it´s one of the biggest tractor/truck meetings in Germany (located near Leipzig, Saxony). Happening on the first weekend of july every two years. 13:30 the blue one is a IFA H6, built in the 50s in East Germany, the green one is a KrAZ (soviet production) 14:20 also KrAZ 14:50 Fortschritt ZT 323-A (built in the 80s), the small ones on the trailer were built by the owners, as 'homage' (or whatever you wanna call it) to the original (much bigger) ZT 300 from the 70s 15:40 Unimog 401 "Froschauge" ("frog eye") 17:08 Magirus truck from the 60s 18:04 Primus P20 (from 1942) - built solely for road transportation ("big brother" of the Primus P14 at 10:20) 18:20 Moskvich (soviet built) 19:00 Lanz 4016 from the 50s - it IS the John Deere color - JD took over Lanz in 1957 (or 56? i'm not sure) and painted their tractors green-yellow before stopping the production in 1958/59 or something 19:20 Pampa (license-built Lanz , built in Argentina) and if you do have any further questions (also the rest of the video or any other ones)...let me know. I'm extremely interested in old machinery, especially tractors :)
15:40 seems to be 'long' wheel base, so it is a U402, not U401. Or maybe one of the first 70 U411 with closed cab, which also had the small Froschauge (frog eye) cabin.
whenever im having a bad day, just seeing you absolutely nerd out about trucks, cars, tractors, whatever just gives me so much simple joy, and i dont even care about motor vehicles at all
The third and fourth somewhat fancier looking ones were mobile homes used by people travelling around with circuses and fair attractions even up into the 1980s. I remember these at the fair campgrounds. The boxy ones with only one window are indeed Bauwagen, a mobile breakroom.
0:07 Apart from the American "r" and the slightly off "Sch" it was pretty spot on, your German is really nice to hear and very close to native with that word 😁
18:17 that blue sedan is "Moskvitch" 2140 .Yes I was 22 and 1992 I make with taht car my driver lessons. 1,5 L enigne R 4 ca 55 hps trop speed 135km/h ( 84 mph ) .
Heinrich Lanz AG in Mannheim was a German manufacturer of agricultural machinery. The majority of shares in the company, which was founded in 1859, were taken over by the US agricultural machinery manufacturer John Deere in 1956. The sales name "Bulldog" for the agricultural tractors manufactured by Lanz between 1921 and 1960 became a synonymous generic name for tractors from all manufacturers. Since 1967, John Deere has no longer used the "Lanz" brand for products from its German subsidiary, and in the same year the suffix was also removed from its company name. In 1956, after 200,000 Bulldogs had been built, Süddeutsche Bank, a predecessor of Deutsche Bank, sold its 51% majority shareholding in Heinrich Lanz AG for 115% or a total of 21.114 million DM (German marks) to the US company John Deere & Company, which expanded the Mannheim site to become its European headquarters. The last Bulldog design was presented in 1957, the D4016 with 40 hp (29 kW). In 1958, Lanz's corporate livery changed from blue and red to John Deere's green and yellow, and the first modern multi-cylinder diesel tractor was developed. In 1960, Heinrich Lanz AG Mannheim was renamed John Deere-Lanz AG. Bulldog production in Mannheim ended in 1960 with the introduction of the John Deere-LANZ 300 and 500 tractors with four-cylinder diesel engines. Bulldogs were still produced at Lanz Iberica in Getafe, Spain, until 1962. The John Deere (Lanz) tractors gradually replaced the entire Bulldog series; large models were initially still imported from the USA. Machines from the Mannheim and Zweibrücken factories still bore the lettering "John Deere-LANZ" for several years. The use of the brand name "Lanz" ended with the payout of the last Lanz shareholders in 1967, when the company name "John Deere-Lanz AG" was changed to "John Deere Werke Mannheim, Zweigniederlassung der Deere & Company". From then on, John Deere-Lanz Verwaltungs-AG limited itself to renting and leasing the Mannheim plant to John Deere & Co. At the Annual General Meeting on August 22, 2011, a resolution was finally passed to force the remaining shareholders of John Deere-Lanz Verwaltungs-Aktiengesellschaft to relinquish their shares in return for a payment of EUR 638.24 per share.
@@wietholdtbuhl6168 @wietholdtbuhl6168 nein Deere ist in USA geboren und hatte nie den deutschen Namen Hirsch getragen. Das Unternehmen trägt seit Gründung den Namen des Gründers. Der Hirsch im Logo kam erst später, vorher war es ein Pflug. Die Farben stehen für die Basis der Agrarwirtschaft in USA, dem Mais.
@@wietholdtbuhl6168 Hab jetzt mal nachgeschaut weil ich nicht sicher war, hab aber diesbezüglich nichts gefunden. Lediglich die Bezeichnung Hirsch als Benennung des John Deere wie zum Beispiel "Premium Hirsch" oder "Gelber Hirsch" oder auch "Seltener Hirsch". Zu den Suchbedingungen "Hirsch Traktoren" Findet man immer nur Deere Traktoren, zu den Suchbedingungen "Hirsch Landmaschinen" findet man nur Landmaschinen Handel Hirsch" jedoch keinen Hersteller zu Hirsch als Firma sodaß ich erstmal bis auf evtl. Beweise davon ausgehe, daß dies nicht existiert oder existiert hat . Also selbst unter Technikbörsen und Landmaschinen Börsen habe ich jetzt nirgends außer alten Belarus, Kirovez und den gängigen Traktormarken aus der westlichen Welt keinen Hirsch gefunden außer Querverweise auf Deere. Nachtrag: aus den letzten 50 Jahren hab ich nur die gefunden: Schlüter, Porsche, Kramer, Eicher, VEB Fortschritt, MAN Ackerdiesel, Lanz, Hela Aulendorf, Hanomag, Linde Güldner, Fendt, Fahr, Deutz, Bautz, Allgaier.....leider kein Hirsch
8:00 red numbers in Germany are usually dealer tags or for test drive. One would have one set of plates for a number of vehicles and basically have to keep record when the tags are used. This would also include historic vehicles for shows like in this case. So basically the use is limited to the show here. It's not a "daily driver".
1:50 Lanz plaquette: 38 HP, 10.266 liter volume, and vehicle number. 7:00 1. machine is separating the grain from the hay. 2nd machine is pressing the hay to hay bells 8:00 the Lanz has a red plate. These are for car traders only. And the vehicle does not need to be full street legal but safe. And the Autobahn may only be accessed with vehicles running at least 60km/h 10:00 that is a 1 axle tractor 13:35 IFA not LGA 14:30 these Trucks look like made in eastern Germany as it was the GDR 14:55 A vehicle is at least 30 years old if they have an "H" after the numbers on the number plate. 16:30 the miniature houses are mobile accommodations for construction workers where they can take their break. 16:50 The truck is a Magirus (Deutz) 17:50 I think the little UniMoG is self made 18:30 That car is definitely not a Trabant. It may be a Wartburg, but I am in doubt.
Having been living in the US 20+ years, and as a long time follower of your channel, I am still amazed that a Murican is actually interested in stuff from elsewhere! 😄👍 It is not the norm. Good for you!
10:15 I don’t know about this exact model (maybe someone else can pitch in), but back in my childhood (rural Switzerland, early 90s), vehicles of a similar build (a lot of times with only one axle) were still quite popular with people who had a small farm or a larger plot of land, either to transport smaller or lighter loads on a flatbed trailer or to drive with agricultural tools like ploughs, snowploughs or mowers mounted to the front.
