[AT] blowing the dust off

Herb Metz metz-h.b at comcast.net
Mon Jul 6 05:53:29 PDT 2015


Yes, Tyler, they can move down the road pretty fast. The 'minus' to that is 
the center of gravity for such tractors is higher than for cars or pickups, 
so use caution about sudden steering wheel turns when blowing off the dust.

-----Original Message----- 
From: Tyler Juranek
Sent: Sunday, July 05, 2015 7:28 PM
To: Antique tractor email discussion group
Subject: Re: [AT] blowing the dust off

Hi John,
That really sounds fun! I got some old iron time in this weekend too!
I went out to my grandfather's place this weekend. (The same one who
gave me the 88 Oliver that I have.)
Anyway, Grandpa has a whole collection of Olivers. My favorite is a
little (but MEAN) Oliver 66. Grandpa bought it when Dad was still in
highschool, so it's been there for many years. Dad said that when
Grandma was still around, that was the tractor that she drove, because
she didn't have enough strength to push the clutch in on the others.
Grandpa and Dad redid that 66 when I was probably about two or three.
Anyway, now that the 88 is here at home with me, Grandpa (I think),
just waits for me to ask if I can drive the 66 around in the yard.
So Grandpa put gas in it, and then we went in and ate. When I came
back outside after helping with the dishes, he had it all backed out
of the shed, etc. I started it, and drove it in the yard. When I got
to the road, I shifted into high range 6th, and opened it up. With
some carbon blowin out the muffler, it got its rear down the road.
Every once in a great while, a "grr" in the rear end would surprise
me. I think it was just low on grease. Dad thinks its a tooth. But for
driving a quarter mile down the road, and then back to the yard, I
didn't think it was to big of a deal.
Sure had a lot of fun.

That tractor's days of pulling are pretty well over, but Grandpa
still uses it to run an 8 inch auger from time to time. I sure wish my
88 would start as good and as fast as that old 66.
Take Care,
Tyler Juranek
IA

On 7/5/15, jtchall at nc.rr.com <jtchall at nc.rr.com> wrote:
> Close to 25 years ago me and dad built a display trailer for grinding corn
> meal. We took a light duty 4 wheel wagon with no bed and locked up 
> steering.
> A lot of torch work later we had the steering free so we set about 
> building
> a bed for it. Made it completely out of wood we had on hand, floored with
> yellow pine. We had a 6 cylinder IH Silver Diamond power unit that came 
> off
> a silage cutter. My family bought the engine in the early 70’s to power a
> grain dryer, which it did until the dryer burnt down about 1989-90. We had
> rebuilt the engine about 2-3 years prior. We put the engine on one front
> corner, set it an an angle to try to distribute the load over the bolster 
> a
> little better. On the opposing back corner we put an IH grist meal (made 
> by
> Meadows). The mill actually has pretty good original paint. We used the
> driveshaft out of the grain dryer (that was all there was salvageable) and 
> a
> shaft from a woodsaw for power transmission. On the other front corner we
> bolted down my grandfathers IH one hole corn sheller. Now when we built 
> this
> rig we would grind quite a bit of corn meal (one time we ground 300lbs) so
> we didn’t want to shell that much corn by hand—too much like work, this is 
> a
> hobby remember! I got started in this antique collecting endeavor with 50’s
> model Briggs engines and old chainsaws. We took one of the Briggs engines
> that had been rebuilt and was an easy starter and hooked it to the 
> sheller.
> Well now that we were all setup we ran this outfit for a couple years 
> around
> Thanksgiving. Then it just got parked under a shed about 20 years ago, I
> think we ran it once maybe 10 years ago? Friday I pulled the Briggs engine
> off and carried it to the shop. Had to polish the magnets, coil and the
> points—after that it cranked on the first pull.Sat we decided to crank the
> IH power unit. My opinion is this thing needs a starter rebuild, its 
> ALWAYS
> been hard to spin over since we had it. Not having a spare 6 volt (and I
> mean a big one at that), we had to do some improvising to crank it. We
> pulled one of the six volt Super A’s in front of the rig and ran a set of
> jumper cables to power the ignition. Then we pulled a truck up to power 
> the
> starter—amazing how fast they spin when you shoot 12 volts to the starter.
> Spun it over a bit, no luck. Polished the points and it fired up like it 
> was
> just ran last week. Ran the mill for a little bit, I only had wheat
> available to run through it. Everything worked well. I saved a few bags of
> ear corn last year, we’ll try to get it ran through in the next couple 
> weeks
> and then put everything back into hibernation. Hope you guys got in some 
> old
> iron time this weekend!
>
> John Hall
> _______________________________________________
> AT mailing list
> http://www.antique-tractor.com/mailman/listinfo/at
>


-- 
Check out my youtube channel, and spread the word!
http://www.youtube.com/tylerthetechy/

_______________________________________________
AT mailing list
http://www.antique-tractor.com/mailman/listinfo/at


-----
No virus found in this message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 2014.0.4813 / Virus Database: 4365/10169 - Release Date: 07/05/15 




More information about the AT mailing list