[AT] Update on the MF 1155

Cecil Bearden crbearden at copper.net
Sun Feb 24 22:16:42 PST 2019


Correct, there is one but it is so fast you are not supposed to be able 
to use it..
Cecil

On 2/25/2019 12:00 AM, deanvp at att.net wrote:
>
> Cecil,
>
> But there isn’t supposed to be a reverse in High Range.  Correct? That 
> is what you mean by a “Lock Out”
>
> Dean VP
>
> Apache junction, AZ
>
> *From:*AT <at-bounces at lists.antique-tractor.com 
> <mailto:at-bounces at lists.antique-tractor.com>> *On Behalf Of *Cecil 
> Bearden
> *Sent:* Sunday, February 24, 2019 10:25 PM
> *To:* at at lists.antique-tractor.com <mailto:at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
> *Subject:* Re: [AT] Update on the MF 1155
>
> Dean there is a reverse in the highest range.  When the shifter gets 
> worn enough it will go into high reverse.  There is some sort of 
> lockout in that range but I can get into it on my 4010.     It really 
> moves in that reverse...
>
> Cecil
>
> On 2/24/2019 10:30 PM, deanvp at att.net <mailto:deanvp at att.net> wrote:
>
>     Cecil,
>
>     Correct me if I am wrong but there is no reverse in the highest
>     range, but all other range in the 4010???   I’m thinking 3010 but
>     I would think the 4010 would be the same.     A 4020 is considered
>     by most JD people to be close to the best if not the best tractor
>     JD ever made. I suspect there were quite a few engine changes made
>     between the 4010 and 4020. Don’t know about the crank.
>
>     Dean VP
>
>     Apache junction, AZ
>
>     *From:*AT <at-bounces at lists.antique-tractor.com>
>     <mailto:at-bounces at lists.antique-tractor.com>*On Behalf Of *Cecil
>     Bearden
>     *Sent:* Sunday, February 24, 2019 8:00 PM
>     *To:* at at lists.antique-tractor.com
>     <mailto:at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
>     *Subject:* Re: [AT] Update on the MF 1155
>
>     The Deere 4010 & 4010 w/ synchro range is a good tractor for
>     loader work.  The reverse in every range makes it easy to load hay
>     and unload trailers.    I need to go get my Dad's old 4010 at
>     another farm setting i a fence row.  I also picked up a 4020
>     w/cab  last week, I think it has a bad or broke crank...
>
>     Cecil
>
>     On 2/24/2019 8:53 PM, Indiana Robinson wrote:
>
>         Cecil: I'm sure you are right... This 1155 probably came from
>         about 3 or 4 states west of here. My dealer friend made his
>         fortune buying tractors and combines and other equipment
>         farther west and bringing them back here to sell. He also
>         deals in some local stuff but most of the stuff comes from his
>         trips west because so much good stuff here sells too high for
>         a good level of profit. When Scott bought this tractor he was
>         not around because he was busy getting ready to hit the road
>         the next morning for a trip west for a couple of large
>         auctions. He has been hauling stuff back here to sell for as
>         long as I have known him and that has been a long time.
>
>         When Diana and I travelled west then to the north-east last
>         summer I was reminded of just how different farming is at
>         different locations around the country. We had been travelling
>         south and east for a number of years before that. Farmers do
>         have a lot in common no matter where they are (especially old
>         tractors) but local differences can be pretty wide (and very
>         interesting) like different soil types, levels of rainfall and
>         when, erosion concerns etc. I suspect that you would be very
>         surprised (because I have long been surprised) at how much
>         moldboard plowing is still done here in Central Indiana and
>         especially in Rush County, the next county east of me.
>
>         I used to do some no-till but I don't see a lot of no-till
>         around me. Here they started switching to no-till but then
>         moved to mulch-till and the use of speciality finishing tools
>         that are kind of a mix of tools all in one.
>
>         Field tile drainage is really bigger than ever here in recent
>         years and I can't really recall the last time I got stuck
>         doing field work. A seed corn and food grade corn operation
>         about 2 miles from me just tiled a farm nearby and they ran
>         tile (plastic) lines about 60 feet apart all over several
>         fields they recently acquired. They have their own tile plow
>         and the tile is reasonable in cost.
>
>         I did get stuck with a golf cart this week but I should have
>         been in a boat.  :-)
>
>         Spencer: Son Scott is our youngest, our baby...He hates when
>         we say that.  :-)   He is 46.