7:56 a red plate starting from 07 is especially for owners of more than one historic vehicle. They get a set of plates for one vehicle, but are free to interchange them between their other vehicles, cars, motor bikes, trucks or whatever. Users have to keep a log book for every ride.
Nicht ganz richtig. Es gibt Fahrzeuge, die mehr als 60 Km/h fahren und nicht auf die Autobahn dürfen. Die Autobahn darf nur mit Fahrzeuge befahren werden, deren *eingetragene* Geschwindigkeit über 60 Km/h liegt. ;)
@@SheratanLP But wouldn't those just be completely illegal to drive on public streets if their registered maximum speed is 60 km/h or under and they still go faster?
@@oskar6747 No, not necessarily. There are vehicles in Germany that, according to the factory specifications, drive 60 km/h, but reach speeds of over 60 km/h from the factory. These were manufactured before 1989 and the fall of the Berlin Wall and have what is known as grandfathering. The best example is the Simson S50 moped, built in East Germany. Its maximum speed stated by the factory is 60 km/h, but it can reach speeds of 80 km/h without any modifications being made to the moped that would increase the speed. You are not allowed to use this moped on the motorway because, according to the road traffic regulations, only vehicles with a speed *over* 60 km/h are allowed to drive. And so that there is no misunderstanding. It is permitted in Germany to tune vehicles to reach higher speeds. However, these vehicles must have been inspected by the TÜV and have received approval for operation from the TÜV. If such vehicles are not approved by the TÜV, the vehicle's operating license automatically expires. However, for the motorway with its minimum speed, what counts is the maximum speed specified by the manufacturer for a vehicle. It doesn't matter whether it can legally reach speeds of over 60 km/h.
16:20 For all of you guys explaining to Ian the use of our famous "Bauwagen", you forgot to add the most important thing, apart from construction works it was also used by Peter Lustig 😆😋
red plates are for a limited time usage,green is basicly for special usage like agriculture and forestry or like boat trailers( u can use them for nothing else) they are mainly tax free.the black plates are the regular plates. black plates with an H at the end are "oldtimer",you have to keep them in pretty original condition to get the H.
Greem ones mean the car is tax free: car of peaple with a disability, trucks and trailers, that are more a movable machine than a basic truck e.c. a crane; trailers for sportsgear or animals for sportive purposes; you can also often find them on trailers behind big trucks - the trailers go free because the pulling truck pays extra tax (you pay once for the trailers and may have several trailers than may be only be pulled by a truck with the higher tax. Don't mess it up, its a tax violation!!!
Lanz was aquired by John Deere in the 50s, thats basically how John Deere got in the European tractor market and thats why that Lanz had the John Deere color scheme. Today John Deeres largest european factory is in Mannheim, the place where all the Lanz Bulldogs also were built. 🙂
5:20 treshing and bailing (straw not hay), in that order The green tractor (and the ones its pulling) is apparently "Fortschritt" ZT made by the East German manufacturer VEB Traktorenwerk Schönebeck from early 80 to 90.
3:49 Don't forget: it is a single-cylinder two-stroke crud-oil engine with a displacement of over 10 litres - about 600 cui for the people using "four letter words" for measuring.
The plaque on the Bulldog says: Heinrich Lanz - manufacturer Mannheim - city headquarters of the company 38PS - 38HP ;-) Hubraum 10266ccm/10,3liter Size of the Engine: 626,5cui (one single piston!) Schlepper Nummer - Number of the Tractor
I drove some Krazs in the army, they had either a foldable bridge or pontoon mounted and we'd practise with them. But the damn things were constantly braking down ' cause a - they were soviet built , b- they'd been sitting unused for the prior ~15 years. Quite fun anyway in hindsight
@@jutimatias yeaa... Unsused for years and sitting i can imagine them breaking down lots, but if used and properly kept these are seriously reliable trucks. The soviet built part isnt really the big problem with em. At least they arent horrible to work on when something does go wrong.
@@Ярослав-с7и6г ....not really, it goes a bit deeper than that. The KrAZ 255 is a truck on basis of the JaAZ 214 which then became the KrAZ 214 and then the 255. (the literally only difference between the JaAZ 214 and the KrAZ 214 being the hood ornament as far as i know) The 256B as well as the 257 and 258 also lead back straight to the JaAZ 210 in chassis, as well as the aforementioned JaAZ 214. It was the JaAZ 210 that took design choices from the REO and the T-980. The later JaAZ and the KrAZ only developed further on the 210. The KrAZ 250 and 260 as well as after those the 6443 are in design rather different, except of a lot of drivetrain parts. Key difference between 250 and 260 is the either 4x6 or 6x6 chassis, both used the twin turboed YaMZ 238, unlike the 255, 256B, 257 and 258. These used NA YaMZ 238's. The reason the 255 came up as a 6x6 after the 214 is that the licenced Detroit in these, called M206B, was straight up underpowered for a truck of that size. But luckily the Kirowez K700 came along, and while doubling to trippling the entire eastern bloc agricultural income alone, brought the YaMZ 238 with it. Same engine also was used in the MT-LB and stuff, later twinturbo charged for the K700A and that twin turbo charged engine lead to variants for the 250, 260 and further. In terms of transmissions, the one in the 210 and 214 that were american licenced also werent exactly good, and after the YaMZ 238 engines came along the YaMZ 238N transmissions came along, which helped with that problem and all stuff was alter build on those.
@@derpmaniak7823After the Second World War, the Union had a lot of American trucks from Lend-Lease, including Diamonds t890, so the Union began to manufacture their copies. Initially, both YaAZ and KRAZ produced the same American copy. YaMZ engines and the transmission to them are also copies of the Americans
Those mobile homes were often used by construction companies as some changing rooms on site, place to have lunch, tool storage. I'm talking especially about road works, about concrete contractors on big construction sites.
16:45 Lanz full diesel (no more blow torch for starting) and a showman's wagon (the wagon in which showman live at the fair) some may call it a gypsy wagon
at 9:21 they are Barkas vans , 3cylinder 2 stroke engines , that also equipped the IFA Wartbourg 353 cars , practically only a bigger flywheel on the Barkas for torque.
A very strong recommendation for you for an irish channel i think youd appreciate, one of the maddest car channels ive seen, channel evenflow, vid combustion!
Nice collection! At 9:35 those colourful vans are called "Barkas B1000", an East German brand. They were very common back in the days. B1000s came in many versions like pickup trucks or minibuses and were equipped with 2-stroke-engines. They were used as ambulances, by law enforcement , firefighters, as delivery vehicles.... The blue truck at 13:30 is another east german vehicle "IFA S4000", the green military truck should be an soviet-russian KrAz (255 maybe...)
@@SheratanLP Okay, war nicht dabei. 🙂An Führerhaus und Haube kann ich die nicht unterscheiden, mMn sind die sogar identisch. Der H6 wurde ja schon 1959 wieder eingestellt, darum bin ich davon ausgegangen, dass die S4000's besser und mehr erhalten blieben. Aber dann ist der H6 ein umso coolerer Truck ^^
@@SheratanLP Der hat ja einen guten Ruf mit seiner Zuverlässigkeit, coole Sache! Ich kenn den S4000 noch aus der Kindheit, ein Arbeitskollege von meiner mMutter hat immer wenn der von der Brauerei Getränke ausgeliefert hat, einen Sack Treber von der Malzherstellung vorbeigebracht für die Tiere zuhause, da durfte ich immer mal mit ins Führerhaus klettern. Von daher war mir der eher ein Begriff.
