Thanks Jason for posting this video. Brings back wonderful memories of life on the farm! Our work horse was a JD 70 diesel, pulled a 3-16 plow with it. At night it spewed a little flame from the muffler. I still have this tractor. In 88-89 I restored this tractor and it is in great condition. Later our work horse was a 4010, what fond memories I have plowing and harvesting with it.
I'm an eighty year old granny and watch a lot of You Tube - no farming experience whatsoever, but by golly this has to be one of the best channels aired. It is SO interesting and I appreciate the hard work involved. I never imagined in a million years such machinery existed from the old classics to the absolute monsters today. Thrilling content.
Buddy of mine had a 5010 cab was small it was a really hard starter hard shiftin but it was a beast in a mud hole. I must have missed the ultimate big muscle the d-19
What a wonderful day for everyone to come together and as friends and neighbors work together a little to help someone and to enjoy the earlier tractor technology that made America great. I’m sure there was great food also. Just look how rugged these old tractors take on that prairie soil!
I love that Allis-Chalmers that is rolling coal. It 's good to see a John Deere 5010 at work. Hopefully it's owner can get there to repaint it. One last thing is that Ford 5000 is a real beauty.
That 185 needs an injector kit! I am an AC fan, but it shouldn't have been smoking that much! Good to see the 180, I've spent many hours in the seat of the same tractor. Gasoline version was kind of a gutless wonder.
I have a 1955 John Deere model 70 gas tractor I started restoring some fifteen years ago ( it had been working in a gravel pit, loading dump trucks with an aftermarket loader that was as slow as molasses). I got distracted by life's demands when it was about 80% finished, and it's been sitting under cover in my tractor shed ever since. It runs well, but needs body work. I really, really must finish that project. The old timers around here love to hear that Johnny Popper running.
I had a 1972 Ford 3000 gas that I restored, added a John Deer front loader bigger front tires and adapted a back hoe off a newer New Holland, and had a single 16 " plow that I adapted to the 3 point lift and used for garden work, Used the front loader and back hoe for rock removal and area prep. great old tractor, sold it to my neighbor when I got too old to climb on the thing. never did a plow meet never ever heard of any in the area. central Washington, Columbia Basin !!!
Glad to see that last John Deere 60 at end of video. My Granddad farmed with one of these plus a JD B model up to the mid-1960’s. Northeast Missouri, Macon County, Chariton River bottom.
I drove the Ford 5000 in this video for a round. They were long rows and it was 95 degrees. I thought as I was going it was fun but would be a long day if I was trying the pole this field with just the 5000.
These are all the tractors I grew up with, the tractors I love. When I went off to college in the fall of 1978, I wanted to go back and farm. Now I see the size and price of tractors and combines and don't want anything to do with farming. While watching the video, I have never seen a WHITE tractor still sporting some of the MINNEAPOLIS MOLINE yellow/praire gold.
The 60’s and 70’s were a great era in farming. The 2-105 is a custom paint job. In 1991 a Spirit of Minne-Moline 145 was produced by White. They also made an Oliver and Cockshutt 145. In 1988 a Spirit of Oliver 185 was also made. The White 60 and 80 could be ordered in Energy Yellow starting in 1989. Unfortunately only 17 were made in yellow.
These are the machines I grew up on, miss the good old days. Have my grand dad's '35 non styled "B", no implements, ended up selling them due to the tractor is currently locked up. No plans to restore currently, eventually, just no time to do so.
Looks like there was a lot of volunteer corn growing in the section of ground at the end of the video. Were they having issues with the combine during harvest?
This is really normal. This field was harvested August 20. They dissed it August 27. There’s always a little bit of loss with any combine even a bushel an acre will lay out a green carpet. This Plow Day took place on October 5. It was 95° out the day of the Plow Day and it was a very warm September so there was plenty of time for the corn to sprout. When you get further north corner is harvested in September October, and November, and you are going to rarely have the opportunity to see the Volunteer corn from the lost behind a combine.
It's strange. The only tractor manufacturer left out of the whole bunch seemed to be John Deere. They're the only ones still around. Good video however. Brings back a lot of memories from my childhood.