>
>         Before I bought my Deere 4020 years ago I almost bought a 806.
>         It was quite nice and the price was right but it was just so
>         dang loud running. Not exhaust noise, compression hammering...
>         I finally walked away from it. Everybody kept telling me that
>         it was normal for them but I just didn't like the sound of it.
>
>         I never regretted the 4020.
>
>         On Sun, Feb 24, 2019 at 7:39 PM Tyler Juranek
>         <tylerpolkaman at gmail.com <mailto:tylerpolkaman at gmail.com>> wrote:
>
>             Hey Spencer and all,
>             Believe it or not, dad bought a 966 here recently.
>             Acording to the
>             serial number, it was one that came out of the factory
>             with a narrow
>             front.
>             He bought it with a wide front, but found a good narrow
>             front to put back on it.
>             He wants to have it all painted up and all that crap that
>             his son
>             doesn't care much about. :) Lol.
>             The mechanical work has all been done I think. That is
>             what matters
>             most to me. I care more about mechanicals and tires, not
>             about the
>             paint jobs.
>             And Spencer, when it comes to my father, everything is for
>             sale...
>             Tyler Juranek
>             IA
>
>             On 2/24/19, Spencer Yost <spencer at rdfarms.com
>             <mailto:spencer at rdfarms.com>> wrote:
>             > I am not sure of the age of your son Scott, it sounds
>             like we must be pretty
>             > close in age.  When I think big tractors I think of
>             those Massey’s too. More
>             > so, I think of the “six” series Farmall and IH tractors.
>             Like the 706 and
>             > 966. I still  keep an eye out for them. It’s a pipe
>             dream, I never will own
>             > one. Recently I saw this on craigslist:
>             >
>             >
>             https://greensboro.craigslist.org/grd/d/coats-ih-706-tractor-plow-and-disk/6818930052.html
>             >
>             > If I was stupid rich or just plain stupid I would buy
>             it.   On my puny 15
>             > acres I don’t even have enough room to turn it...
>             >
>             > Spencer Yost
>             >
>             >> On Feb 24, 2019, at 10:33 AM, Indiana Robinson
>             <robinson46176 at gmail.com <mailto:robinson46176 at gmail.com>>
>             >> wrote:
>             >>
>             >> Son Scott did buy the MF 1155. I figured that he would.
>             He has wanted one
>             >> for too long and this one was in too good of general
>             condition for him to
>             >> pass it up. He had asked me to go with him when he
>             first looked at it when
>             >> there was no one around. It was sitting on the lot of a
>             dealer I have
>             >> bought stuff from for a very long time. Not constant
>             purchases and not big
>             >> stuff. I never farmed very big, couple of hundred acres
>             most of the time.
>             >> The farm is a lifestyle thing, I made most of my income
>             from other
>             >> enterprises. Still it takes a lot of equipment to do
>             the job. Over the
>             >> years I bought a couple of combines from him, a 20
>             something foot wide
>             >> harrogator, a wider set of wings for my big disk, field
>             sprayer etc.
>             >> Several years ago we bought a Vermeer round baler from
>             him. He always
>             >> treated me well. When I started dealing with him he was
>             a small
>             >> independent dealership and a farmer like a lot of other
>             small dealers
>             >> were. Today he and his sons have a huge operation with
>             one huge building
>             >> that is absolutely full of classic tractors that are
>             not for sale. Over
>             >> the years he has bought most of the farms that surround
>             him and he now has
>             >> his own system of private roads from one to another. We
>             became business
>             >> friends over those years and I was always impressed
>             that when I walked in
>             >> he always treated me the same as if I was one of the
>             biggest farmers in
>             >> the state. That is the way you should do business.
>             >> Anywho... Scott had his mind mostly made up but wanted
>             me to go along to
>             >> help check it over carefully with it running and him
>             driving it to check
>             >> each function. We studied it pretty carefully for maybe
>             2 hours or more
>             >> and if anything had popped up he would have backed away
>             but he was
>             >> confident enough that we went in a semi with a low-boy.
>             I had to meet him
>             >> at a local shopping center because it is pretty tough
>             to get even a 40'
>             >> trailer in to this farm and this was a 52' trailer.
>             >> Everything seemed OK and they were willing to drop the
>             price $500. He
>             >> asked them to pop the duals off and load them on the truck.