@@Tom_Err Ich hab ihn immer mal im Steinbruch gefahren, mit einem Tank hinten drauf um die Fahrwege zu wässern, damit es nicht so staubt, wenn wir mit unseren Roman Diesel Kippern drüber gefahren sind. War ne elendige Klapperkiste, aber echt zuverlässig. :)
Hello from Germany ! The small vans at minute 9.30 are not VWs, they are IFA Barkas from the GDR (East Germany). I think your videos are great, keep up the good work !
9:23 Those are Barkas B 1000 and 11:40 is an IFA H3A. Both are from East Germany. 13:25 On the left is an IFA H6 and on the right is, I believe, a Soviet/Ukrainian KrAZ-214 of the NVA (that's the East German National People's Army, not the North Vietnamese Army). 17:30 That logo is of Magirus-Deutz. Today, Magirus is one of the largest manufacturers of fire fighting vehicles.
19:05 John Deere bought Lanz in the 50ies. Until 1967 both logos were shown, than the color and logo was changed to JD. Lanz had a big production plant in Mannheim, which is JD today, and a lot of these tractors, produced in germany are still exported to the US! 😉
Here in northern germany they named it "Trecker Treffen". A few years ago we attended this event as a father's day motor bike tour. There I saw a Porsche Diesel Tractor P 133 for the first time. Best wishes from Hamburg (Germany)
10.13 One Axle Tractor: Those things were usually coupled with a small trailer to buuild an articulated (mini-) truck. The driver used to sit on the trailer to steer the combo.
09:00 min.: Bulldogs were manufactured from 1921 to 1957 when John Deere purchased the Heinrich Lanz AG located at Mannheim. Therefor all Bulldogs to be seen here are at least 77 years old.
1:50 That's a "Typenschild" (type-label"). It holds different information about the vehicle it's attached to, including the VIN (in this case the "Schlepper-Nr.") The odd thing here is that the weight (Kg) is blanked out. Maybe the tractor was restored, they replaced the label and didn't input that again.
16:40 Bauwagen, sort of a camper for the construction crews And the brown one towed by a beautiful Lanz Volldiesel (16:46) was used by the circus or fairground folks (Schausteller)
You recognized the 2 main series of Lanz tractors very well. There was a series called Ackerluft, which basically translates to field-air and a series called Eilbulldog, "hasty-Bulldog" or "fast-Bulldog". The Ackerluft series had smaller, wider tires and was used in field work, had a slower transmission, usually up to 25 km/h 16mph, the Eilbulldog series had larger diameter but narrower tires and a faster transmission up to 40 km/h 25mph and was used as an alternative mover in haulage operations.
13:31 the blue truck was build by the east German IFA (Industrial Association for Vehicle Construction) and going by the image I'd say its an IFA H6 The green one could be either a ZIL, a URAL or KrAZ imported from Russia for use by the NVA, Armed forces of east Germany, clearly marked as a NVA vehicle on the door
9:20 - These are probably “Express Bulldogs” that were approved for road traffic and intended for pulling heavy loads. 9:46 - Barkas B 1000 16:56 - These "Express Bulldogs" were used to transport circus companies from town to town, some of these wagons look like old circus wagons. 17:09 - This is a Magirus-Deutz. 19:07 - The Heinrich Lanz AG was taken over by John Deere in 1956. 19:34 - In Argentina there was the Pampa T01 type built under license (Pampa Bulldog)
The first machine seperates the straw from whe grain, the second one makes bales out of the straw. Later machines combined the two, so that you "only" have to lift the wheat up and get bales / grain out. It's the ancient version of a combine harvester. The small stationary motors were very common in smaller villages two, they predated the tractor and were much cheaper (tractor without wheels). Some are even steam powered, later electric (in the 50s). All get's linked up with belts made from plant fiber, which has to be lubricated frequently to keep the friction on the wheel of the motor and the machine.
The blowout at 4:40 is caused by the glow igniting system of the Lanz tractor.the diesel mixture is ignited with a petroleum burner and afterwards each stroke ignites the next mixture, if there is not everything exhausted from the first stroke you get a part of this explosion with the next , so an overignition…😂
9:15 East-German Barkas B1000 13:45 The blue truck is an East-German 1950s IFA truck. The green military truck is a 1960s KRAZ from the Soviet Union 14:10 the red and white truck is a 1950' to 1960s Soviet KAZ truck You should check these out and also look into the URAL, ZIL and KAMAZ trucks. They are awesome and way to underrated
The VW bus is officially called "Transporter" by Volkswagen and the different model lines over the years are T1, T2, T3 and so on. But really nobody calls them that here, we also say VW bus. Btw., they have now launched a fully electric one, did you see? The truck with the logo looking like a rocket is a Magirus-Deutz from the late 50s, early 60s. Magirus-Deutz was really big then in West Germany, building trucks, busses and heavy machinery. Later on the company was swallowed by IVECO.
13:37 "IFA" - East German automobile company 13:55 KrAZ 255B - was in use in most Warsaw Pact armies 14:13 looks like KrAZ 219 to me. KrAZ is a former soviet now Ukrainian company producing trucks now also MRAP military vehicles
16:35 mobile construction hut 16:50 old circus trailers modelled after early 1900 train carts 18:00 Primus Diesel. A stationary engine build up to be movable / usable to pull
The Heinrich Lanz Ag was bought by JD, thats why that one Lanz had JD Colors, they had a time when they were called John Deere Lanz, and the Orange Pampa was a license build by the argentinian, Australians also built licensed Lanz under some other name
At 13:12, that's a KrAZ 255B military truck. It was made from 1967 to 1994 in the city of Kremenchuk, USSR (currently in Ukraine). It is a 12 tons truck with a 14.9 litres V8 naturally aspirated diesel engine, with a 260 HP output. Fun fact, that the bodywork's frame was made from wood, and the truck has got an own compressor, which can blow the tires up. It was very popular in the communist countries, the Hungarian army is still using many of them.
You know the old expression "fast and loose"? That was referring to those long slack belts on the farm machinery (and in factories). They were notorious for flying off if they weren't aligned properly, and were dangerous.
6:08 It's a threshing machine. That old design are still in use in Norway. There's no need to ditch something that still does the job, when you're just threshing samples. Getting a newer machine running for small batch of grass is just a waste of time, when the old one is easier and faster
8:05 Yes, they are streetlegal, but going on the Autobahn not only doesn't make any sense (like he said) but is also illegal. To drive on the Autobahn your verhicle must at least be able to go 60 kmph.
16:49 They are used by construction workers as a break room or as a shelter in bad weather.....although there are now some that have been converted into apartments by a few hardy people
Many of the vehicles you saw there were east german brands (East Germany, formerly known as DDR - before the german wall fell). I think the Schleppertreffen was somewhere in the eastern part of Germany. Btw I am very impressed of your german pronounciation! Very good!! The Lanz company was bought by John Deere in 1956. One year later the last Lanz left the factory.