I think you missed the Oliver 2255 in your list. That tractor is 🤩. I have taken my Oliver 60 with a 2-12 Oliver 100 plowmaster plow, Oliver Super 88 with a 4340 Oliver plow, Oliver 66 standard with a 1 bottom 100 plow and a 550 with a 3241 plow that was my grandpa's. I thought about taking my Allis Chalmers G this spring, but i was too busy and didn't have enough notice to get ready to make it to the plow day.
I do not know. Unfortunately, the plowing goes so quickly. I rarely have an opportunity to talk with the owners of the tractors at these events. Smaller plows are often at these events because they bring the tractors in on a trailer towed by a pick up truck and you only have so much room to also bring the plow with you. A smaller three-point monitor Plow makes for easy transport to just go out and enjoy the day of plowing.
At the 5:21 mark you have a caption that says the John Deere 80 was manufactured 958 - 1961; but actually according to tractor data it was 1955 - 1956. I believe it was the John Deere 830 that was manufactured 958 - 1961.
😊😊 anybody that knows that sound knows that is a 2 cylinder john deere tractor 🚜 😊 they made them in GAS / LP GAS / DIESEL the last of those tractors 🚜 made like that was in 196O after that John deere went 2 the inline 4 and 6 cylinder engines 😊😊 OMG 11 24 2O24
😊😊 the last john deere 6O3O tractor 🚜 😊 I seen was at a tractor 🚜 😊 pull turned up and hot nothing stock about it a full pull tractor 🚜 😊 that went on out of the gate and still kept going 2 the next field 😊😊 there shouldve been a corn 🌽 😊 field there that way 👉 😊 U could see 👀 😊 the corn stalks moving went it went through the that way U know where it was at look the corn 🌽 😊 is moving over there on the other side of the field over yonder 😊😊 OMG 11 24 2O24
The FARMALL H tractors in this video are a good example of 1940’s technology. I wish I had a chance to see more of those older tractors from the 1920s and 30s to feature, but you just don’t see them out there any more. The 1950’s to the 1970’s are taking over classic events. Even some 1980’s.
Looks like it was a great day, wish I could have been there to see some of those “golden oldies “. Some of the people riding on the mudguards are talking a risk, fall in front of the wheel…… it has happened, I know of an instance, the result was horrendous. Regards from Down Under.
Unfortunately, there were a lot of people riding on the fender at this event. Many of the tractors shown in this video had riders on them for several passes, which I patiently waited to catch them when they were solo. A few of them head riders the entire time. I fully understand people wanting to share the experience with their families, but I try not to promote gender riding.
The announced a 950 hp model in October and showed it half built. Other than that, I am not sure they’ve also redesigned the 700. I am hoping to see one in the field next spring.
The 1970’s tractors can really move on a 3pt plow. The 1950’s tractors on a drawn plow often struggle in places cutting through the residue and tend to plug.
Is that White 2 105 in Mini yellow original? I know it was optional with the American model but didn't know it came original in the 2 105 model. Even the rear fenders were mini fenders, never seen one before
I'd love to take my 38' BN on skeleton steel wheels, out pulling a single bottom, but I'm afraid I'd be holding up the all of those speedsters pulling 4 bottoms... lol
Well in the meeting we had before the plow day started they stated to run a safe speed and be respectful to everybody. That didn't happen. My wife plowed for about 15 minutes with her 1940 H and #51 trip plow and we left.
@@79fordblake Exactly what I was worried about. I saw that big White, in the opening, segment, pulling a four bottom at about twice the speed I'd be running.
Good crop of volunteer corn your plowing under....can't set up a combine...like they can't set a plow....plow a straight furrow for God's sake...and yes...I could do better....
