Posted by Mike M on February 28, 2019 at 05:16:45 from (24.140.3.210):
In Reply to: Old John Deere posted by SVcummins on February 27, 2019 at 19:27:27:
I'm the fellow in Ohio with one that Leroy talked about. Years ago he was kind enough to make a copy of some original literature and stopped in to see me and the # 26 loader. I also have an original owners manual and they are really a nice manual. They also made a dirt bucket for them. Before my time my uncle wore one of these out using it to load out trucks in a gravel pit. When I was a kid I remember seeing some parts of it laying around. I think they were going to use some of the parts to make up a sawmill but never did. There was one of those tined buckets turned upside down in the yard. IIRC the dog they had would climb up on it as it was in his area he could reach from his chain. I found mine not too far up the road from where I live. It was sitting close to the road and all grown up around it. I rescued it and got it operational. I even found a factory defect in it when I went to mount it on my B model JD. It had spent it's life on an A model. There are 2 sets of holes in the mounting brackets. The ones for the B on the one side was not drilled in the proper spot and needed reworked. LOL.
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Today's Featured Article - Tractor Profile: Allis-Chalmers Model G - by Staff. The first Allis-Chalmers Model G was produced in 1948 in Gasden, Alabama, and was designed for vegetable gardeners, small farms and landscape businesses. It is a small compact tractor that came with a complete line of implements especially tailored for its unique design. It featured a rear-mounted Continental N62 four-cylinder engine with a 2-3/8 x 3-1/2 inch bore and stroke. The rear-mounted engine provided traction for the rear wheels while at the same time gave the tractor operator a gre
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