At the time of my grandfather most farmers had one engine to do it all - it could be mechanically coupled with threshing machines, feed mills, centrifuges, drillers, gang saws, ... you name it. In the case of my grandfather it was even a electrical one, because they were with the first to get electricity in their vicinity, but later they had also a tractor with external transmission shafts like shown here. 8:18 You are not allowed to take them to the Autobahn because they are not fast enough. Only vehicles which are able to be faster than 60 kph are allowed to use the Autobahn. 9:25 They look like Barkas B 1000 (produced 1961-1991 in Karl-Marx-Stadt - now renamed Chemnitz again - in the GDR). The Schleppertreffen took place in Leipzig, Saxony (which was part of the GDR). "Barkas" was the family name of Hannibal of Carthago and is Punic for "lightning". At the time of its construction it was in some terms more performant than its western counterparts (front-wheel-drive, low loading height, up to 1 ton load capacity, ...). 13:38 IFA stands for Industrieverband Fahrzeugbau (Industrial Association Vehicle Manufacturing), a collective combine in the GDR compassing all automotive corporations. The logo was mainly used by the subsidiary IFA Nutzfahrzeuge (IFA Utility Vehicles) as well as for early passenger car models (based often on pre-WW II models, for which originals the copyright often belonged to western companies). 14:59 A ZT 320 of the East German brand "Fortschritt" (progress), built in the 1980s in the VEB Traktorenwerk Schönebeck ('people owned company tractor plant Schönebeck'). 16:35 "Bauwagen" (construction site wagons) are mobile sheds / break rooms / offices used on many construction sites - sometimes also reused as mobile homes, studios or kindergarten sheds (for so called Waldkindergarten = forest kindergarten - see e.g. ruclips.net/video/31eBV6ZTNDQ/видео.html). They are similar to older circus wagons. 17:07 a Magirus Deutz truck. Magirus was originally a producer of firefighter trucks and equipment in Ulm - the logo incorporates symbolically the Ulm Minster silhouette. It was merged with the Diesel engine manufacturer Humboldt-Deutz (Cologne) in 1936 and was very successful in the 1950s and 1960s. As it got financially troubled in the 1970s, it was taken over by the Italian Iveco company.
the five cars on the Right are Barkas B 1000 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barkas_B_1000 . The Barkas B 1000 was build in GDR. The Motorbike with sidecar at 11:28 MZ build in the GDR. The Round nose Truck at 17:17 is a Deutz build in western Germany. The Blue Car at 18:21 is a Moskvitch build in Russia. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moskvitch,
if you need torque for days but don't have the means the light a steam engine and keep it going just bring a Lanz Bulldog and a tanker of crude, might need a small fire for preheating that stuff but that like is going at the campsite anyway
Well , the first Lanz Bulldog with 12 PS came out 1921 = over 100 Years now and the Plate says 38 PS , one cylinder with 10,266 l , probably the D9511 Modell build from 1935-1936 = 89 Years Old
13:00 Top Gear had an episode where the challenge was to "find a car that the parking attendant of a Casino/Hotel in Monaco COULDNT re-park" ... and they came up with a MODEL T ... which was still there next moring (right in front of the entrance). Starting them wasnt easy ...
@19:00 In 1960, Heinrich Lanz AG Mannheim was renamed John Deere-Lanz AG. In Mannheim, Bulldog production ended in 1960 with the introduction of the John Deere LANZ tractors
Imagine driving this Lanz 4:40 through a tunnel xD If this Schleppertreffen is coming up again in the year, then these Lanz Bulldogs owners are coming from all around Germany, yes some of them are driving over 300km (186 miles) or more through Germany to this Meet. Therefore, they need a place to sleep so they just take their Caravan with them, that's these "Shed's". I'am living in a small Village, and some of them are driving through here, it's always a pleasure to hear them :D
1:27, 19:06 centre of the Wheel shows the Crest of the "Heinrich Lanz Aktiengesellschaft Mannheim" By the way the Heinrich Lanz Ag was taken over in or about 62 by Deere & Company out of Moline Illinois, the colour of which happens to be a dark green paired with yellow rims Beautiful Lanz yes, but Green and Yellow; be careful what you say if you ever find yourself a guest at one of these meets... might be seeing the pointy ends of some pitchforks if you get the wrong part of the crowd
17:00 These Mobile Home were used often by traveling circuses, but also bevor war to traveling construction companies to house the construction workers away from home or later to give a place for pauses during daytime.
The first machine was probably a thresher. And the other a baler. I don't think you're allowed to drive a tractor on the autobahn. At least that's how it is on the motorway in Sweden.
@@onkelpencho8609 Your vehicle must be designed to reach a speed of at least 60 km and you allowed to drive on the autobahn, even if you drive under 60 km is still allowed. Otherwise, regulations applies that no one should be hindered more than is necessary under the circumstances
it´s one of the biggest tractor/truck meetings in Germany (located near Leipzig, Saxony). Happening on the first weekend of july every two years.
13:30 the blue one is a IFA H6, built in the 50s in East Germany, the green one is a KrAZ (soviet production)
14:20 also KrAZ
14:50 Fortschritt ZT 323-A (built in the 80s), the small ones on the trailer were built by the owners, as 'homage' (or whatever you wanna call it) to the original (much bigger) ZT 300 from the 70s
15:40 Unimog 401 "Froschauge" ("frog eye")
17:08 Magirus truck from the 60s
18:04 Primus P20 (from 1942) - built solely for road transportation ("big brother" of the Primus P14 at 10:20)
18:20 Moskvich (soviet built)
19:00 Lanz 4016 from the 50s - it IS the John Deere color - JD took over Lanz in 1957 (or 56? i'm not sure) and painted their tractors green-yellow before stopping the production in 1958/59 or something
19:20 Pampa (license-built Lanz , built in Argentina)
and if you do have any further questions (also the rest of the video or any other ones)...let me know. I'm extremely interested in old machinery, especially tractors :)
How cool is to see a Pampa from my country :D
the KrAZ 255's, like at 13:30, are just awesome.... good old Yamz 238 diesel V8.
Moskvich 2140
Thank YOU!! 🙏 🎉
15:40 seems to be 'long' wheel base, so it is a U402, not U401.
Or maybe one of the first 70 U411 with closed cab, which also had the small Froschauge (frog eye) cabin.
9:15 is a Barkas B1000, the East German Van and counterpart of the VW Bus.
11:33 is am MZ TS250, a East German Motorbike Company
By the way. Until 1990, MZ was the largest motorcycle manufacturer in the world
@@bubu5908 Already in 1939 DKW Zschopau produced 1/4 million motorcycles per year or more. Honda overtook about 1984 with 600.000 ..
Later MZ Motorenwerk Zschopau..
5:15 The first machine is a thresher that separates the wheat and second machine is a baler that as the name suggest makes hay bales.
whenever im having a bad day, just seeing you absolutely nerd out about trucks, cars, tractors, whatever just gives me so much simple joy, and i dont even care about motor vehicles at all
Me too, and I like his voice.
I’m happy to hear that, I feel joy connecting with people here and reading comments 🎉❤
16:41 These are "Bauwagen" These were often used as a mobile office or eating place for construction workers
... and as "permanent homes" for small (semi-mobile) hippie/alternative/minimalist lifestyle communities.
@@Muck006 And Peter Lustig.
Those "little houses" are called BAUWAGEN and are used on construction sites for the workers to have breaks ore change clothes.
And beer drinking!
@@blaster1670 ... and beeers, too, sure
or to transport many amounts of small tools
The third and fourth somewhat fancier looking ones were mobile homes used by people travelling around with circuses and fair attractions even up into the 1980s. I remember these at the fair campgrounds. The boxy ones with only one window are indeed Bauwagen, a mobile breakroom.
and you can buy them privat for drinking partys in the country
0:07 Apart from the American "r" and the slightly off "Sch" it was pretty spot on, your German is really nice to hear and very close to native with that word 😁
The buses you were referring to at around 10:00, those are Barkas 1000.They use the powertrain from the Wartburg 353. It's east-german hardware.
1:50 10.2 litre single cylinder 38 HP :) But more torque than a tank :) The other number is the VIN
18:17 that blue sedan is "Moskvitch" 2140 .Yes I was 22 and 1992 I make with taht car my driver lessons. 1,5 L enigne R 4 ca 55 hps trop speed 135km/h ( 84 mph ) .
