[AT] Ramble: I broke a MF 255 into 2 pieces
charlie hill
chill8 at cox.net
Fri Jan 7 14:37:15 PST 2005
Well it's good to hear from you again anyway David. Sorry about your run of
bad luck!
Charlie
----- Original Message -----
From: "David Holcombe" <Dlholcombe at una.edu>
To: "Antique tractor email discussion group" <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Cc: <Dlholcombe at una.edu>
Sent: Friday, January 07, 2005 2:32 PM
Subject: [AT] Ramble: I broke a MF 255 into 2 pieces
> It's been almost 6 months since posting anything to ATIS. I retired from
> my "public job" July 1 2004. I guess I'm crazy at 47, but I had to get
> back outside.
>
> The day after Thanksgiving my son and I were hanging a Xmas wreath on the
> front of my house. I got the MF 255 so he could lift me up using the
> front-end loader. After getting it on the house I discovered that my
> extension cord was not long enough. He proceeded to lower me to the ground
> and turned
> the tractor off. I went into the basement, he got off the tractor to
> unchain the dogs. Coming back into the front yard I noticed the tractor
> was slowly
> inching it's way backward out of our yard toward the road in front of my
> house. My yard is about 10' above the road with about a 40 degree slope
> down to
> the road, then across the road is a 4 strand barb wire fence then another
> 40 degree slope of about 200' before if levels off into the pasture.
> I ran as hard as I could, didn't catch it. It rolled out of the yard
> across the road into the barb wire fence just missing 2 big "electric
> pole" posts that would
> would have probably stopped it. The barb wire almost stopped it. You know
> how wire sounds when it is being stretched and the ping it makes when it
> breaks. When it finally broke and the tractor went through it and out of
> sight I guess it was going 25-30 mph down the hill, through bushes, then
> nothing.
> When I got to where I could see, it hadn't made all the way to the level
> pasture, but is was still sitting on all 4 wheels with the front-end
> looking right at me or
> so I thought. The left rear wheel had broadsided a cedar tree and snapped
> it completely into two pieces just behind where the rear-end bolts
> together
> at the gear shifters. The bolts just sheared off the running(foot rests)
> boards on the front part of the tractor and were still attached the rear
> fenders.
> The only thing still connecting the two pieces together was the wire to
> the tail light(I cut it with my pocket knife).
> It took my dad, myself, my 2 sons about 3 hours to get the two pieces off
> the hill. We chained each piece, took the chain around a tree above it and
> then
> down the hill to another tractor. I took another tractor with a hay spear
> then lifted the chained piece and backed it off the hill while the
> tractor it was chained
> to backed up the hill. We had to lift the front end loader off with
> another loader tractor. It fired right up when I turned the key over, it
> just had no rear wheels
> to take it any where. We loaded the front end on one trailer, the rear end
> on another trailer and carried it to a farmer friend that does a lot of
> tractor
> work in the off season. Needless to say, we were the talk of the community
> when everyone saw our convoy of two tailers carrying one tractor.
> He delivered it back in one piece Xmas eve. All he had to replace was the
> rear chunk, a few hydraulic hoses and clamps. He used our hydraulic pump
> and gears. The left rear rim is warped a little, but not enough to
> replace.
>
> Cost: $1800.00
>
> Why did it roll off the hill? It has a high/low range shifter on the
> dash on top of the high/low range gear shifter. When the dash shifter is
> in low
> range the tractor is free wheeling, the transmission will not hold it back
> going down hill. I think we left it in low range.
>
> Very thankful I didn't catch up to the tractor, I probably would have been
> ran over.
> Very thankful the tractor didn't hit a car in the road.
> Very thankful my boys were not hurt.
>
> I have always counted myself as being a very careful person, but accidents
> still do happen.
>
> Everybody be careful, I know I am trying to be.
>
>
> David Holcombe in extreme NW AL
>
> BTW, I didn't put all my Xmas lights out this year.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
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