Allis Chalmers 200 - Just a Good Old Tractor
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- Опубликовано: 18 сен 2024
- Allis Chalmers 200 - Just a Good Old Tractor
If you like seeing old tractors working here is another video for you
Cutting, Raking, and Baling Hay - Case, New Holland, and a John Deere 2750
• Cutting, Raking, and B...
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If you like seeing old tractors working, here is another video for you
Cutting, Raking, and Baling Hay - Case, New Holland, and a John Deere 2750
ruclips.net/video/RRC58U0e58o/видео.html
Thanks Brock and Billy! Lots of memories locked up in that old iron. I know how nostalgic I get when I happen to see and hear an old Farmall running! Makes me smile 🙂
I liked everything about my 200 except for the PTO stops when you clutch it so you have to use the hand lever
Good memories, thanks. We had a WD 45, JD 80 and 730. Back in 1980 my dad purchased another 225 acres from my grandmother and he went out and bought a 200.
I was 12 at the time and the 200 was the first tractor i drove on own. My das was on the 80 and I in the 200 plowing in tandem. The 80 pulled 4-16's and the 200 pulled 4-18's. I would lap the 80 about 6-7 rounds but it came at a cost..... i refueled that 48gal tank at lunch while the 80 refueled its 20 gal tank at the end of the day.
Could go on and on about the 'ol girl but you get my point... good memories of growing up working the ground...
Thanks again,
Love the old Allis Chalmers. I worked on a farm that had a 170,180,190 Chalmers tractors. Plowed with the 190 and a 6 bottom Plow. I can still hear that thing singing and carrying the front wheels and a column of black smoke!!
If I remember correctly, the 190XT pulled a little harder than the 200. It had fluid in the rear tires but we had 1 AC plow and 1 John Deere. Both were 5-16’s.
Yes sir! I love to see and hear old tractors run.
Awesome guys! Thanks for sharing! I always wanted to be a farmer growing up... loved watching the tractors work the fields around my house. Particularly this monster green machine - a Steiger Panther (not sure the exact model number). It was the coolest looking tractor on the block for sure! Not many 4WD tractors pivoted in the middle in the late '70s and early '80s. Good memories! 🤠
I thought Steigers were cool until I saw an article in a farming magazine with a Big Bud. I watch Welker Farms just to see those things.
ABSOLUTELY GREAT VIDEO !!! You need to do some more of these for sure from time to time!! I was born in 1960 and cut my teeth on a 72’ Deere 3020D. The mid sixties thru the early eighties were the high watermark for classic farm Iron. Love these machines and will stop anytime anywhere I see one in my travels that’s still running! My uncle still has my granddads 72’ 3020D and farms with every day. This tractor has never been a prom queen it’s been in constant use since bought brand new in 72’ 🔥🔥🔥 great content
Nice ol rig. Hard to beat the way an old tractor sounds
Gotta love them old tractors!
Yes sir
My 200, you have to hold the key all the way over for 1 minute to heat the air intake for cold start anytime it is cool at all outside. They are cold nature for sure.
Mine just have to plug in for 30-45 minutes. Will start up in sub zero weather if plugged in for a little bit
Not as hard starting as a 4020 or 4430
@@SilverGleaner and you don't have to shake the wheel like a lunatic while turning the key
The 7030 and 7050 were made at the same time as the 200. The 7000 replaced the 200.
My great grandfather sold Allis Chamblers brand new. My mother tells story's of how when she would go so her grandparents house there would always be one or two tractors in the front yard.
The dealership would let him take them home for people to come demo the tractors, since they have a 400 acre farm.
Now my mother has just recently inherited half of the farm. I've been doing research on these old tractors glad you've done a video on one.
Thanks for the video Brock, this was definitely one of my favorite top 10 videos of yours. 👍🤠
Thanks for sharing the story and good luck with your farm
The 8000 series was my favorite. We rented an 8050 FWA one year and I thought it was the most badass thing ever and still do. I remember specifically riding in it with my uncle Rueben pulling a Landoll chisel breathing in secondhand cigarette smoke from his More brand cigarettes.
A 200 Allis Chalmers at 100 hp is merely a suggestion. Most had far more.
Use the manifold heater tgey start right up.
They dont run 2500 either, the tach goes that high, the engine runs about 2250
They have pretty good hydraulics for their day. The rated rpm is 2200 like most tractors built in those days and the PTO on your 200 is a dry socket reversible pto so there is no oil loss or contamination unlike the Deere models of the day. On the latev200 models like yours I would check the adjustment of the Power Director linkage using the service manual. It was an issue on the late 200 and can cause clutch slippage. You must have a fuel leak or a bad pump for it to start that hard. My late model 200 starts pretty good in pretty cold weather. BTW a 190XT is rated at 93 horse power and so was the 200 but the 200 according to Norm Swinford's book, usually ran around 105 horse power or more. When I worked at an Allis shop most XT and 200 tractors put out 110 to 130 horse power but engines usually climb slightly in hp as they break in and of course farmers loved to turn the screws to a turbobdiesel. Good video.
Thanks for sharing the information
My father sold Allis's for 25 years. We had a 200, 185, XT190, D17's, and an 8050. Some of those units had ether cold start. You would push a button that was tethered to a cable that gave the engine a shot of starting fluid.
We are going to use some ether next time we start it. There was a can on every tractor we owned.
It was built about 2 miles from my house 🏠 in Wisconsin.
Pretty cool
@@RockhillfarmYT Yes it is. A friend of mine his dad probably was the one who wrote the service manual for those tractor's .
I’m not sure it’s the original that came with it when he bought it, but we have a service manual for it.
@@billyshapp4076 OK.
Just as a point of reference, my first car was a '71 Chevelle (handed down from my dad) and it had factory a/c.
My grandpa and dad had a 190xt. That was the cats meow back then they said. Haha.
My dad had a '63 Cadillac, it was black and had the tail fins. We called it the Batmobile. The AC in that thing would literally freeze your cojones off, it had a vent in the lower steering column that blew right between your legs!
Thanks for sharing the story
Wouldn’t it be cool to still have at least drive it a few times
@@RockhillfarmYT I drove it in '76/'77, it was a luxurious ride. The point I failed to make was, yes, AC was well established in cars by 1972.
By far my favorite video although they are all good.
Now.... If we can get Rockhill farms to have an Allis Chalmers collection like I do that would be great haha.
Oh yeah by the way Billie Allis Chalmers did have their own loaders too. I have an Allis Chalmers loader on my D-17. They were 400 and 500 series loaders. My WD has one too and they were a lot more robust then the aftermarket loaders.
From one Brock to another... Good videos bud, keep up the great entertainment:)
Thanks
Very cool that you collect these
I'm looking at a 73 for $8,000 hour meter doesn't work one family tractor worth the money??
Old Betsy's old
My brother has a 190xt and I hate it. They are a cheap throw away tractor in my opinion. With 4000 original hours on it there isn't any left on it that hasn't needed to be rebuilt.
Except for my 1965 190 which has under 4000 hours, all of my family's 190 tractors we've had gathered at least 7000 hours or more without major issues except one old 1965 gas XT my dad took an axle bearing out on way back in the 80's. From 1966 and on all 190 models got heavier axles. We love ours and have been farming with them since the 1970's adding one here or there between myself, a brother and my dear old dad. They are just good easy to run and very comfortable tractors and the turbo diesels sip the fuel like no other from that era. Too bad you had some bad luck or I would guess a poorly maintained tractor. I could tell you about my father-in-law's POS poorly maintained John Deere if you like.