Schlepper is the German word for tractor (Traktor)
These can be tractors for the field, or tractors that pull trailers over the roads.
In American English "to schlep" or "to schlepp" means "schleppen".
Heinrich Lanz AG in Mannheim was a German manufacturer of agricultural machinery. The majority of shares in the company, which was founded in 1859, were taken over by the US agricultural machinery manufacturer John Deere in 1956. The sales name "Bulldog" for the agricultural tractors manufactured by Lanz between 1921 and 1960 became a synonymous generic name for tractors from all manufacturers. Since 1967, John Deere has no longer used the "Lanz" brand for products from its German subsidiary, and in the same year the suffix was also removed from its company name.
In 1956, after 200,000 Bulldogs had been built, Süddeutsche Bank, a predecessor of Deutsche Bank, sold its 51% majority shareholding in Heinrich Lanz AG for 115% or a total of 21.114 million DM (German marks) to the US company John Deere & Company, which expanded the Mannheim site to become its European headquarters. The last Bulldog design was presented in 1957, the D4016 with 40 hp (29 kW). In 1958, Lanz's corporate livery changed from blue and red to John Deere's green and yellow, and the first modern multi-cylinder diesel tractor was developed. In 1960, Heinrich Lanz AG Mannheim was renamed John Deere-Lanz AG. Bulldog production in Mannheim ended in 1960 with the introduction of the John Deere-LANZ 300 and 500 tractors with four-cylinder diesel engines. Bulldogs were still produced at Lanz Iberica in Getafe, Spain, until 1962. The John Deere (Lanz) tractors gradually replaced the entire Bulldog series; large models were initially still imported from the USA. Machines from the Mannheim and Zweibrücken factories still bore the lettering "John Deere-LANZ" for several years.
The use of the brand name "Lanz" ended with the payout of the last Lanz shareholders in 1967, when the company name "John Deere-Lanz AG" was changed to "John Deere Werke Mannheim, Zweigniederlassung der Deere & Company". From then on, John Deere-Lanz Verwaltungs-AG limited itself to renting and leasing the Mannheim plant to John Deere & Co. At the Annual General Meeting on August 22, 2011, a resolution was finally passed to force the remaining shareholders of John Deere-Lanz Verwaltungs-Aktiengesellschaft to relinquish their shares in return for a payment of EUR 638.24 per share.
War John Deere vorher Firma Hirsch?
@@wietholdtbuhl6168 @wietholdtbuhl6168 nein Deere ist in USA geboren und hatte nie den deutschen Namen Hirsch getragen. Das Unternehmen trägt seit Gründung den Namen des Gründers. Der Hirsch im Logo kam erst später, vorher war es ein Pflug. Die Farben stehen für die Basis der Agrarwirtschaft in USA, dem Mais.
@@Arch_Angelus Aber es gab Tracktoren mit dem Namen Hirsch!20'Jahre oder so
@@wietholdtbuhl6168 Hab jetzt mal nachgeschaut weil ich nicht sicher war, hab aber diesbezüglich nichts gefunden. Lediglich die Bezeichnung Hirsch als Benennung des John Deere wie zum Beispiel "Premium Hirsch" oder "Gelber Hirsch" oder auch "Seltener Hirsch". Zu den Suchbedingungen "Hirsch Traktoren" Findet man immer nur Deere Traktoren, zu den Suchbedingungen "Hirsch Landmaschinen" findet man nur Landmaschinen Handel Hirsch" jedoch keinen Hersteller zu Hirsch als Firma sodaß ich erstmal bis auf evtl. Beweise davon ausgehe, daß dies nicht existiert oder existiert hat . Also selbst unter Technikbörsen und Landmaschinen Börsen habe ich jetzt nirgends außer alten Belarus, Kirovez und den gängigen Traktormarken aus der westlichen Welt keinen Hirsch gefunden außer Querverweise auf Deere.
Nachtrag: aus den letzten 50 Jahren hab ich nur die gefunden: Schlüter, Porsche, Kramer, Eicher, VEB Fortschritt, MAN Ackerdiesel, Lanz, Hela Aulendorf, Hanomag, Linde Güldner, Fendt, Fahr, Deutz, Bautz, Allgaier.....leider kein Hirsch
@@Arch_Angelus Danke !Dann kann ich was von meiner Festplatte im Gehirn löschen!
8:00 red numbers in Germany are usually dealer tags or for test drive. One would have one set of plates for a number of vehicles and basically have to keep record when the tags are used. This would also include historic vehicles for shows like in this case. So basically the use is limited to the show here. It's not a "daily driver".
The red 07xxx licence plates are for oldtimers, and can be used for more than one vehicle.
@@DanielPortmann-v7k
Ususally for collectors. Nothing for driving around exept for shows or meetings like this and not more than 7000 km p.a.
1:50 Lanz plaquette: 38 HP, 10.266 liter volume, and vehicle number.
7:00 1. machine is separating the grain from the hay. 2nd machine is pressing the hay to hay bells
8:00 the Lanz has a red plate. These are for car traders only. And the vehicle does not need to be full street legal but safe. And the Autobahn may only be accessed with vehicles running at least 60km/h
10:00 that is a 1 axle tractor
13:35 IFA not LGA
14:30 these Trucks look like made in eastern Germany as it was the GDR
14:55 A vehicle is at least 30 years old if they have an "H" after the numbers on the number plate.
16:30 the miniature houses are mobile accommodations for construction workers where they can take their break.
16:50 The truck is a Magirus (Deutz)
17:50 I think the little UniMoG is self made
18:30 That car is definitely not a Trabant. It may be a Wartburg, but I am in doubt.
Having been living in the US 20+ years, and as a long time follower of your channel, I am still amazed that a Murican is actually interested in stuff from elsewhere! 😄👍 It is not the norm. Good for you!
I enjoy America 🇺🇸 of course, but there’s a whole world out there, and it’s fascinating. More Americans should embrace it 😎
And if you go back to here (17:19), you can see a Porsche 111 (the little red coupé on the lefthand side of the road).
THis plate shows basically the identity.Model making( Lanz Bulldog), Horsepower(38), Displacement 10 liters and somthing. ( only one cylinder)
10:15 I don’t know about this exact model (maybe someone else can pitch in), but back in my childhood (rural Switzerland, early 90s), vehicles of a similar build (a lot of times with only one axle) were still quite popular with people who had a small farm or a larger plot of land, either to transport smaller or lighter loads on a flatbed trailer or to drive with agricultural tools like ploughs, snowploughs or mowers mounted to the front.
7:56 a red plate starting from 07 is especially for owners of more than one historic vehicle. They get a set of plates for one vehicle, but are free to interchange them between their other vehicles, cars, motor bikes, trucks or whatever. Users have to keep a log book for every ride.
You actually did pronounce Schleppertreffen quite well! Cheers from Berlin 🍻
In Germany you are only allowed on the motorway if you drive your vehicle faster than 60 kmh as standard
Nicht ganz richtig. Es gibt Fahrzeuge, die mehr als 60 Km/h fahren und nicht auf die Autobahn dürfen. Die Autobahn darf nur mit Fahrzeuge befahren werden, deren *eingetragene* Geschwindigkeit über 60 Km/h liegt. ;)
@@SheratanLP But wouldn't those just be completely illegal to drive on public streets if their registered maximum speed is 60 km/h or under and they still go faster?
