My grandfather had one of these. It was his favorite tractor. He bought it brand new. For his dairy farm. I had the pleasure of driving at when I was a teenager. It was a great tractor.
Awsome Vidja I just got done spreading some pelletized lime and 20 -10-10 for my cotton this year while playing theses videos over my radio to give me that golden age of farming feeling !!!
During college in the mid 60's during summer vacation I worked for a small school district maintenance department. They had a D-10. It was sold to the district by a school board member who was also the local Allis Dealer. It was too lightweight for most jobs that we were expected to do with it. Some of them very dangerous. Scariest moment was when something heavy was attached and you'd slowly let the clutch out and the front end would come up three feet. It's a wonder that were all alive.
My grandfather had one of these. It was his favorite tractor. He bought it brand new. For his dairy farm. I had the pleasure of driving at when I was a teenager. It was a great tractor.
Awsome
Vidja I just got done spreading some pelletized lime and 20 -10-10 for my cotton this year while playing theses videos over my radio to give me that golden age of farming feeling !!!
Absolutely makes me want to go out and buy a D-14. Thank you showing these J and L
Use to have one years back! Used it for pulling transplanters and wagons! Damn good tractor!
Thank you
Is there any dealer movies for the B?
I have some that have the B in then but not about the B specifically
@@JandLVideos oh ok
During college in the mid 60's during summer vacation I worked for a small school district maintenance department. They had a D-10. It was sold to the district by a school board member who was also the local Allis Dealer. It was too lightweight for most jobs that we were expected to do with it. Some of them very dangerous. Scariest moment was when something heavy was attached and you'd slowly let the clutch out and the front end would come up three feet. It's a wonder that were all alive.
Well, i guess if the kids can't figure out how to safely operate a tractor, an expensive education is their only hope.
I learned on a Ed 45 then when I mastered it then on to the D 19 and a mounted corn picker talk about dangerous gotta keep yer whitts about ya
Orange Power FOREVER!!!