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Help Identifying International Bulldozer

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Freeride

02-10-2008 00:17:31




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Hey, I was surfing around and found this site while trying to identify the model of this tractor. If anyone could steer me in the direction of the model number, or a place where I might be able to find out the model I would appriciate it. We recently stumbled onto this fully functional dozer in an abandoned shed, it runs and the hydraulics work but it doesn't move forward or back. Any help would be apriciated.

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Ohiohillbilly

02-10-2008 18:51:24




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 Re: Help Identifying International Bulldozer in reply to Freeride, 02-10-2008 00:17:31  
Stupid punks. I think those kids need a good whoopin with a hickory switch. My old granny rest her soul would have been perfect for the job.



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Zach Bouchard

02-10-2008 17:48:42




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 Re: Help Identifying International Bulldozer in reply to Freeride, 02-10-2008 00:17:31  
You should change your handle to "freeride to jail"



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Zach Bouchard

02-10-2008 17:47:43




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 Re: Help Identifying International Bulldozer in reply to Freeride, 02-10-2008 00:17:31  
If you want to find out what model it is look at the damn picture. If someone came to my shop and started my tractor I think they would be in for a beatin or a gunshot wound. Stay clear of my house moron.



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you have no respect

02-10-2008 11:51:44




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 Re: Help Identifying International Bulldozer in reply to Freeride, 02-10-2008 00:17:31  
I hope you get caught .I hate arrogany PUNKS like you that think my property is your playground.You are a jerk and Ihope you go to jail



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TomH in PA

02-10-2008 11:35:12




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 Re: Help Identifying International Bulldozer in reply to Freeride, 02-10-2008 00:17:31  
If you want to find out more about that machine, go to the county courthouse and ask who owns the land where you found it. Call him up and tell him you went onto his property without permission, "stumbled upon" an "abandoned" shed that has an expensive piece of machinery in it. I'm sure he'll be interested to meet you and talk about your find.



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135 Fan

02-10-2008 10:24:47




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 Re: Help Identifying International Bulldozer in reply to Freeride, 02-10-2008 00:17:31  
Who says it's abandoned? It starts and runs. That does indicate that it hasn't been sitting long. I have a good idea why it didn't move but there is no way I'm going to tell you. I wish I knew the owner of it. I'd send him your picture. Where are you from? I could send your picture to the the cops. An expensive machine inside a nice looking shed with a nice roll up door and you think it's abandoned? And then have a picture taken on the machine and admit to starting it. We have a winner for one of the best darwin awards of all time! Do you have rocks in your head? You couldn't even figure out the model number, when you're looking straight at it! WOW!Dave

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Chuck46

02-10-2008 09:03:40




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 Re: Help Identifying International Bulldozer in reply to Freeride, 02-10-2008 00:17:31  
Idiot, How does anyone abandond a shed? It is built and remains on private property! You are guilty of tresspassing and malicious vandalism, I hope you are caught and get fully what you deserve. And after that they can put you on "Stupid Criminals" I usually end my remarks here with Good Luck, but for you I will pass. Chuck



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glennster

02-10-2008 06:01:33




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 Re: Help Identifying International Bulldozer in reply to Freeride, 02-10-2008 00:17:31  
your post says you stumbled upon it in an abandoned shed. if it is not yours, dont fool around with it. in front of the bucket on the wall it says keep out private property. more than likeley the drive was disabled so someone did not joyride the dozer. if you want to purchase it, locate the owner. if it started and runs, its not abandonded. dont mess around with it.



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Hugh MacKay

02-10-2008 08:36:04




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 Re: Wasn't done, got called away in reply to glennster, 02-10-2008 06:01:33  
Glen I'm not really satisfied the TD15 in my post had the engine cooked. I saw the work the borrower started, he basically finished what he was doing, with no trail of antifreeze. 1/2 mile in 3rd wouldn't take that long. The owner basically saw an opertunity to have an engine with several thousand hours rebuilt free of charge. He knew who he was dealing with and knew the guy had enough net worth to pay.

I had a similar experience, selling saw logs to a mill doing the trucking. I had a snow covered hill that caused trucks some difficulty. If it was frosty enough they would make the grade without chains. To save them bothering with chains, my operator if close by would follow them up the hill pushing on back of load with John Deere power shift. Once he was not right there, truck had come down the hill backwards. My operator started down the hill towards him, hit the area where truck had been sliding with brakes applied. The John Deere started sliding, he couldn't get out of the wheel tracks. He dropped the forestry blade, applied down presure hoping it would slow him down. It did, but not enough, the horn of the log piling blade went into his grill and radiator. I turned it over to my liability insurance. A week later I got a call from my insurance, with a question. Is there anyway the horn of the skidder blade could have hit the end of the truck crank shaft. "He said they are trying to get a new Cummins engine out of us, do you have any photos taken at the scene." We didn't believe the blade horn designed for piling logs could have reached the crankshaft. However by that time bumper and attachments were all torched. The day of the accident, I would have said the truck bumper was little more than scratched thus horn couldn't have made contact with crank. My insurance decided to pay and not fight. He got his new engine, rad and bumper, I never sold him logs again. I do have a disposable camera in every vehicle since.