@@oskar6747 No, not necessarily. There are vehicles in Germany that, according to the factory specifications, drive 60 km/h, but reach speeds of over 60 km/h from the factory. These were manufactured before 1989 and the fall of the Berlin Wall and have what is known as grandfathering. The best example is the Simson S50 moped, built in East Germany. Its maximum speed stated by the factory is 60 km/h, but it can reach speeds of 80 km/h without any modifications being made to the moped that would increase the speed. You are not allowed to use this moped on the motorway because, according to the road traffic regulations, only vehicles with a speed *over* 60 km/h are allowed to drive.
And so that there is no misunderstanding. It is permitted in Germany to tune vehicles to reach higher speeds. However, these vehicles must have been inspected by the TÜV and have received approval for operation from the TÜV. If such vehicles are not approved by the TÜV, the vehicle's operating license automatically expires.
However, for the motorway with its minimum speed, what counts is the maximum speed specified by the manufacturer for a vehicle. It doesn't matter whether it can legally reach speeds of over 60 km/h.
16:20 For all of you guys explaining to Ian the use of our famous "Bauwagen", you forgot to add the most important thing, apart from construction works it was also used by Peter Lustig 😆😋
Der Löwenzahn Bauwagen!
red plates are for a limited time usage,green is basicly for special usage like agriculture and forestry or like boat trailers( u can use them for nothing else) they are mainly tax free.the black plates are the regular plates. black plates with an H at the end are "oldtimer",you have to keep them in pretty original condition to get the H.
Greem ones mean the car is tax free: car of peaple with a disability, trucks and trailers, that are more a movable machine than a basic truck e.c. a crane; trailers for sportsgear or animals for sportive purposes; you can also often find them on trailers behind big trucks - the trailers go free because the pulling truck pays extra tax (you pay once for the trailers and may have several trailers than may be only be pulled by a truck with the higher tax. Don't mess it up, its a tax violation!!!
The red 07xxx plates are for oldtimers and can be changed between several vehicles.
9:30 these are Barkas vans. Made in GDR
Lanz was aquired by John Deere in the 50s, thats basically how John Deere got in the European tractor market and thats why that Lanz had the John Deere color scheme. Today John Deeres largest european factory is in Mannheim, the place where all the Lanz Bulldogs also were built. 🙂
5:20 treshing and bailing (straw not hay), in that order
The green tractor (and the ones its pulling) is apparently "Fortschritt" ZT made by the East German manufacturer VEB Traktorenwerk Schönebeck from early 80 to 90.
at: 7:10 the Ködel&Böhm is a threshing machine.
It is used to seperate the grain from the straw.
Like an modern combine.
19:24 Pampa is a licensed Version of the Lanz Bulldog, made in Argentina.
3:49 Don't forget: it is a single-cylinder two-stroke crud-oil engine with a displacement of over 10 litres - about 600 cui for the people using "four letter words" for measuring.
The plaque on the Bulldog says:
Heinrich Lanz - manufacturer
Mannheim - city headquarters of the company
38PS - 38HP ;-)
Hubraum 10266ccm/10,3liter Size of the Engine: 626,5cui (one single piston!)
Schlepper Nummer - Number of the Tractor
1:23 yes it´s a Lanz Bulldog. Easy to see. The pistons are static, it`s the tractor that that goes up and down.
That Lanz Bulldog at 7:50 looks like the Gym Bro-version of a Ford Model T, imo. XD
13:53 thats a KRaZ truck, made in USSR, it was used in communist east germany, as shown by the flag on the door
I drove some Krazs in the army, they had either a foldable bridge or pontoon mounted and we'd practise with them. But the damn things were constantly braking down ' cause a - they were soviet built , b- they'd been sitting unused for the prior ~15 years.
Quite fun anyway in hindsight
@@jutimatias yeaa... Unsused for years and sitting i can imagine them breaking down lots, but if used and properly kept these are seriously reliable trucks. The soviet built part isnt really the big problem with em. At least they arent horrible to work on when something does go wrong.
Yes, the good old Soviet-Ukrainian KRAZ, which was developed on the basis of the American Diamond T-980
@@Ярослав-с7и6г ....not really, it goes a bit deeper than that. The KrAZ 255 is a truck on basis of the JaAZ 214 which then became the KrAZ 214 and then the 255. (the literally only difference between the JaAZ 214 and the KrAZ 214 being the hood ornament as far as i know) The 256B as well as the 257 and 258 also lead back straight to the JaAZ 210 in chassis, as well as the aforementioned JaAZ 214. It was the JaAZ 210 that took design choices from the REO and the T-980. The later JaAZ and the KrAZ only developed further on the 210. The KrAZ 250 and 260 as well as after those the 6443 are in design rather different, except of a lot of drivetrain parts. Key difference between 250 and 260 is the either 4x6 or 6x6 chassis, both used the twin turboed YaMZ 238, unlike the 255, 256B, 257 and 258. These used NA YaMZ 238's. The reason the 255 came up as a 6x6 after the 214 is that the licenced Detroit in these, called M206B, was straight up underpowered for a truck of that size. But luckily the Kirowez K700 came along, and while doubling to trippling the entire eastern bloc agricultural income alone, brought the YaMZ 238 with it. Same engine also was used in the MT-LB and stuff, later twinturbo charged for the K700A and that twin turbo charged engine lead to variants for the 250, 260 and further. In terms of transmissions, the one in the 210 and 214 that were american licenced also werent exactly good, and after the YaMZ 238 engines came along the YaMZ 238N transmissions came along, which helped with that problem and all stuff was alter build on those.
@@derpmaniak7823After the Second World War, the Union had a lot of American trucks from Lend-Lease, including Diamonds t890, so the Union began to manufacture their copies. Initially, both YaAZ and KRAZ produced the same American copy.
YaMZ engines and the transmission to them are also copies of the Americans
Those mobile homes were often used by construction companies as some changing rooms on site, place to have lunch, tool storage.
I'm talking especially about road works, about concrete contractors on big construction sites.
16:45
Lanz full diesel (no more blow torch for starting) and a showman's wagon (the wagon in which showman live at the fair)
some may call it a gypsy wagon
at 9:21 they are Barkas vans , 3cylinder 2 stroke engines , that also equipped the IFA Wartbourg 353 cars , practically only a bigger flywheel on the Barkas for torque.
Those small vans are called Barkaz/Barkas. It was a 3 cylinder 2 stroke van. The engine was very similar if not the same as the Wartburg car.
A very strong recommendation for you for an irish channel i think youd appreciate, one of the maddest car channels ive seen, channel evenflow, vid combustion!
ruclips.net/video/gG2CdEv3Kjk/видео.htmlsi=bYL77hwpKY4OqvPu
Nice collection!
At 9:35 those colourful vans are called "Barkas B1000", an East German brand. They were very common back in the days. B1000s came in many versions like pickup trucks or minibuses and were equipped with 2-stroke-engines. They were used as ambulances, by law enforcement , firefighters, as delivery vehicles....
The blue truck at 13:30 is another east german vehicle "IFA S4000", the green military truck should be an soviet-russian KrAz (255 maybe...)
Das war kein S4000. Das war ein H6.
@@SheratanLP Okay, war nicht dabei. 🙂An Führerhaus und Haube kann ich die nicht unterscheiden, mMn sind die sogar identisch. Der H6 wurde ja schon 1959 wieder eingestellt, darum bin ich davon ausgegangen, dass die S4000's besser und mehr erhalten blieben. Aber dann ist der H6 ein umso coolerer Truck ^^
@@Tom_Err Bei mir hier in der Nähe ist ein Fuhrunternehmen, der fährt den H6 heute noch. S4000 sehe ich seltener.
@@SheratanLP Der hat ja einen guten Ruf mit seiner Zuverlässigkeit, coole Sache!
