re: Tractor Gurus in reply to Steven@AZ, 12-02-2006 07:43:43  
Very likely the same one. I suspect that there is only one of these in existence. It was created and owned by Don Dufner of Buxton, ND. I believe he uses it for work on his farm. He claimed it has about 300 HP. He also had it on display at a 2 Cyl EXPO a few years ago. It was made from three 830s and all are controlled from the one cab.



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IMPRESSED!

12-02-2006 07:51:49




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 Re: Tractor Gurus in reply to Steven@AZ, 12-02-2006 07:43:43  
Holy Moly..... .How'd you get up in that great big tractor anyway, Verne?



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