This Is An Incredibly Slow Engine

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 26 вер 2024
  • The Lanz Bulldog series was made from 1921 to 1960 in the city of Mannheim. The name was sourced from the design of the hot bulb resembling the dog breed. It rooted down so much that in Germany a bulldog became a synonym for tractor. It featured an extraordinary engine of 10.3-litres with a single piston.
    - Support -
    / visioracer
    - Disclaimer -
    This video is fair use under U.S. copyright law because it is transformative in nature, uses no more of the original than necessary and has no adverse effect on the market for the original work.
    - Credits -
    “Commercial for 1917 Fordson Model F tractor” by Jef Smith
    • Commercial for 1917 Fo...
    “Steam Tractors 1950s” by trailertrane
    • Steam Tractors 1950s
    “First Farm tractor 1890's made process” by iam a farmer
    • First Farm tractor 189...
    “Superlandini (Landini SL50)” by Thomas Ohm
    • Superlandini (Landini ...
    “Lanz Bulldog D3506, verkauft/sold/vendu” by derLanzmannheim
    • Lanz Bulldog D3506, ve...
    “Lanz Bulldog 1941” by Didier
    • Lanz Bulldog 1941
    “Lanz Bulldog Sound” by Valentin Bien
    • Lanz Bulldog Sound
    “Historische Feldtage und Traktorentreffen in Bedburg-Hau am 20./21.08.2022” by Niederrheintrecker
    • Historische Feldtage u...
    “Lanz Bulldog & Schleppertreffen 2019 Highlights ¾” by DR
    • Lanz Bulldog & Schlepp...
    “Lanz Bulldog D 9506 Part 4 - works continue” by ClassicTractor
    • Lanz Bulldog D 9506 Pa...
    “Lanz Bulldog D 9506 Part 1 - 1st start after 40 years” by ClassicTractor
    • Lanz Bulldog D 9506 Pa...
    “Lanz Bulldog Crawler Raupe 01-16” by Itzik Merkado
    • Lanz Bulldog Crawler R...
    “Der Lanz Bulldog Traktor Glühkopfmotor/Zweitaktmotor -Die Technik und Funktion - Ursache und Wirkung” by Kult Traktor
    • Der Lanz Bulldog Trakt...
    “Lanz Bulldog in action! Thunderbolts! Pure sound machine!” by The Stoker Elvis 1104
    • Lanz Bulldog in action...
    “lanz bulldog” by colin hardefeldt
    • lanz bulldog
    “Como funciona o motor de um trator Lanz Bulldog??” by Lucas Micheletti - Tratores Antigos
    • Como funciona o motor ...
    “Lanz HL12 Start!” by Dr. Trecker
    • Lanz HL12 Start!
    “Lanz Bulldog Cast Iron Piston 225mm Tig Welding” by dwerke
    • Lanz Bulldog Cast Iron...
    “Lanz Bulldog szybki bieg” by Marek Kalinowski
    • Montaż Szybkiego Biegu...
    “Ursus c-45 climbing Hill” by Marshall Bawden
    • Ursus c-45 climbing Hill
    “Lanz Bulldog starten / Fire up a Lanz Bullog” by Andreas Brunner
    • Lanz Bulldog starten /...
    “Engine running backwards? Lanz Bulldog Tractor two stroke” by David's Garage
    • Engine running backwar...
    “lanz bulldog start after 40 years” by Julien Jansen
    • lanz bulldog start aft...
    “Le Percheron 1939 Leerlauf.” by Angelo Pianon
    • Le Percheron 1939 Leer...
    “Ursus C45 hotbulb / gloeikop is running again” by FritsB1976
    • Ursus C45 hotbulb / gl...
    “Pampa t01 stand bei 150 Umdrehungen” by Pampa 2018
    • Pampa t01 stand bei 15...
    “John-Deere Lanz for sale at VDI auctions, Deurne, The Netherlands” by VDI Auctions
    • John-Deere Lanz for sa...
    “Hill Climb steam tractor” by lonestar16oz
    • Hill Climb steam tractor
    “Hill climbing with a Minneapolis steam traction engine” by oldironmike
    • Hill climbing with a M...
    “1921 Fordson #3” by Frank Smith
    • 1921 Fordson #3
    “Lanz Bulldog Raupe piston 01-3 B” by Itzik Merkado
    • Lanz Bulldog Raupe pis...
    “Honen Lanz Zylinder” by Rosenau Fahrzeug- und Motorentechnik GmbH
    • Honen Lanz Zylinder
    “Lanz Bulldog 8506 Kopflos Hybridtechnik” by ursusfreak
    • Lanz Bulldog 8506 Kopf...
    “Lanz Bulldog 45 Full Power” by Rainhill1829
    • Lanz Bulldog 45 Full P...
    “Lanz” by Leo van Dijck
    • Lanz
    “Lanz Bulldog 6Gang Getriebe” by ursusfreak
    • Lanz Bulldog 6Gang Get...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 571

  • @EATSLEEPDRIVE2002
    @EATSLEEPDRIVE2002 2 роки тому +1540

    Fun fact about these tractors: because it would run in either direction, you had to be careful when pulling a load up a hill; if you let the engine bog down too slow, it would predetonate and unexpectedly reverse direction, and your tractor would takeoff backwards down the hill

    • @acme_tnt8741
      @acme_tnt8741 2 роки тому +109

      Scary fact. When I was 12 my Parents both had Yamaha RT 180 dirt bikes(2 stroke gas incase you didnt know). We were trail riding and my mom stopped and said her bike wasn't running right. She went to shut it off and it Dieseled for about 15 seconds. That can happen when air cold 2 strokes get hot. We were riding slower trails and she can't ride like my dad and I to keep speed to keep cool so we took a break and grabbed a drink.
      We gave it 10 minutes and I took it for a test ride.. near us was a decent hill climb especially for a trail bike but I've done it 100s of times on that bike.
      I hit a rock this time and at the top the engine started to bog. I wasn't going to make it so I pulled the clutch and started dragging front tire down the hill. I let out on the clutch to slow down using the gear as a brake. It let out a loud 2 stroke back fire and rand what seemed like full throttle in reverse back down the hill.
      Scary AF! Lol. I pulled in the clutch and shut it off. I started it right back up and it ran fine too. My mom was so afraid of it doing it to her on flat land she insisted we trade bikes. I was riding a CR 125 that day. She ended up wanting a race bike after that but wanted a big cushion seat like on her bike..