Ich kenn den S4000 noch aus der Kindheit, ein Arbeitskollege von meiner mMutter hat immer wenn der von der Brauerei Getränke ausgeliefert hat, einen Sack Treber von der Malzherstellung vorbeigebracht für die Tiere zuhause, da durfte ich immer mal mit ins Führerhaus klettern. Von daher war mir der eher ein Begriff.
@@Tom_Err Ich hab ihn immer mal im Steinbruch gefahren, mit einem Tank hinten drauf um die Fahrwege zu wässern, damit es nicht so staubt, wenn wir mit unseren Roman Diesel Kippern drüber gefahren sind. War ne elendige Klapperkiste, aber echt zuverlässig. :)
Hello from Germany ! The small vans at minute 9.30 are not VWs, they are IFA Barkas from the GDR (East Germany). I think your videos are great, keep up the good work !
The littel trailer are home for circusstaff or festival workers,the blue one is a shelter you find at constructionsites.
9:23 Those are Barkas B 1000 and 11:40 is an IFA H3A. Both are from East Germany.
13:25 On the left is an IFA H6 and on the right is, I believe, a Soviet/Ukrainian KrAZ-214 of the NVA (that's the East German National People's Army, not the North Vietnamese Army).
17:30 That logo is of Magirus-Deutz. Today, Magirus is one of the largest manufacturers of fire fighting vehicles.
The "vw bus" is a Barkas B 1000 Bus built in the GDR East Germany! This Bus has a 2Takt Motor
The word Schlepper comes from schleppen(pulling) so they all are Pullers😂
So does Tractor from Latin, trahere traho traxi ...pull
By the way, Lanz Traktoren had a close collaboration with John Deere for a while and the Lanz company was ultimately taken over by John Deere.
And John Deere still makes tractors in their old Mannheim plant. ruclips.net/video/hoyfIzY5l2M/видео.html
The colourful vans are East German Barkas B 1000.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barkas_B_1000
19:05 John Deere bought Lanz in the 50ies. Until 1967 both logos were shown, than the color and logo was changed to JD. Lanz had a big production plant in Mannheim, which is JD today, and a lot of these tractors, produced in germany are still exported to the US! 😉
The brass plate on the Lanz is called a Typenschild and it states the vehicle number and in this case the displacement or Hubraum
Here in northern germany they named it "Trecker Treffen". A few years ago we attended this event as a father's day motor bike tour. There I saw a Porsche Diesel Tractor P 133 for the first time. Best wishes from Hamburg (Germany)
10.13 One Axle Tractor: Those things were usually coupled with a small trailer to buuild an articulated (mini-) truck. The driver used to sit on the trailer to steer the combo.
09:00 min.: Bulldogs were manufactured from 1921 to 1957 when John Deere purchased the Heinrich Lanz AG located at Mannheim. Therefor all Bulldogs to be seen here are at least 77 years old.
1:50
That's a "Typenschild" (type-label"). It holds different information about the vehicle it's attached to, including the VIN (in this case the "Schlepper-Nr.")
The odd thing here is that the weight (Kg) is blanked out. Maybe the tractor was restored, they replaced the label and didn't input that again.
16:40
Bauwagen, sort of a camper for the construction crews
And the brown one towed by a beautiful Lanz Volldiesel (16:46) was used by the circus or fairground folks (Schausteller)
3:45 this pulls a Lanz Eildog, 1 cylinder 15 liter 50 bhp, it can pull heavy streetbuilding devices..
Alter lässt der Schläg naus!!!🤣
Die DSG Furzer sitzen da in der Ecke und heulen XD
9:48 Barkas
18:26 Russian Moskvich
You recognized the 2 main series of Lanz tractors very well. There was a series called Ackerluft, which basically translates to field-air and a series called Eilbulldog, "hasty-Bulldog" or "fast-Bulldog". The Ackerluft series had smaller, wider tires and was used in field work, had a slower transmission, usually up to 25 km/h 16mph, the Eilbulldog series had larger diameter but narrower tires and a faster transmission up to 40 km/h 25mph and was used as an alternative mover in haulage operations.
*13:40** I think it was a "Magirus-Deutz"*
Schlepper is the noun of schleppen, which means carry a big load (on your back). (And nearly collapse by the load.)
13:31
the blue truck was build by the east German IFA (Industrial Association for Vehicle Construction) and going by the image I'd say its an IFA H6
The green one could be either a ZIL, a URAL or KrAZ imported from Russia for use by the NVA, Armed forces of east Germany, clearly marked as a NVA vehicle on the door
9:20 - These are probably “Express Bulldogs” that were approved for road traffic and intended for pulling heavy loads.
9:46 - Barkas B 1000
16:56 - These "Express Bulldogs" were used to transport circus companies from town to town, some of these wagons look like old circus wagons.
17:09 - This is a Magirus-Deutz.
19:07 - The Heinrich Lanz AG was taken over by John Deere in 1956.
19:34 - In Argentina there was the Pampa T01 type built under license (Pampa Bulldog)
The first machine seperates the straw from whe grain, the second one makes bales out of the straw. Later machines combined the two, so that you "only" have to lift the wheat up and get bales / grain out. It's the ancient version of a combine harvester.
The small stationary motors were very common in smaller villages two, they predated the tractor and were much cheaper (tractor without wheels). Some are even steam powered, later electric (in the 50s).
All get's linked up with belts made from plant fiber, which has to be lubricated frequently to keep the friction on the wheel of the motor and the machine.
The blowout at 4:40 is caused by the glow igniting system of the Lanz tractor.the diesel mixture is ignited with a petroleum burner and afterwards each stroke ignites the next mixture, if there is not everything exhausted from the first stroke you get a part of this explosion with the next , so an overignition…😂
9:15 East-German Barkas B1000
13:45 The blue truck is an East-German 1950s IFA truck. The green military truck is a 1960s KRAZ from the Soviet Union
14:10 the red and white truck is a 1950' to 1960s Soviet KAZ truck
You should check these out and also look into the URAL, ZIL and KAMAZ trucks. They are awesome and way to underrated
The VW bus is officially called "Transporter" by Volkswagen and the different model lines over the years are T1, T2, T3 and so on. But really nobody calls them that here, we also say VW bus. Btw., they have now launched a fully electric one, did you see?
The truck with the logo looking like a rocket is a Magirus-Deutz from the late 50s, early 60s. Magirus-Deutz was really big then in West Germany, building trucks, busses and heavy machinery. Later on the company was swallowed by IVECO.
13:37 "IFA" - East German automobile company
13:55 KrAZ 255B - was in use in most Warsaw Pact armies
14:13 looks like KrAZ 219 to me. KrAZ is a former soviet now Ukrainian company producing trucks now also MRAP military vehicles
16:35 mobile construction hut
16:50 old circus trailers modelled after early 1900 train carts
18:00 Primus Diesel. A stationary engine build up to be movable / usable to pull
The Heinrich Lanz Ag was bought by JD, thats why that one Lanz had JD Colors, they had a time when they were called John Deere Lanz, and the Orange Pampa was a license build by the argentinian, Australians also built licensed Lanz under some other name
I want to tell you this little Unimog is called "Haflinger" its build by Puch also the little Brother(Sister) from the Pinzgauer.
17:09 I notice... some are also used as toilet carts, for example at festivals
12:45 i just drove the 2024 Tesly Model Y of my neighbor's, i have a 1992 Audi 80 B4. that's night and day already
At 13:12, that's a KrAZ 255B military truck. It was made from 1967 to 1994 in the city of Kremenchuk, USSR (currently in Ukraine). It is a 12 tons truck with a 14.9 litres V8 naturally aspirated diesel engine, with a 260 HP output. Fun fact, that the bodywork's frame was made from wood, and the truck has got an own compressor, which can blow the tires up.