This field was harvested August 20 and disked August 27. The plow day was held October 25. It was 95 degrees the day this plow day was held. The month of September gave plenty of time for volunteer corn to sprout. No mater how well you set the combine there will be loss. The tillage shortly after harvest gave ample opportunity to show the loss even if it was a couple of bushels per acre which I find pretty normal for any combine. If you are harvesting farther North in September, October and into November this loss is not going to show up like it does in August corn. Winter wheat follows corn here in WKY that is seeded after October 10. In June when that wheat is harvested double crop soybeans are no-tilled right behind the combine. As far as the quality of the plowing it is going the vary. This is a day for fun and you have people who farmed plowing 50 years ago and people whose first time ever plowing was that day. Many of the plows had not been scoured. The corn yielded 250 bu an acre on average in the region this year. That is allot of residue to plow even with a disking pass with a 30 foot Landoll a month before. Some of the plows cut right through while some of the really vintage ones on steel wheels struggled in places and plugged up. It was a fun day and a great opportunity to see a variety of classics. They came in and got the field with a 35ft Case IH 335 True Tandem Turbo and seeded it into wheat. It all worked out great. The farm was working ground right across the road the day of the plow day making a second pass getting the seed bed ready for the air drills with their 525 Quadtrac and 335 True Tandem Turbo. A video of that is posted at ua-cam.com/video/ca28sCnAtO4/v-deo.htmlsi=LoQObwakd2ZUmUBX Again you will see plenty of volunteer corn put even a bushel an acre of loss will make a green carpet after a month in the field.
Thanks Jason for posting this video. Brings back wonderful memories of life on the farm! Our work horse was a JD 70 diesel, pulled a 3-16 plow with it. At night it spewed a little flame from the muffler. I still have this tractor. In 88-89 I restored this tractor and it is in great condition. Later our work horse was a 4010, what fond memories I have plowing and harvesting with it.
I'm an eighty year old granny and watch a lot of You Tube - no farming experience whatsoever, but by golly this has to be one of the best channels aired. It is SO interesting and I appreciate the hard work involved. I never imagined in a million years such machinery existed from the old classics to the absolute monsters today. Thrilling content.
Thanks for NOT posting any irritating, loud, annoying, cheesy background music. Great to see and hear these old classics working. 😀
I agree with that statement
Gotta love the classics! That 730 Standard was really neat!
Thanks for posting this. Sound quality is excellent 👌
The plows too were antique.
The ‘ol boy on the 5010 knew he had one the baddest tractors there. No need to run fast. He has all the power he needs. Like driving a Ferrari slowly.
You're trying to be funny, right? The 5010/20 were huge dogs
@@RJ1999x That's why Kinze repowered a bunch of them.
@@billloomis4975 exactly right
The baddest ones there was the Oliver's an the whites FACT PERIOD!!!
Buddy of mine had a 5010 cab was small it was a really hard starter hard shiftin but it was a beast in a mud hole. I must have missed the ultimate big muscle the d-19
love the sound of the 5010
Great to see those old tractors I grew up with
That's how plowing was done back in the day😁👍 neat to see so many old tractors going strong💪😄 thanks for sharing👍👍
My plow team was very similar to the Allis Chalmers 180 and John deere plow. Thank you for the trip back to my farming days.
Very cool.
Favourite has to be the JD 5010 in original unpainted condition and going steady. 🇬🇧
What a wonderful day for everyone to come together and as friends and neighbors work together a little to help someone and to enjoy the earlier tractor technology that made America great. I’m sure there was great food also.
Just look how rugged these old tractors take on that prairie soil!
Great video BTP. Love to see the antiques out turning dirt
It was a fun day in the field.
Awesome classics. I like the Jonny poppers and those Allis-Chalmers.
Ole 6030 really draws 😊❤
It’s a strong tractor.
He should try putting the plow in the ground at plowing depth
The 2250 and 1755 olivers were my favorites
Two great tractors. The 1755 is my favorite Oliver.
That was great as always!
It was a great day in the field. The 340 Magnum video and 525 Quadtrac video posted recently were filmed on the same farm the same day.
Nothing beats the feeling of working with the earth. True power in the soil!
Nice ploughing display from the old timers 👍👍👍
Hello! Oldies are always ready to plow...
I love that Allis-Chalmers that is rolling coal. It 's good to see a John Deere 5010 at work. Hopefully it's owner can get there to repaint it. One last thing is that Ford 5000 is a real beauty.
That 185 needs an injector kit! I am an AC fan, but it shouldn't have been smoking that much! Good to see the 180, I've spent many hours in the seat of the same tractor. Gasoline version was kind of a gutless wonder.
Fantastic video! It still blows my mind how a tractor like JD70 can run at such low rpm you can literally hear every stroke but got so much power.
loved seeing an old ford
The 5000 was very nice. I got to plow with it for a round.