    • @LabiaLicker
      @LabiaLicker 2 роки тому +39

      Very scary. As a lot of people first instance would be to brake. Only to have the tractor tip over, and with these tractor seat that hang out the back...messy

    • @nils2tr
      @nils2tr 2 роки тому +19

      We have a Lanz D7506.
      You must be very careful with this Engine.
      The Sound is sooo good, you can listen for hours 😋

    • @acme_tnt8741
      @acme_tnt8741 2 роки тому +34

      @@nils2tr I have a 103 year old hit and miss engine 1.5 horse power.
      Some people just don't understand how I can go into my garage and watch it spin at spin and listen to it clop clop clop pow, clop clop pow clop ...... I was raised by a machinist so mechanical admiration might run in the blood.

    • @ottonormalverbrauch3794
      @ottonormalverbrauch3794 2 роки тому +4

      @@acme_tnt8741 My 50 cc DKW could be started by pushing it backwards. When the ignition cam is more or less symmetrical around top dead centre this is possible. With a-symmetrical ones this will not work or run erratically.

  • @sample3279
    @sample3279 2 роки тому +861

    It's worth mentioning how dangerous that vehicle was, could break your arms upon starting up or change rotations upon towing heavy load uphill, resulting in rapid acceleration backwards. I've also heard stories of inexperienced drivers getting literally knocked off of it cause it was lurching like crazy from that huge torque

    • @goosenotmaverick1156
      @goosenotmaverick1156 2 роки тому +72

      That was a different era, everything was dangerous 🤣 the coming of the industrial age overall really killed a lot of people in the name of forward progress. Sound familiar?

    • @dieselgeezer18
      @dieselgeezer18 2 роки тому +57

      the engine would not change rotation randomly when it was under load. It could only change when it was under load but at VERY low RPM. This can be avoided by simply not doing what i said previously. Otherwise it was fine

    • @benitopussolini544
      @benitopussolini544 2 роки тому +21

      Life is dangerous,that's what makes it interesting.if ya scared of dieing you ain't living!

    • @goosenotmaverick1156
      @goosenotmaverick1156 2 роки тому +12

      @@benitopussolini544 my first go-kart didn't have brakes. I was 8 🤣 I have lived most of my life almost dying lol it's been an experience. But I just turned 31 with a couple kiddos. Gotta keep things reasonable these days 🤣 I can only almost die so may times before the wife gets upset or my health insurance runs out hahahaha

    • @Jan_372
      @Jan_372 2 роки тому +11

      The arm-breaking story sounds odd, since most Lanz were started with the steering wheel, which would be pushed out automatically if the engine revs.

  • @Kahsimiah
    @Kahsimiah 2 роки тому +176

    We have a classic tractor parade one town over from mine every year. There's Porsches, Lamborghinis, Lanzs, it's just incredible.
    The coolest thing ever is seeing a Lanz spit his smoke rings! :-)

    • @goosenotmaverick1156
      @goosenotmaverick1156 2 роки тому +4

      When I was a kid our county fair had a whole exhibition section for antique engines, equipment and tractors and such. Got to see some cool stuff! They had a huge rock crusher they'd bring every year and it made the ground shake

    • @andreasstrauss5194
      @andreasstrauss5194 Рік тому +1

      yes same here the lanz were always the coolest since they would be like a mini earthquake when you stand next to them

    • @jochenkraus7016
      @jochenkraus7016 Рік тому

      @@andreasstrauss5194 They can make smoke rings :-)

  • @XMarkxyz
    @XMarkxyz 2 роки тому +318

    The Landini "40hp" and the "Super Landini" had respectively a 14.3 and a 12.2 litres single cylinder engine so the Bulldog has the not quite largest tractor piston, apart from that great video as always

    • @goosenotmaverick1156
      @goosenotmaverick1156 2 роки тому +7

      What about bore and stroke specs? Even weight? There's more to being big than the displacement of the cylinder it occupies when at BDC... it could be the largest in any number of ways.

    • @XMarkxyz
      @XMarkxyz 2 роки тому +8

      @@goosenotmaverick1156 you are right, there is more to displacement, but having the same kind of engine executed in a very similar way I guess all dimansions get proportionally scaled up, anyway as for bore and stroke they are: 260x270 Landini 40 Hp, 240x270 Super Landini, 225x260 Lanz Bulldog

    • @dorusvanasseldonk8729
      @dorusvanasseldonk8729 2 роки тому +4

      The big lanz tractors have a 14.6 and 65 hp and there are bigger ones but they are very rare

    • @nilsgaming6664
      @nilsgaming6664 Рік тому +2

      @@dorusvanasseldonk8729
      when we talk about hot bulb engines, the largest lanz had a cubic capacity of 13.804 liters, it was operated with wood gas, but was then almost exclusively converted to diesel, so you achieve 63 hp at 450 rpm, we have such a tractor ourselves

    • @MAGGOT_VOMIT
      @MAGGOT_VOMIT Рік тому

      Yes!!
      My Grandfather: "RUHSPEK THA STERNIN' WHEEL!!"