>             >> Kind of a funny bit of irony here... They have large
>             industrial battery
>             >> electric impact wrenches so they don't have to drag air
>             hoses around.
>             >> Worked really great but to get the duals off they had
>             to jack the tractor
>             >> up a little. Yep, pneumatic jack and an air hose
>             dragged out to the apron
>             >> where the tractor was sitting.  :-)
>             >> It all went well, of course Scott loads and hauls big
>             stuff almost daily,
>             >> sometimes several times a day. He spends more time
>             behind a desk these
>             >> days  but he is still on job sites most days.
>             >> The 1155 is quite wide. It has power adjust (spin out)
>             rear wheels but
>             >> also wide slide out axles. He is considering cutting
>             down the axles some
>             >> so the don't stick past the wheels. Thinks it might
>             save some doorways.
>             >> The duals are clamp on and don't use the axles. I doubt
>             he will ever use
>             >> the duals.
>             >> I have a little Case VAC that has the wide axle option
>             and I'm still
>             >> considering chopping those... (shrug)
>             >> We have 3 ways to get to the farm here, none of them
>             semi friendly.  :-)
>             >> Coming in from the north requires  going through an
>             oddball 20' tall
>             >> rail-road underpass that was built long long ago as a
>             bridge over a fair
>             >> sized creek and then back in about the 1920's people
>             started driving
>             >> around one side of it in dry weather on a gravel bar.
>             It wasn't even a
>             >> road then. Later a heavy one lane "U" shaped concrete
>             "shelf" was poured
>             >> around there for traffic. Scott comes through there
>             fairly often with a
>             >> tri-axle dump truck towing a tri-axle trailer with a
>             backhoe/loader or
>             >> maybe a good sized excavator but it is not suited for a
>             semi at all. The
>             >> other two directions are only slightly better due to
>             utility poles in too
>             >> close to the corners and narrow culverts. Scott 
>             considered parking on the
>             >> wider road and unloading the tractor and me driving it
>             home but then we
>             >> would still have had to deal with the duals and it was
>             a cold day.  :-)
>             >> He managed to get the longer trailer "buttoned" past
>             the corners with only
>             >> minimal damage to the road ditches which were about
>             like quicksand.
>             >> He has already been working on the 1155 for several
>             days now off and on. I
>             >> can about guarantee you that the first thing he did was
>             rework all of the
>             >> wiring.  I noticed yesterday that he has the hood off
>             and I think the
>             >> whole exhaust system. It had some minor exhaust leakage
>             where the manifold
>             >> mounts to the heads and I know that he ordered a batch
>             of gaskets for it.
>             >> I know that he was planning on putting some money in it
>             trying to get
>             >> everything just right.
>             >> It is important to understand here that while this
>             tractor will not be an
>             >> actual "trailer queen" this pretty much falls under the
>             heading of "a toy
>             >> he always wanted" like his Harley or his 4 wheeler and
>             not a tractor to
>             >> farm with productively. He works very hard and makes
>             very good money and
>             >> he plans his fun stuff too. I am not sure of the value
>             of this tractor,
>             >> the big tractors (this is 140 HP and about 20,000
>             pounds ballasted) have
>             >> never been on my wish list so I have not followed them.
>             The 10 to 60 HP
>             >> tractors are my choice and I like the smaller ones more
>             all of the time
>             >> like my Cub, Pony, VAC, Allis C etc.
>             >> I don't guess he would mind me saying that he paid
>             $7,000 for it. It's a
>             >> nice tractor and when he asked me I told him that if he
>             didn't like it
>             >> after he bought it or something failed badly he could
>             probably at least
>             >> part it out for more than that...
>             >> I'll have to see if I can convince him to take it to
>             Portland. Then if he
>             >> uses the semi he can haul a couple more for me.  :-) 
>             :-)  :-)
>             >>
>             >>
>             >> .
>             >>
>             >> --
>             >> --
>             >>
>             >> Francis Robinson
>             >> aka "farmer"
>             >> Central Indiana USA
>             >> robinson46176 at gmail.com <mailto:robinson46176 at gmail.com>
>             >>
>             >>
>             >>
>             >>
>             >>
>             >>
>             >>
>             >>
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>
>         -- 
>
>         -- 
>
>         Francis Robinson
>         aka "farmer"
>         Central Indiana USA
>         robinson46176 at gmail.com <mailto:robinson46176 at gmail.com>
>
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