A bit of advice for would be operators of what may look like an abandoned machine. That 175 is not all that old in heavy equipment. I operated a Cat loader last summer about the same age and size. It was capable of drawing down same hourly rate as a new one. Crawler loaders are not in big demand these days, however there are some jobs they fit, and many get parked for months in between those jobs, yes if available, in what might look like an abandoned shed. Last I recall, those power shifts were about a $15,000, rebuild. Our freind in the photo could find himself on the hook for a transmission.

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glennster

02-10-2008 08:53:01




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 Re: Wasn't done, got called away in reply to Hugh MacKay, 02-10-2008 08:36:04  
worse yet, if he got that crawler in gear, it would go right thru the shed, even with the rops, it could kill the operator, or the photographer. we have had a number of incidents around here where vandals started up heavy equipment and let em go. they did serious damage to property. it just scared the heck out of me to think what could of happened.



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Hugh MacKay

02-10-2008 09:56:50




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 Re: Wasn't done, got called away in reply to glennster, 02-10-2008 08:53:01  
Glen: You reminded me of a trucker sent out on mild winter day to pick up a big dozer left at a remote construction sight. He wasn't an expert heavy equipment operator, however he had loaded and unloaded many machines. He fired the old dozer up, went back to the truck dropped his beavertail ramps, got his binds and chains in order so it would be quite exit once loaded.

Back to the dozer, pulled the power shift in no. 1 let off the decellerator, headed for the low bed. As he approached the lowbed he depressed the decellerator, nothing happened, pulled it to neutral nothing happened. He panicked and jumped, broke his ankle on hard frozen ground. He lay in the snow and watched the dozer chew and spin for a bit as it came up against his truck cab. In the end the dozer preveiled taking cab, engine and transmission with it into a bog where it lost traction. He spend hours in the cold, cell phone gone with the cab. Finally co workers came looking for him.

They believe that machine had been tampered with. I know the company offered a reward to anyone who may have seen folks playing with the dozer. I never did hear the results. I can well imagine the bill on the Mack tractor, bringing in another mahine tow tow the first one out of bog, where it lost traction. Those things don't pull out of a bog very easy.

Your right, that building in the photo wouldn't slow the 175 down very much. There is a story around these parts about a John Deere A with a hand clutch. Grand father was putting it in the drive shed for the night, forgot about the hand clutch. His grand son claims the last thing they remember was the old man yelling whoa, damnit, whoa. Luckily yhe John Deere took the whole wall in front of it, roof stayed up and grand father was not hurt.

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Hugh MacKay

02-10-2008 07:35:43




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 Re: Help Identifying International Bulldozer in reply to glennster, 02-10-2008 06:01:33  
Glen: Not exceptionally smart is he, admits to starting it then puts his photo on the web. If the right lawyer gets a hold of that he may find himself paying for a transmission.

I once hired a bulldozer to build logging roads, near a lake with weekend cotages. Actually basically the same model, a TD15 The machine had just been in the shop the week before for a new water pump and rad, The operator noticed mid day Fri he had an anti freeze leak, and shut the machine down and went home. Upon arriving Mon. with a mechanic, they discovered the dozer had been moved. It had been to the lake, cleared a new cottage lot. Water pump came right off fan fell into the rad, deatroyed the rad. Then the good souls drove the machine 1/2 mile back to where they found it, and cooked the engine. The dozer owner was exactly 1 hour finding out who had his dozer. His cottage lot cost him $18,000., before lawyers were done with him.

Truth is in both cases only the owner or operator know why it was left as is and what may have been removed or be apart. Doen't matter how well you know the guy either. My brother who worked in the city, almost borrowed my 300 one night. Had it not been for the fact a neighbor of mine was with him who knew I had all the bolts out of the front bolster Fri. afternoon, he would have been out of the shop and down the road. We know how long that would have stayed together.

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L.C.Gray

02-10-2008 04:41:24




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 Re: Help Identifying International Bulldozer in reply to Freeride, 02-10-2008 00:17:31  
Looks like he has a serious steelpecker infestation on that shed.....



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schrocky

02-10-2008 04:31:59




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 Re: Help Identifying International Bulldozer in reply to Freeride, 02-10-2008 00:17:31  
It is a 175 crawler loader, it would not actually be refered to as a dozer. Not moving could be many different things BE CAREFUL ! it could be as easy and cheap as a few gallons of oil. Or possibly a small leak in a line could have allowed your trans charge pump to get air in it or the trans could be just plain shot ! get the guy who wants to sell it to you to get it moving. I have bought lots of old constuction equip and some you win some you LOOOOOSE !

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DCW

02-10-2008 03:27:31




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 Re: Help Identifying International Bulldozer in reply to Freeride, 02-10-2008 00:17:31  
That is a 175,which is a crawler loader version of a TD-15 BULLDOZER.I suspect that whats wrong with it is a bit more serious than just the parking brake if it won't move forwards or backwards.Is it for sale?



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Kristof

02-10-2008 01:54:11




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 Re: Help Identifying International Bulldozer in reply to Freeride, 02-10-2008 00:17:31  
If it's anything like caterpillar, it should have a parkingbrake?
Did you remember to switch it off?
Did you check the axle connection between your Hydraulic Coupling and your transmission?
Is it a differential or brake steering?
If it is a differential steering, did you check if it works?
Before you trie, let her get warmed up a bit, than put her full throttle and put her forward and reverse a few time than neutral,than check if the differential steering works.

I believe your parking brake will be the problem.

Kind Regards,

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