  • @jamesgeorge4874
    @jamesgeorge4874 2 роки тому +176

    I love it, nothing in 2022 is simple, with a superflous amount of Iron, designed to run on whatever, and last for decades. Sometimes low tech is the best.

    • @skylinefever
      @skylinefever 2 роки тому +27

      I love seeing the things that will continue to work after the EMP blast goes off.

    • @rickey5353
      @rickey5353 2 роки тому +3

      I couldn't agree more.

    • @elirenigar9357
      @elirenigar9357 2 роки тому +7

      In terms of longevity and serviceability, low tech is the only acceptable method.

    • @roulsalzer5407
      @roulsalzer5407 2 роки тому +1

      @@skylinefever so true got to get one

    • @JimTheZombieHunter
      @JimTheZombieHunter 2 роки тому +1

      brother .. when the hour hand passes twelve and we're back to the beginning again - it's not going to be Gibson in leather and a Falcon XB :D.

  • @DeputatKaktus
    @DeputatKaktus 2 роки тому +168

    Many years ago I was in a little Niederrhein village, visiting a friend. And there was an elderly gent with a Lanz Bulldog just a few meters down the road. So we stopped by and had a really pleasant chat. According to the guy, the tractor needed anywhere between 20 and 40 minutes to pre heat. He was in the process of doing so while we chatted, with him occasionally checking on the engine. When he finally started it, things happened rather quickly. I was thoroughly impressed by how quickly he yanked the steering column out of the engine once it turned over. He just remarked „Well you really need to watch your hands and arms. If you have them in the wrong place at the wrong time, they will be turned into minced meat. Once thjs thing goes, it goes and it won’t stop. You really need to respect the machine“.
    He told us that dad had one of his arms very badly injured and almost had to have an amputation when he slipped in the mud while turning the same engine over that we were standing next to. This particular tractor had been in active farm use all the way to the 1970s and was also used to drive some stationary machinery via a long belt over the flywheel.
    I knew those machines were torque monsters. But 500nm…that is pretty substantial and impressive.

    • @VisioRacer
      @VisioRacer  2 роки тому +11

      Thank you for the amazing story!

    • @MrChoklad
      @MrChoklad 2 роки тому +14

      It's pretty charming how we humans tend to familiarize ourselves so much with the machines we work with for a long time. After all this time this old man could've certainly upgraded for something newer and easier to work with, but he chose not to

    • @mann_idonotreadreplies
      @mann_idonotreadreplies Рік тому

      Thats why germany lost the war. They were waiting and waiting 😂

    • @SW-qr8qe
      @SW-qr8qe Рік тому

      @@mann_idonotreadreplies stupid comment

    • @drbobsnightmare2521
      @drbobsnightmare2521 Рік тому +2

      @@mann_idonotreadreplies they won actually, just started waving different flags.

  • @jarikinnunen1718
    @jarikinnunen1718 2 роки тому +80

    In Finland was only one Lanz Bulldog. German Army Left it in lapland and had written "kaputt" on it and it served as its name when its feed pump was assembled correctly.

    • @Ammageddon89
      @Ammageddon89 2 роки тому +10

      Yeah, i remember a story from my grandpa. When the Army came they had 2-stroke generators with them. Nobody had told the soldiers that these needed 2 stroke oil, so they tried to run them on pure petrol. Didn´t went well. He managed to yell at one guy to shut it off - just in time before it would have seized. He repaired it and still had it decades later.
      Seems the average soldier at the time wasn´t really that knowledgeable about mechanics.

    • @Gamer-nc8qp
      @Gamer-nc8qp Рік тому +2

      @@Ammageddon89 they probably still arent today.

  • @helgelippert1970
    @helgelippert1970 2 роки тому +25

    My neighbour had lots of Lanz tractors. He used them still in the 80s for his little Farm. After the world war two he moved from near Berlin to our little village. He told me that he saved a few Lanz tractors from the srapyard for 10 Deutsch Mark. The farmers don´t wanted them anymore. The engine start procedere and driving comfort was already outdated at that time. He had a large collection of tractors with nearly every engine Lanz had ever build. One the biggest was a 50 hp Lanz Bulldog. Whenever he started the engine you heard it. The sound was really loud an so unique.
    His most rare tractor was a 60 hp Eil (fast) Bulldog with an original "Berliner" cabin. The cabin frame is from wood. It is not 100% clear how many original tractors of this type have got survived, but probably just a hand full.
    I remember that I have often seen cars with numberplates from far away and I heard that many collectors wanted to buy tractors from him, but he never sold any of them. On top of this he owend a few old cars (Mercedes Benz, BMW Isetta, Volkswagen Beetle) and old Motorbikes like DKW, Zündapp and so on. It was always like a museum at his farm. Unfortunatly he died a couple of years ago.

    • @nilsgaming6664
      @nilsgaming6664 Рік тому +2

      Hey, du bist doch bestimmt deutsch, ist ein umbau oder,auf 60 ps halbdiesel ?

    • @helgelippert1970
      @helgelippert1970 Рік тому +1

      @@nilsgaming6664 Moin, ehrlich gesagt kenn ich mich mit der Lanz Technik gar nicht so gut aus. In der Sammlung war mindestens ein Halbdiesel dabei. Das hat mir mal ein Kumpel erzählt, der da deutlich tiefer in der Materie steckt, als ich. Kann sein, daß der Halbdiesel eher der 50PS Bulldog war. Der war verglichen mit vielen anderen in der Sammlung schon recht neu und hatte defintiv einen E Starter. Da standen aber auch einige Glühköpfe und mindestens ein Alldog bei ihm auf dem Hof.

    • @johnelliott7375
      @johnelliott7375 Рік тому

      I bet that they came back like Hawks and low balled the widow if their was one. How I hope that it didn't happen.

    • @helgelippert1970
      @helgelippert1970 Рік тому

      @@johnelliott7375 Everything what I know he was divorced and his son shouldn't get any of this tractors. Two friends of mine where in his testament an got a few tractors and the farm.

