[AT] Odd rod on a WD Allis?
Chuck Bealke
bealke at airmail.net
Sat Jan 23 23:09:22 PST 2010
On 1/23/2010 7:25 AM, Indiana Robinson wrote:
> One of the guys on my Allis Chalmers list posted this question:
> ---------------------
> I found a strange attachment on a WD at the link below and can't
> identify it. Would you guys take a look at the rod that seems to
> becoming from the vicinity of the draw bar to the top of the front
> wheels and tell me what it is.
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:RogerTractorLarge.jpg
> ---------------------
> All I could come up with was maybe some kind of a brace for the final
> drive like to a loader bracket etc? I cannot tell if there is one on
> both sides. I have never seen one before.
>
>
Y'all,
Sure looks like the tractor is hooked to a rope trip plow. These had
adjustment handles just like the implement in the picture. It looks
like the front of the upright rod is a trip rope attachment point. The
strange front of the plow hitch might be a protective plow release to
let go in case the plow encountered an unmoving rock, and the reason the
trip rope was attached to that handle instead of the seat might have
been to keep from jerking the back of the seat when the plow releases.
A little background may explain why I hazard such a guess. The picture
flat reminds me of my very first field plowing. This was with a AC WC
with a hard pulling AC rope trip plow, a pairing which looked in many
ways like the iron in the picture. I fast learned the hard way that when
you felt that quick, awful sinking in a low, soft spot in an otherwise
dry field, it was often too late to pull the trip rope and a bad time to
stop forward motion. As luck would have it, the plow had one of those
hitches that would release the plow when you pressed on the top of it.
So I rigged a quick plow release from the seat. First, I wired an
eyebolt attached to the bottom of a thin square board to the top of the
hitch so that the board would release the plow pronto when you pressed
down on the top it from the tractor seat. Then I attached the top of
the board ('nother little eyebolt and short piece of twine) somehow
close to the seat where I could reach back, grab and push down to set
the tractor free of the plow. As I recall, it took a fair bit of
experimenting - and untimely releases when the boy-filled bouncing seat
caught the top of the board - to position the board right. But it
worked and saved me a possibly career altering request for a repeat pull
out. (I kept a long chain on the tractor to pull the plow out from
firmer ground.) Also learned to use older and weaker baling twine to
attach the plow trip to the tractor seat. The first time the plow was
released in a wet spot, the trip rope from the released plow pulled the
tractor seat as violently as fast, and the newbie operator was almost
launched off the tractor when the rope broke.
Chuck Bealke
Dallas, TX
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