It was very popular in the communist countries, the Hungarian army is still using many of them.
Yes, and I will also add that Kraz was developed on the basis of the American Diamond T980
You know the old expression "fast and loose"? That was referring to those long slack belts on the farm machinery (and in factories). They were notorious for flying off if they weren't aligned properly, and were dangerous.
6:08 It's a threshing machine. That old design are still in use in Norway. There's no need to ditch something that still does the job, when you're just threshing samples. Getting a newer machine running for small batch of grass is just a waste of time, when the old one is easier and faster
8:05 Yes, they are streetlegal, but going on the Autobahn not only doesn't make any sense (like he said) but is also illegal. To drive on the Autobahn your verhicle must at least be able to go 60 kmph.
16:49 They are used by construction workers as a break room or as a shelter in bad weather.....although there are now some that have been converted into apartments by a few hardy people
Many of the vehicles you saw there were east german brands (East Germany, formerly known as DDR - before the german wall fell). I think the Schleppertreffen was somewhere in the eastern part of Germany.
Btw I am very impressed of your german pronounciation! Very good!!
The Lanz company was bought by John Deere in 1956. One year later the last Lanz left the factory.
Didn't spot any Porsche tractors (they're usually red), seen one or two at rallies in the UK.
At the time of my grandfather most farmers had one engine to do it all - it could be mechanically coupled with threshing machines, feed mills, centrifuges, drillers, gang saws, ... you name it. In the case of my grandfather it was even a electrical one, because they were with the first to get electricity in their vicinity, but later they had also a tractor with external transmission shafts like shown here.
8:18 You are not allowed to take them to the Autobahn because they are not fast enough. Only vehicles which are able to be faster than 60 kph are allowed to use the Autobahn.
9:25 They look like Barkas B 1000 (produced 1961-1991 in Karl-Marx-Stadt - now renamed Chemnitz again - in the GDR). The Schleppertreffen took place in Leipzig, Saxony (which was part of the GDR). "Barkas" was the family name of Hannibal of Carthago and is Punic for "lightning". At the time of its construction it was in some terms more performant than its western counterparts (front-wheel-drive, low loading height, up to 1 ton load capacity, ...).
13:38 IFA stands for Industrieverband Fahrzeugbau (Industrial Association Vehicle Manufacturing), a collective combine in the GDR compassing all automotive corporations. The logo was mainly used by the subsidiary IFA Nutzfahrzeuge (IFA Utility Vehicles) as well as for early passenger car models (based often on pre-WW II models, for which originals the copyright often belonged to western companies).
14:59 A ZT 320 of the East German brand "Fortschritt" (progress), built in the 1980s in the VEB Traktorenwerk Schönebeck ('people owned company tractor plant Schönebeck').
16:35 "Bauwagen" (construction site wagons) are mobile sheds / break rooms / offices used on many construction sites - sometimes also reused as mobile homes, studios or kindergarten sheds (for so called Waldkindergarten = forest kindergarten - see e.g. ruclips.net/video/31eBV6ZTNDQ/видео.html). They are similar to older circus wagons.
17:07 a Magirus Deutz truck. Magirus was originally a producer of firefighter trucks and equipment in Ulm - the logo incorporates symbolically the Ulm Minster silhouette. It was merged with the Diesel engine manufacturer Humboldt-Deutz (Cologne) in 1936 and was very successful in the 1950s and 1960s. As it got financially troubled in the 1970s, it was taken over by the Italian Iveco company.
the five cars on the Right are Barkas B 1000 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barkas_B_1000 . The Barkas B 1000 was build in GDR. The Motorbike with sidecar at 11:28 MZ build in the GDR. The Round nose Truck at 17:17 is a Deutz build in western Germany. The Blue Car at 18:21 is a Moskvitch build in Russia. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moskvitch,
Van is barkas from ddr,they have 3 cylinder engine from motorcycle, and front wheel drive
you're only allowed on the Autobahn if your vehicle can make at least 60 km/h
if you need torque for days but don't have the means the light a steam engine and keep it going
just bring a Lanz Bulldog and a tanker of crude, might need a small fire for preheating that stuff but that like is going at the campsite anyway
funfact unimog is an abbreviation and means in full universal motor device hence the abbreviation unimog
7:35
The Term in German is actually "Straßenbulldog" and the one shown could be from a subcategory therein "Eilbulldog"
Well , the first Lanz Bulldog with 12 PS came out 1921 = over 100 Years now and the Plate says 38 PS , one cylinder with 10,266 l , probably the D9511 Modell build from 1935-1936 = 89 Years Old
13:00 Top Gear had an episode where the challenge was to "find a car that the parking attendant of a Casino/Hotel in Monaco COULDNT re-park" ... and they came up with a MODEL T ... which was still there next moring (right in front of the entrance). Starting them wasnt easy ...
@19:00 In 1960, Heinrich Lanz AG Mannheim was renamed John Deere-Lanz AG. In Mannheim, Bulldog production ended in 1960 with the introduction of the John Deere LANZ tractors
The tiny Unimog at 17:30 is/was an official product since the 80s, intended for foresters and mountainous use where paths are narrow and unstable.
The vehicle at 17:30 is not a Unimog, although it looks like one. Some home made bodywork.
Imagine driving this Lanz 4:40 through a tunnel xD
If this Schleppertreffen is coming up again in the year, then these Lanz Bulldogs owners are coming from all around Germany, yes some of them are driving over 300km (186 miles) or more through Germany to this Meet.
Therefore, they need a place to sleep so they just take their Caravan with them, that's these "Shed's".
I'am living in a small Village, and some of them are driving through here, it's always a pleasure to hear them :D
9:20 Thats a Barkas B1000. I was a small GDR Pickup
1:27, 19:06
centre of the Wheel shows the Crest of the "Heinrich Lanz Aktiengesellschaft Mannheim"
By the way the Heinrich Lanz Ag was taken over in or about 62 by Deere & Company out of Moline Illinois, the colour of which happens to be a dark green paired with yellow rims
Beautiful Lanz yes, but Green and Yellow; be careful what you say if you ever find yourself a guest at one of these meets...
might be seeing the pointy ends of some pitchforks if you get the wrong part of the crowd
There were literally bales coming out of the machine whilst you were asking. 😂
The Van is - Barkas B1000
17:00 These Mobile Home were used often by traveling circuses, but also bevor war to traveling construction companies to house the construction workers away from home or later to give a place for pauses during daytime.
Sadly I didn't see any Benz or Opel Blitz, but that was awesome!
The letters on the blue truck say IFA.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Industrieverband_Fahrzeugbau
This fancy looking Bull Dog you mentioned could have been a showmans or circus vehicle back in the days.
14,45 this is ein Fortschrit ZT 323 build in east of Germany !He was buildin the last years of the GDR
The first machine was probably a thresher. And the other a baler. I don't think you're allowed to drive a tractor on the autobahn. At least that's how it is on the motorway in Sweden.
It isn‘t allowed to drive on the Autobahn when your vehicle is slower than 80km per hour
@@onkelpencho8609 Your vehicle must be designed to reach a speed of at least 60 km and you allowed to drive on the autobahn, even if you drive under 60 km is still allowed. Otherwise, regulations applies that no one should be hindered more than is necessary under the circumstances
13:47 is a KrAZ 255 in DDR (east german) army colours. built between 1967 and 1994 they have a V8 diesel engine with 170hp (NA) to 308hp (Turbo)