  • @tehwin89
    @tehwin89 2 роки тому +87

    Very cool tractors, I've seen one at a tractor pull and when they are at full power you can feel the shockwaves through your whole body from some distance, pretty impressive but also probably miserable to drive for any extended period of time

    • @rais1953
      @rais1953 Рік тому +1

      No, I used to drive a Bulldog all day in seeding and harvest season. When the engine is at full revs you don't get much vibration.

  • @MisterTalkingMachine
    @MisterTalkingMachine 2 роки тому +7

    My grandpa who passed away last year used to tell me when I was little that back in the day there were these tractors with engines that would run on anything. Many years after I would learn what he was talking about and I'l love to witness one running in person.

  • @kevinmoor26
    @kevinmoor26 2 роки тому +13

    These tractors were built under license in Australia under the name of KL Bulldog by the engineering company Kelly and Lewis. Very popular with smaller landowners as they could run on other vehicles used crankcase oil.

    • @rais1953
      @rais1953 Рік тому +2

      That was our first Bulldog. Later we got a Lanz Model T with electric start.

  • @Tom-Lahaye
    @Tom-Lahaye 2 роки тому +20

    At 4:07 there is a Field Marshal tractor in view, it is very similar to the Lanz Bulldog in having a horizontal single cylinder 2 stroke engine, but the difference is that this is a true Diesel engine, so it won't burn other fuels than diesel and other fuels with a similar flash point like kerosene or some vegetable oils.
    The Bulldogs with fenders over the rear wheels are Eilbulldogs (speed Bulldogs), these had different gear ratios for a higher top speed and were made for on road haulage.

  • @Iskelderon
    @Iskelderon 2 роки тому +27

    Even to this day, in many parts of Germany, "Bulldog" is still used as the colloquial term for a tractor.

    • @VisioRacer
      @VisioRacer  2 роки тому +3

      Thank you for confirmation

    • @LupoAndy
      @LupoAndy 2 роки тому +5

      Mostly in southern Germany.

  • @chesspiece81
    @chesspiece81 2 роки тому +20

    I really appreciate the video on this engine VR. These motors are obviously extremely powerful and were popular but I had never knew anything about these before. Thank you!!

    • @VisioRacer
      @VisioRacer  2 роки тому +3

      Thank you, it is my pleasure!

    • @legros731
      @legros731 2 роки тому

      Lol they are not powerfully in any way comparatively to any modern engine
      They make 40hp for a 10.3 liters engine
      Not fuel efficient lol

    • @chesspiece81
      @chesspiece81 2 роки тому

      @@legros731 I was talking about the torque not horsepower.

    • @legros731
      @legros731 2 роки тому

      @@chesspiece81 even the torque is pretty low compared to "modern "diesel that make over 1000lbs torque

  • @__-vb3ht
    @__-vb3ht Рік тому +8

    Until you mentioned it, I had never questioned why we use "bulldog" as a synonym for tractor even to this day. I never even considered that it's actually a weird synonym. Thinking back to my childhood, itt's probably the first word I learned for it, even before tractor. Now I know the story behind that

  • @jamesfinn4547
    @jamesfinn4547 2 роки тому +5

    They had a few at a vintage tractor pull and you could fell the shock wave from every stroke of engine at full power was fantastic. My grandfather has a Lanz bulldog in Australia running a saw blade and it used to bury itself into the ground with its rocking if you weren't careful

  • @Infection3d
    @Infection3d 2 роки тому +5

    6:27
    How ironic then that the company that bought them out won't let you work on your own tractor easily.

  • @Damien.D
    @Damien.D 2 роки тому +17

    I knew about these lovely machines and their MASSIVE single cylinder engine, but never knew the power specs. Thanks for digging that. Impressive figures for its time. Never knew they could run at 0 RPM too, that's a pretty funny trivia.
    (and the sound of these engines is just fantastic. Slow running big engine are something special, when you can literally hear each piston stroke)

    • @user-si5fm8ql3c
      @user-si5fm8ql3c 2 роки тому

      Oh man, you need to see the exhaust plume of some of these.
      Ive seen one push a smoke vortex 30m high, they truly are beautifull

    • @mrwhips3623
      @mrwhips3623 2 роки тому

      Well at 0 rpm it's making literally no horsepower so it's kinda not really running 😂

    • @richsackett3423
      @richsackett3423 2 роки тому

      @@mrwhips3623 wrong

    • @mrwhips3623
      @mrwhips3623 2 роки тому

      @@richsackett3423 no you

  • @GeoStreber
    @GeoStreber Рік тому +4

    My dad grew up in a tiny village in the middle of nowhere in germany (Hochsauerlandkreis). All his relatives were farmers. He was super happy that nobody in that village owned a Lanz, because the thing is so terribly loud.

  • @alanswallow9033
    @alanswallow9033 Рік тому +1

    Great content! Back in the 1970s I was I 3rd part share holder in a 1932 model 22/38 here in Christchurch New Zealand. This tractor ended being taken back to Germany. Long may it live!

  • @maxgr7723
    @maxgr7723 2 роки тому +68

    Actually they have a huge fanbase...most of them are retrofitted with elctrical starters nowadays. The so called Eilbulldog(old version of a word with meaning of fast-trac) which was mostly sold to big shipping companies or circuses, costs nowadays more then 200k €. Ones with an open cab and those retrobuild to Eilbulldog design, are sold between 30 and 80k euros. Where i live btw, is a lanzbulldog showcased on meetings of old tractors and agricultural stuff, where an American airplane shot through the flywheel when the farmer was brave enough to plow the field at day...Bulldog still runs 😉😅

    • @instrumental
      @instrumental 2 роки тому

      ...that's what the title says? Cult usually means huge following. And you're saying the same thing like it's contradictory?

