[AT] more HP guaranteed!/now front end on the ground.
David Bruce
tractor57 at gmail.com
Fri Mar 17 10:23:26 PDT 2017
I learned to drive a tractor using an Allis D-14. When I switched to a
Ferguson type draft control system I had to learn a lot of different
things.
A story on the D-14. The first tractor I ever drove was an Allis B
pulling a sled in the tobacco field. I was about 6 or 7 at the time. I
could not get a handle on the B's clutch so it was switched to be the
"to the barn" tractor while I drove the D-14 in the field. I could not
reach both the clutch and brakes at the same time so I had to depress
the clutch, shift to neutral and then hit the brake pedals. That was a
bit of a problem as the tobacco field had rows running up and down a
significant hill. Later I would plow with the D-14 after school and into
the night in late winter and early spring. There I learned the
advantages of the traction booster system.
David
NW NC
On 3/17/2017 12:41 PM, charlie hill wrote:
> John, that was the beauty of the old Allis Chalmers "Traction Booster"
> system. On the Snap Coupler tractors it worked from spring tension on
> the drawbar and on the 3pt hitch tractors it used a rock shaft that
> connected
> the front of the 3pt lift arms. The system kept the lift system always
> tight against
> the load and immediately reacted to load changes. When the pressure went up
> in
> the system from load tension the lift would quickly raise the implement
> until the load
> decreased. It was essentially a "draft system" but it worked by load not
> depth. When they
> were right they were wonderful.
>
> Charlie
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