I have a 1955 John Deere model 70 gas tractor I started restoring some fifteen years ago ( it had been working in a gravel pit, loading dump trucks with an aftermarket loader that was as slow as molasses). I got distracted by life's demands when it was about 80% finished, and it's been sitting under cover in my tractor shed ever since. It runs well, but needs body work. I really, really must finish that project. The old timers around here love to hear that Johnny Popper running.
Operated many of those tractors as a kid. Farmers are the backbone of our country! However D.C. is killing them off one at a time.
Another great video. Looks like it was a perfect day for this event! Thanks for bringing it to us!
It was a picture perfect day.
Good video.
I had a 1972 Ford 3000 gas that I restored, added a John Deer front loader bigger front tires and adapted a back hoe off a newer New Holland, and had a single 16 " plow that I adapted to the 3 point lift and used for garden work, Used the front loader and back hoe for rock removal and area prep. great old tractor, sold it to my neighbor when I got too old to climb on the thing. never did a plow meet never ever heard of any in the area. central Washington, Columbia Basin !!!
Love seeing the 5000 out there! Wish more fords were around!
the plow competitors were watching the JD that was in road gear @1:30 and were in tears throwing dirt a meter over lol
👌💯Excellent👌 video
Thank you James.
Good brother 🎉
Minnie Mo! Love it yes, it says "White" but we know what this is!
New generation is THE generation!!!!!!!!!
So good programme thanks ❤
Glad to see that last John Deere 60 at end of video. My Granddad farmed with one of these plus a JD B model up to the mid-1960’s. Northeast Missouri, Macon County, Chariton River bottom.
Very Nice video !!!!!
Thank you for watching. It was a great day of plowing.
Very interesting video. Stay safe my friend . God bless you 🙏🙏🇺🇸
What a nice variety of tractors.
❤❤thanks good video
Great video Jason as always
Thank you Joey. Thank you to you and your dad for having the 5020 and 6030 in this video to add some green power.
I forget how hard it is drive those tractors across the fields, Oww!
I drove the Ford 5000 in this video for a round. They were long rows and it was 95 degrees. I thought as I was going it was fun but would be a long day if I was trying the pole this field with just the 5000.
Good smooth going. Not rough
Nice and easy.
If that 5000 is anything like ours
That thing is a workhorse
my dad had one of those in the mid 70s....just a great pulling tractor for plowing. Wish I had one back, 4000 is my largest Ford.
I've got a 1939 Farmall H,we use it to scrape out the free stall barns for the heifers it's still a good running tractor
Wow that’s cool. Great tractor. Does yours have the trim on the grille.
These are all the tractors I grew up with, the tractors I love. When I went off to college in
the fall of 1978, I wanted to go back and farm. Now I see the size and price of tractors and combines and don't want anything to do with farming. While watching the video, I have never seen a WHITE tractor still sporting some of the MINNEAPOLIS MOLINE yellow/praire gold.
The 60’s and 70’s were a great era in farming. The 2-105 is a custom paint job. In 1991 a Spirit of Minne-Moline 145 was produced by White. They also made an Oliver and Cockshutt 145. In 1988 a Spirit of Oliver 185 was also made. The White 60 and 80 could be ordered in Energy Yellow starting in 1989. Unfortunately only 17 were made in yellow.
They had 2-4320 one with duals 18-4-38 and one 20-8-38 with plain single they were good tractorst.😮
Had one in the 70s
These are the machines I grew up on, miss the good old days.
Have my grand dad's '35 non styled "B", no implements, ended up selling them due to the tractor is currently locked up. No plans to restore currently, eventually, just no time to do so.
Tractors are very reliable
Good job
😊😊😊
I enjoy your UA-cam videos I own 1952 allis chalmers ca tractor it belong to my grandpa i am in process of fixing my tractor
Looks like there was a lot of volunteer corn growing in the section of ground at the end of the video. Were they having issues with the combine during harvest?
This is really normal. This field was harvested August 20. They dissed it August 27. There’s always a little bit of loss with any combine even a bushel an acre will lay out a green carpet. This Plow Day took place on October 5. It was 95° out the day of the Plow Day and it was a very warm September so there was plenty of time for the corn to sprout. When you get further north corner is harvested in September October, and November, and you are going to rarely have the opportunity to see the Volunteer corn from the lost behind a combine.