    • @maxgr7723
      @maxgr7723 2 роки тому

      @@instrumental sry if it sounds like that

    • @roulsalzer5407
      @roulsalzer5407 2 роки тому +5

      @@maxgr7723 you have no reason to apologize to that fool instrumental he's miserable and thinks he's better than you enjoy what you do

    • @HrLBolle
      @HrLBolle Рік тому

      sind halt untötbar

  • @Travatain
    @Travatain 2 роки тому +5

    Thanks for the informative video, I love these tractors! In the UK we had Field Marshall tractors with a two stroke single cylinder engine, about 6 litres I think, they were started with a shotgun cartridge and were said to be very reliable and economical. I always think that they were a copy of the Lanz Bulldog. Still many to be seen at steam fairs.

  • @teagueman100
    @teagueman100 2 роки тому +3

    Don't even get me started on how boss these tractors are. There is a lot of them here in Australia. I know a farmer that still has a barrel of crude oil to run theirs on.

  • @JosephCowen-fz8vj
    @JosephCowen-fz8vj 3 місяці тому

    Such a good simple design , I live in Australia, every year they do a tractor pull , and to this day the Landz will not stop , wins every year , it pulls down to 50 rpm , nothing can beat it ! They are still used all these years later ! Amazing with 3 to 1 compression .

  • @RingoLanzBulldog
    @RingoLanzBulldog 2 роки тому +2

    Interesting video. There are some points I'd like to add though.
    After WWII, Lanz developed the hot-bulb engine to a semi-diesel engine. The hot-bulb disappeared and the time-consuming starting procedure was not necessary anymore. The hand start was replaced by a electric starter. The semi-diesel is started with gasoline and a spark plug ignites the fuel until the piston is hot enough to ignite diesel fuel. The driver has to control which fuel is injected to the combustion chamber. Without the hot-bulb, Lanz was able to increase the compression to a medium pressure, which increased efficiency by a lot. Semi-Diesels only need about a third of fuel compared to the the hot-bulbs.
    Next, Lanz got rid of the gasoline start by adding a glow plug to the combustion chamber. Apart from being horizontal single cylinder two-strokes, these tractors are almost like regular diesel engines. This was about in the mid 50s. This tractor is called "Volldiesel" and was the last development before John-Deere took the majority of shares to expand to Europe.
    Such a Volldiesel with 16 hp was the first tractor my great-greatparents bought for their small farm here in southern germany. Since Lanz Bulldogs have such a charming sound and a characteristic engine, my father also reimported a D1506 hot-bulb engine from Greece in the 80s. This was the strongest hot-bulb tractor from lanz with 10,3 l and 55 hp.
    I have some videos about our Volldiesels on my channel.
    Greetings from from the black forest! (~150 km to Mannheim)

  • @dallasgrant
    @dallasgrant 2 роки тому +2

    I really love the sound they make, any big bore low RPM engine sounds cool, but they have a distinct sound I think.

  • @motor-werner1989
    @motor-werner1989 2 роки тому +11

    There was a version of the Lanz Bulldog with a factory mounted wood gasifier that had around 14 liters of displacement.

  • @Brad772006
    @Brad772006 2 роки тому +3

    Knowing the starting procedure is dangerous and sketchy. Yet, these old tractors are so cool. I love all the variations with rubber tires, all steel wheels, and tracked.

  • @amaccama3267
    @amaccama3267 2 роки тому +3

    This channel just keeps getting better 👍✌️🤘

  • @maxwolff5885
    @maxwolff5885 2 роки тому +1

    How great that you made a video about the Lanz! Everybody in Germany that's a bit into tractors knows and loves tha Lanz Bulldog! A really great piece of Technic

  • @druegeme
    @druegeme Рік тому +1

    I grew up not far from Mannheim and yes Bulldog was a synonym for tractor. I drove a Lanz for a while around a farm. The 0-rpm back and forth was a thing to watch out for, and it would run the wrong way if not carefully started.
    But when it ran, it seemed there was nothing that could stop it. One time we were working on the farm around some ditches filled with salt water (it was on an island in the northern sea) and accidentally drove the thing into a deep ditch. We jumped off because it was freezing cold and the water was deep. To our amazement the Bulldog just kept going and drove out at the other side of the ditch after being half submerged in salt water. Somehow we got to the other side and caught it.

  • @1974motorhead
    @1974motorhead 2 роки тому +1

    In that day's here in Germany by wintertime they parked the Lanz with distance to the farmhouse.
    They didn't stop the engine in the evening because of the preheating in the morning to avoid crack's in the glowhead.
    Imagine to preheat a -25 degrees cold glowhead with a torch you can barely kontrol the heat on.

  • @mordechajzuckerman9088
    @mordechajzuckerman9088 2 роки тому +6

    My neighbor owns this tractor(Ursus c-45 copy 1:1 of Lanz). Absolutley crazy machine;-)

    • @fidelcatsro6948
      @fidelcatsro6948 2 роки тому

      how much do they cost?? lets order one from china, im sure they make them

    • @mordechajzuckerman9088
      @mordechajzuckerman9088 2 роки тому

      @@fidelcatsro6948 How cost? I dont know. No no no its absolutley orginal machine from 1949. Made in Poland. He is a big farmer(1500ha) and this machine is just ornament to his farm;-)

    • @fidelcatsro6948
      @fidelcatsro6948 2 роки тому

      @@mordechajzuckerman9088 i see its a vintage..must be priceless🐱👍🏿

    • @dodoz44
      @dodoz44 2 роки тому

      @@fidelcatsro6948
      You could probably scoop one up for pretty cheap, especially if it was passed down to the current owner and they don't need it/not know much about it.

    • @fidelcatsro6948
      @fidelcatsro6948 2 роки тому

      @@dodoz44 i live in a state where they going to ban bikes made before 2003 in 2028...😭😭😭

  • @paulsto6516
    @paulsto6516 2 роки тому +4

    Lanz Bulldog, impressive workhorse. And it's good looking! Thanks for posting.

  • @TheDaroza
    @TheDaroza 2 роки тому +3

    Nice video. Lanz bulldog is probably one off the coolest tractor ever. Because off the engine.

  • @Scottingham
    @Scottingham Рік тому

    I got deep into the lanz bulldog videos when my kid was about 3. They were/are so awesome, and you did a great job of summarizing why they are so cool!

  • @steeltube195
    @steeltube195 2 роки тому +22

    A 10L engine that you must start using the steering wheel.... that is the coolest.

    • @noobhacker101
      @noobhacker101 2 роки тому +3

      Until you break your wrists and have to drive with your feet.

    • @steeltube195
      @steeltube195 2 роки тому +2

      @@noobhacker101 If driving a tractor with your feet isn´t cool ... I don´t know what is.

    • @bensmith4563
      @bensmith4563 2 роки тому +2

      @@noobhacker101 broken wrist is better than ripped off arm

    • @castkerosene5377
      @castkerosene5377 Рік тому

      Also cool is a 28L kickstart... Early Rumely OilPulls.

  • @mariebcfhs9491
    @mariebcfhs9491 Рік тому +1

    My uncle was a tank driver in Vietnam People's Army and he told me we used these tracked tractors as training vehicles for tank drivers during the war.

  • @piper263
    @piper263 Рік тому +3

    You could maybe make a video about the "Eil-Bulldog" which was a strange mod of the Bulldog, made it to look like a weird mixture of an old car and tractor. It could make up to 60kph which looks absolutely crazy, if you see this old machines in real life (one time I saw 4 Eilbulldogs running up some mountain road in the black forest, the soundsphere and the sheer velocity of these vehicles were astonishing)

    • @KR4FTW3RK
      @KR4FTW3RK Рік тому

      Holy crap that thing looks SICK! I love it.

  • @ricepony33
    @ricepony33 2 роки тому +5

    Engines that can burn anything is a path forward and shouldn’t be forgotten.

    • @fuzzy1dk
      @fuzzy1dk 2 роки тому +2

      I'm sure the efficiency is very low, so you'll be busy find stuff to burn

    • @kimpatz2189
      @kimpatz2189 2 роки тому

      And the result to forward innovation is the gas turbine engine. It can burn any combustible liquid. With the right fuel flow, you can sustain the burn time no matter the energy density of the fuel. It also shares the ridiculously low thermal efficiency if you use light fuel like gasoline. But on heavier fuels, it can reach 50% thermal efficiency. Torque is non existent and it needs a gearbox to produce torque from a high revving turbine.

    • @vHindenburg
      @vHindenburg Рік тому

      @@kimpatz2189 Ever heard of Diesel engines?

    • @mann_idonotreadreplies
      @mann_idonotreadreplies Рік тому

      @@kimpatz2189 lmao. you must live in a cave.

    • @kimpatz2189
      @kimpatz2189 Рік тому

      @@vHindenburg Yep, heard those.
      You however, ever heard of the multifuel gas turbine engine of the Abrams Tank?
      It can run on anything as long as its liquid and it burns. That's the peak of multifuel engine. Only a gas turbine can do it. And the only thing you need to change on the fly is its injection flow rate depending on what fuel type.

  • @rickreid81
    @rickreid81 2 роки тому +1

    Another excellent & exciting topic on Visio Racer Channel. Yup, that Bulldog was really one in a million. What a beast of an engine!

  • @apismellifera1000
    @apismellifera1000 Рік тому +1

    Even though I am an International Harvester guy from the USA I have to say Lanz Bulldog is another one of my favorite tractors. I also found out that Lanz Dealerships in quite a few US states. My dad likes them too and he said I should get one but problem is that it would cost a lot and parts I have a feeling would be hard to find.
    Thanks for this awesome video of my favorite tractor.

  • @raymaulder7383
    @raymaulder7383 Рік тому

    That was the most interesting history on the hot bulb engine, thanks.

  • @MMOPhotos
    @MMOPhotos Рік тому +1

    Excelent video as always... What a surprise to hear my country's name (Argentina) in it!

  • @anthonylove6639
    @anthonylove6639 2 роки тому +5

    Crude but extremely fascinating!

  • @BattlecatRed
    @BattlecatRed 2 роки тому

    Fascinated by the Lanz Bulldog. I had seen those videos of the thing idling in first gear, jumping back and forth with each piston stroke. Excellent video.

  • @rjung_ch
    @rjung_ch 2 роки тому +3

    Just great what they came up with. Never heard of them. Thanks!

  • @danb37
    @danb37 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you for making this very informative video. Now I want one!

  • @jonr6680
    @jonr6680 2 роки тому

    Amazed, fascinated and amused. Top job! Also the UA-cam algorithm deserves thanks for bringing me your channel, incredible variety of engine related vids - your output is eclectic and prolific, kudos!

  • @jackharlor1658
    @jackharlor1658 2 роки тому +64

    Love your content man, been watching since the early days of engine sound compilations, would love to see a classic throwback to that

    • @VisioRacer
      @VisioRacer  2 роки тому +7

      Thanks, Jack! Will think about that!

  • @Triplex5014
    @Triplex5014 2 роки тому +4

    I really like Lanz Bulldogs and I would love to own one just for the hobby of driving one.
    Here in Croatia the most popular tractor brand is IMT followed by Torpedo. IMT is a licensed Massey Ferguson while Torpedo is a licensed Deutz-Fahr and mostly 06 series was produced. But I love German tractors and my father had a Guldner A3K Burgund and that tractor is robust as a tank. With it's humble 25HP it can outperform the most popular IMT 539 any day. Even my grandfather owned some old 2 cylinder Fahr tractors with 18HP and a Deutz D25 or D30, not sure which one. Best tractors ever, German engineering at it's finest.