JD combine 😂
John Deere 80 wasn't manufactured between 1958 -61.
They were made in 1955 & 1956 !
So, did that yellow 2-105 have a Perkins or a Waukesha? I think my Fav is the JD 80 with fatties.
The 2-105 has a turbo charged Perkins 354.
Getting the plowing done quick! Wish I had all that help! Enjoyed mostly the Fords, Allis Chalmers. but NO Case??
There’s nothing quite like the connection you feel when working with the earth-true strength lies in the soil!
Just one minor correction, on the John Deere 80. It wasn't manufactured 1958-1961, that would have been the 830. The 80 was made from 1955-1956.
It's strange. The only tractor manufacturer left out of the whole bunch seemed to be John Deere. They're the only ones still around. Good video however. Brings back a lot of memories from my childhood.
I think you missed the Oliver 2255 in your list. That tractor is 🤩. I have taken my Oliver 60 with a 2-12 Oliver 100 plowmaster plow, Oliver Super 88 with a 4340 Oliver plow, Oliver 66 standard with a 1 bottom 100 plow and a 550 with a 3241 plow that was my grandpa's. I thought about taking my Allis Chalmers G this spring, but i was too busy and didn't have enough notice to get ready to make it to the plow day.
Wow many of tractors for plow this land
The 1100 MASSEY.... How "Deep" where those 3 BTM Plows?... 😮....😊
I do not know. Unfortunately, the plowing goes so quickly. I rarely have an opportunity to talk with the owners of the tractors at these events. Smaller plows are often at these events because they bring the tractors in on a trailer towed by a pick up truck and you only have so much room to also bring the plow with you. A smaller three-point monitor Plow makes for easy transport to just go out and enjoy the day of plowing.
In Oklahoma we ran propane fueled Case 930 Tractors.👩🌾
Hi from Dexter🏠Missouri
😁👍
Men of agriculture.we meet again.
Lots of corn growing. Combine operator needs a lesson on setting a Combine.
Probably corn was down when harvest
I was wondering if the field was hailed out.
Classic look after a green combine grinds a field after a couple weeks.
At the 5:21 mark you have a caption that says the John Deere 80 was manufactured 958 - 1961; but actually according to tractor data it was 1955 - 1956. I believe it was the John Deere 830 that was manufactured 958 - 1961.
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
I have a 1970 Ford 5000 in NC .
I saw a JD 2510 Gas in the lineup; my dad has a 2510 Diesel.
Why is this beautiful video only in 720p?
Because the end screen is picture it degrades the 1080 filming when I upload the video. I will be changing that soon.
😊😊 anybody that knows that sound knows that is a 2 cylinder john deere tractor 🚜 😊 they made them in GAS / LP GAS / DIESEL the last of those tractors 🚜 made like that was in 196O after that John deere went 2 the inline 4 and 6 cylinder engines 😊😊 OMG 11 24 2O24
That yellow white is a limited edition three series made through 1976 to 1982 only 900 156,000 only made
😊😊 the last john deere 6O3O tractor 🚜 😊 I seen was at a tractor 🚜 😊 pull turned up and hot nothing stock about it a full pull tractor 🚜 😊 that went on out of the gate and still kept going 2 the next field 😊😊 there shouldve been a corn 🌽 😊 field there that way 👉 😊 U could see 👀 😊 the corn stalks moving went it went through the that way U know where it was at look the corn 🌽 😊 is moving over there on the other side of the field over yonder 😊😊 OMG 11 24 2O24
Is like to see stuff from the 30s and 40s. I.e. How did they grow food during (and a few years before) the war? What was the technology then?
The FARMALL H tractors in this video are a good example of 1940’s technology. I wish I had a chance to see more of those older tractors from the 1920s and 30s to feature, but you just don’t see them out there any more. The 1950’s to the 1970’s are taking over classic events. Even some 1980’s.
🙂👌🏻👍🏻
Muy buen video siempre los miro!! Me gustaria participar con mi FIAT 1100 pero me queda lejos para ir...saludos de argentina!....