  • @jakerazmataz852
    @jakerazmataz852 2 роки тому +1

    Sounds like the perfect engine for after the Apocalypse. Runs on anything.

  • @walterkersting6238
    @walterkersting6238 2 роки тому +1

    They didn’t need warning labels on tractors back then; if you could start it you were probably capable of operating it safely.

  • @SMGJohn
    @SMGJohn 2 роки тому +1

    This design is still made in Africa and North Korea, the thing can run on anything and is so simple to fix and maintain, its a timeless design, even after WW3 there will probably be bunch of Lanz ploughing the radioactive fields.

  • @Astrofrank
    @Astrofrank 7 місяців тому

    Another fascinating piece of German engineering for agricultural use is the Universal-Motor-Gerät - the Unimog. It was meant as a combination of a tractor and a truck, allowing a farmer not only doing farm work but also transporting the goods to customers in relatively short time. The Unimog is still made, very versatile and a great off-road vehicle.

  • @jamiewood4280
    @jamiewood4280 2 роки тому +2

    I want one! Great video as always.

  • @rais1953
    @rais1953 Рік тому +1

    The later Lanz tractors such as the Model T had electric starting. There was a separate fuel tank containing a petrol and diesel mix and the hot bulb was replaced by a spark plug. The starter bounced the piston back and forth against the compression until it fired then as soon as it was running you switched it from the petrol mix to straight diesel fuel.

  • @Piqus3
    @Piqus3 2 роки тому +1

    6:31 looks and then also sounds (6:39) like some totally crazy vintage trike racers. Really cool tractors.

  • @user-cs1ne8gx9u
    @user-cs1ne8gx9u 2 роки тому +2

    Cool old machine, great work

  • @ghoulbuster1
    @ghoulbuster1 2 роки тому +1

    This tractor is so iconic, every tractor since then is based on this simple thumper.

  • @grexursorum6006
    @grexursorum6006 2 роки тому

    Here are only tow types of people. The ones that love Lanz bulldog and the ones who love it. Oh wait.... :-) Living in Germany those are still on display on every oldtimer and tractor event. You have to feel the sound. There is nothing else like it. An engine that you can feel running standing next to it. bub bub bub. Thanks for the vid!

  • @Mikepet
    @Mikepet 2 роки тому +1

    I Highly reccomend the Lanz meet in germany each year. Just fantastic traktors and the sound is glorious.

  • @victoryfirst2878
    @victoryfirst2878 Рік тому +1

    The tractor is one cool unit. I how one day I could find me one to buy. I like the slow one cylinder sound. Very similar to a john deere also called a "Johnny Popper"

  • @mixedboi
    @mixedboi 2 роки тому +1

    This is so interesting, thanks.

  • @MattBrownbill
    @MattBrownbill 2 роки тому +2

    Anti-theft, take your steering wheel with you. Can't start, or steer! Great video, thanks.

  • @ovalwingnut
    @ovalwingnut 2 роки тому

    I did not know any of this... I DO NOW. Very InTeReStinG. Thank you :)

    • @VisioRacer
      @VisioRacer  2 роки тому +1

      Glad you learned something new!

  • @Mladjasmilic
    @Mladjasmilic Рік тому

    After first time watching this video, I asked my grandfather about this tractor. He told me that it was best plowing tractor ever, but extremely dangerous for wood extraction and towing uphill.

  • @lawnlyrider4893
    @lawnlyrider4893 2 роки тому +3

    Cool video. I love this engine!

  • @PaulAngileri
    @PaulAngileri Рік тому

    That's a hell of a piston design. You can tell that they had to really watch air-fuel mixture so that the flames didn't burn a hole right through the piston head.

  • @leopard2a6m23
    @leopard2a6m23 Рік тому

    Remember how i stood next to a 10.3L one as it was going over a dirt road, the ignitions where so heavy you could feel the ground shaking

  • @Shaun.Stephens
    @Shaun.Stephens Рік тому +1

    I used to hate having to start heating the bulb (with a paraffin blowtorch) 30 minutes before I wanted to use the tractor. Other than that it was better than doing things without a tractor!

  • @jarguez1440
    @jarguez1440 2 роки тому

    3:13 loved the fact that you crank start it using the steering wheel then using it to steer the whole thing.

  • @Sir_Cactus
    @Sir_Cactus Рік тому

    They do make a beautiful sound indeed. I have the luck to live in a little town, where almost every year there is the biggest meeting of historical tractors in Europe (every 5th year or so the place where they park is closed and due to Covid it also did not take place for a few years). Whenever all the Bulldogs come, you can litterally hear it from kilometres away.

  • @grundyb
    @grundyb Рік тому

    That steering wheel for the crank starter! You can’t loose it!!!! 😂

  • @ikesgarage05
    @ikesgarage05 2 роки тому +1

    That is a very cool and unique tractor. I haven’t heard of those before.

  • @MinutemanOutdoors
    @MinutemanOutdoors 2 роки тому

    Oh wow...havent seen you in a while...glad youre back.

  • @SMWegge
    @SMWegge 2 роки тому

    Wild that the Kawasaki KLR650 had such humble roots.

  • @zombiewoof5257
    @zombiewoof5257 2 роки тому +1

    I really like the variation in your content, keep it up! 🙂

  • @tynewlin
    @tynewlin 2 роки тому

    I love machines that pre-date safety.
    Let us not forget that natural selection is(was) a good thing.

  • @jr-ee9jk
    @jr-ee9jk Рік тому

    I couldn't help but notice the purpose in this Company & the end result. In the US Henry gave us modle T's but this Co. gave the farmer a tractor (he didn't understand) that was so simple a family could figure it out. It was a new marketing strategy. "Give the people what they want". These tractors proved that strategy work's & they did it during a 20yr period between wars. These machines are highly sought after today...

  • @moenchii
    @moenchii 2 роки тому

    I love these things! THere is a rather big community around them here (I also saw two of them in this video with license plates from my state) and I'd love to one day drive one.

  • @stephenstreeter
    @stephenstreeter 3 місяці тому

    We need these reliable kinds of machinery now more than ever. I sometimes can't help thinking that, the constant push for higher efficiency and zero carbon is maybe a step backwards in progress. May be worth remembering that trees, insects and a host of other life actually needs carbon to live.
    Great video.

  • @isaacsrandomvideos667
    @isaacsrandomvideos667 2 роки тому +4

    Engines went from big to small. They keep getting smaller.

  • @razor21212121
    @razor21212121 2 роки тому +1

    damn i never wanted a tractor before, now i do

  • @ricolorenz7307
    @ricolorenz7307 Рік тому

    Insane that such a powerful machine was made so long ago

  • @kennethconnors5316
    @kennethconnors5316 2 роки тому

    As usual another Great Video ,well done

  • @gen3v8
    @gen3v8 2 роки тому +3

    I don`t know where you get this stuff. It`s good shit!👌

  • @mattt198654321
    @mattt198654321 2 роки тому +1

    3:10 - Did he just use the steering wheel as a starting crank? Awesome....LOL!

  • @TigaLionessArt
    @TigaLionessArt Рік тому +1

    My favorite tractor of all time. I was about 4 or 5 when my father first took me to some festival where I've seen Lanz Bulldog for the first time. I fell in love with the sound of that engine. Here in Poland it was very popular until the 1970s I think, when Ursus made the C330 and C360 four cylinder tractors. Before that, Lanz Bulldog and C45 (which is the name of the "stolen" Polish Lanz, produced by Ursus after the war) were probably the only tractors in use here. My father told me many times how he remembers these tractors from his childhood, people driving them to markets or something in the winter wouldn't put the engine down, but they'd instead let them slowly run on neutral, so that the bulb and the engine itself stayed warm for hours. Thanks to that the driver wouldn't have to risk breaking his fingers a lot of times during the day :P Anyway, this thing is in my top of smart engineering. It's simple as hell, but it worked. It suited it's purpose perfectly.

    • @vHindenburg
      @vHindenburg Рік тому +1

      Its still weird to me that the Polish version is called "Ursus" Its a very German style company name.

    • @TigaLionessArt
      @TigaLionessArt Рік тому

      @@vHindenburg it's probably called that way because in the times of creating the tractor factory, Henryk Sienkiewicz's "Quo Vadis" was a hit book. And there was a character called Ursus, which in Latin means "bear" if I recall correctly. The tractors were meant to be strong as the character in the books and a bear, so they called it that way. ;)

  • @1toonhead
    @1toonhead 2 роки тому

    Aaaawwwe I wanted to hear more on this, great video mate.

  • @johnbattista9519
    @johnbattista9519 2 роки тому +1

    Nothing runs like a Lanz.

  • @curtisnewton895
    @curtisnewton895 Рік тому

    nice simple, incredible machines

  • @martinchiappetti9321
    @martinchiappetti9321 2 роки тому

    In Argentina it was manufactured under license, it was called the Pampa tractor and I saw versions with twice the size of the piston.

  • @Missed_Apex_GT
    @Missed_Apex_GT 2 роки тому

    Back in 2016 I got the chance to drive a 1930s Field Marshal tractor here in the UK was a lot of fun ❤️❤️

  • @thomascorbett709
    @thomascorbett709 Рік тому

    Supposedly there is a story here in NZ (heard it like thirdhand so cannot confirm), that when the government introduced feul taxes they took a farmer to court over not paying them. The reason is that the west coast of the South Island has many tiny pockets of oil, and one of these pockets had been slowly leaking into the farmers pond. Not wanting to waste it, the farmer would skim of the crude oil and run his Lanz Bulldog on it.
    If true, the morals of the story are,
    a) A Lanz Bulldog will run on ANYTHING, so long as it is flammable
    b) Governments don't like the idea of losing out on tax dollars.

  • @archygrey9093
    @archygrey9093 Рік тому

    We got two of these engines sitting out in the bush.
    Just the engines, not the rest of the tractor

  • @makingmistakeswithgreg
    @makingmistakeswithgreg 2 роки тому

    I want one of these. I have no use for it but I love old school stuff, especially sketchy old school stuff lol.

  • @MrTimstaaa
    @MrTimstaaa 2 роки тому +1

    That's awesome. I can't believe it had 500 NM of torque from a single piston.

    • @Luke357
      @Luke357 Рік тому

      Well with 10.3L of displacement i'd be surprised if it didn't.

  • @Xayuap
    @Xayuap 2 роки тому +2

    that is like tha manliest vehicle ever.
    I want one to climb ladders

  • @davidhollenshead4892
    @davidhollenshead4892 2 роки тому +1

    A small correction, as the first internal combustion engine to reach most farms here in the US was not a tractor engine or a pickup truck engine as it was the engine in the first powered washing machines. A farmers wife used to do about 40 hr. of hand washing a week, and that was reduced by the gasoline powered washers to a single days worth of work. Low octane gasoline was sold by the can for as much as $7 per gallon and that is not adjusted for inflation, it was really $2 to $7 per gallon in a disposable metal tin can....

    • @mann_idonotreadreplies
      @mann_idonotreadreplies Рік тому

      cool story bro

    • @marionwilliams7907
      @marionwilliams7907 Рік тому

      the maytag washers used a maytag engine or an early briggs and stratton, washing machines never used car or truck engines, , in 1949 gasoline cost usually about 15 cents per gallon.