Looks like it was a great day, wish I could have been there to see some of those “golden oldies “. Some of the people riding on the mudguards are talking a risk, fall in front of the wheel…… it has happened, I know of an instance, the result was horrendous. Regards from Down Under.
Unfortunately, there were a lot of people riding on the fender at this event. Many of the tractors shown in this video had riders on them for several passes, which I patiently waited to catch them when they were solo. A few of them head riders the entire time. I fully understand people wanting to share the experience with their families, but I try not to promote gender riding.
Interesting. Many of these tractors could have pulled bigger plows. Lack of 60s 70s IH?
Admire the tractors, not the plowing.
Say Jason.... I don't suppose you've heard any more news out of Big Bud? Have they actually produced any more tractors besides the one new one?
The announced a 950 hp model in October and showed it half built. Other than that, I am not sure they’ve also redesigned the 700. I am hoping to see one in the field next spring.
@@bigtractorpower Cool! Thanks for the update.
hey Jason it seems to me that on one of the tractors I saw my childhood friend who took over a farm in Kentucky but I'm not sure
My brother use to take out john deere 730. Pull Oliver 3bottom 16inch
Very nice. The 730 is my favorite two cylinder.
👏👏👍👍🚜🚜👌👌🙏🙏🇧🇷🇧🇷
Thank you Paulo.
SHE was "Rippen"...
The 1970’s tractors can really move on a 3pt plow. The 1950’s tractors on a drawn plow often struggle in places cutting through the residue and tend to plug.
Is that White 2 105 in Mini yellow original? I know it was optional with the American model but didn't know it came original in the 2 105 model. Even the rear fenders were mini fenders, never seen one before
All the Deere two cylinders were made 58 to 61…….😉
The 630 is listed in the burrs guide up to 1960. The 730 and 830 appear until 1961. I go by the company sales brochures.
? John Deere two cylinders started in the 20's. 730 was made in Argentina until the 70s.
I'd love to take my 38' BN on skeleton steel wheels, out pulling a single bottom, but I'm afraid I'd be holding up the all of those speedsters pulling 4 bottoms... lol
Well in the meeting we had before the plow day started they stated to run a safe speed and be respectful to everybody. That didn't happen. My wife plowed for about 15 minutes with her 1940 H and #51 trip plow and we left.
@@79fordblake Exactly what I was worried about. I saw that big White, in the opening, segment, pulling a four bottom at about twice the speed I'd be running.
The only improvement to the video would have been the smell of the dirt
Good crop of volunteer corn your plowing under....can't set up a combine...like they can't set a plow....plow a straight furrow for God's sake...and yes...I could do better....
This field was harvested August 20 and disked August 27. The plow day was held October 25. It was 95 degrees the day this plow day was held. The month of September gave plenty of time for volunteer corn to sprout. No mater how well you set the combine there will be loss. The tillage shortly after harvest gave ample opportunity to show the loss even if it was a couple of bushels per acre which I find pretty normal for any combine. If you are harvesting farther North in September, October and into November this loss is not going to show up like it does in August corn.
Winter wheat follows corn here in WKY that is seeded after October 10. In June when that wheat is harvested double crop soybeans are no-tilled right behind the combine.
As far as the quality of the plowing it is going the vary. This is a day for fun and you have people who farmed plowing 50 years ago and people whose first time ever plowing was that day. Many of the plows had not been scoured. The corn yielded 250 bu an acre on average in the region this year. That is allot of residue to plow even with a disking pass with a 30 foot Landoll a month before. Some of the plows cut right through while some of the really vintage ones on steel wheels struggled in places and plugged up. It was a fun day and a great opportunity to see a variety of classics. They came in and got the field with a 35ft Case IH 335 True Tandem Turbo and seeded it into wheat. It all worked out great.
The farm was working ground right across the road the day of the plow day making a second pass getting the seed bed ready for the air drills with their 525 Quadtrac and 335 True Tandem Turbo. A video of that is posted at ua-cam.com/video/ca28sCnAtO4/v-deo.htmlsi=LoQObwakd2ZUmUBX Again you will see plenty of volunteer corn put even a bushel an acre of loss will make a green carpet after a month in the field.
@@bigtractorpower thanks for your in depth explanation.....love your vids!!