I am extremely proud to call Louis my grandpa. I only wish I would have had more time to have real conversations with him. I was only 17 when he passed. I distinctly remember his funeral, the dirt was filled in with one of the first machines they made. It was a very beautiful to see such a machine, made by the two of them, come full circle. Amazing men the both of them.
skid steer loaders made it a lot easier and faster to build. there is probably entire airports, malls, suburbs/towns, etc (and 100+ million people) that would not exist without your grandpa.
@Repent and believe in Jesus Christ . . . . did you really need to taint that thoughtful comment? You bring disgrace to the truth with your misdirected quotes from the book. As you probably know, you actually serve the Devil by stirring malice towards those who truly believe.
@@contraband1543 You have never been in a machine that has ZERO suspension. You get sloppy with the operation and the machine beats you down in a big way. Especially with foot controls. You can drop the boom like a sledge hammer and it rings your spine like a bell.
@@contraband1543 imagine spending 8 hour days in one doing sand bedding every week or hauling sawdust..my back is fucked. I’ve put a thousand hours or more on one unit alone. My back is shot.
@@ShainAndrews If you're shitty at running the machine then yeah, of course it's going to beat you around. That goes without saying. That the same thing as saying riding a horse is painful when the problem is you just don't how to ride a horse. I've driven foam filled tires skid steers on concrete all day and my back had no complaints. Probably because I wasn't in there jerking the controls around like you, thinking it's a lonely Saturday night or something lmfao
My family was the proud owner of the orange Keller Loader that Cyril was driving in the video. My father bought it at auction in the early 1990s in WI and while the auctioneer told the story that it was one of the first Bobcats he wasn't entirely convinced. A few years later the Keller family tracked us down and bought it back and now it seems that it became Cyril's personal loader.
My dad, Joe Keller, saw your comment. He was the one who picked up that Keller Loader from Robert Johnson. I was on the trip too when I was still quite young. He's tried to find a contact number for anyone in Robert's family. He would love to talk with anyone if that is possible.
I spent a week with Cy in Gwinner in 1973 at Bobcat Operators School. I was the only one to attend that week, so I had him to myself. Great guy, we went to the bowling alley every day after class to drink Grain Belt Beer. He told me the whole story as you hear it now. I was honored to be there with the original guys that created it. I did 20 years with the Bobcat store in Orlando Florida.
@@LoganBraaten-wm1lh Not sure how much I could tell you, I spent the better part of 5 days with Cy showing me about operating the Bobcat. I had experience already so we stopped early and went to the bowling alley, 3 lanes if I remember right, and drank beer and talked. He was a really nice guy, I never met Louis. He gave me a signed book about the evolution of the Bobcat, but someone nabbed it many years later. Pictures of them running the first machine in the turkey stalls, and how it evolved. I wish I had the book, but gone now.
I always wondered about the history of the Bobcat. I used to run a Bobcat back in the mid 70's on a dairy farm running Silage carts, cleaning barns all kinds of various duties, then I joined the Army driving the APC 113 which steered just like a Bobcat. The instructor said you drive this like a pro, I told him I used to run a Bobcat every day. Thanks for the upload. I hope these brothers got rewarded financially for all there efforts and hard work. They deserved it.
Cool story! I too, lived on a farm in Israel and drove an M-113 in the Israeli Army. Fun fact: NASA used to (or maybe still does) use an M-113 for an escape vehicle in case something goes wrong with the Space Shuttle/newer rockets. It's not really the best choice, if you think about it; even if you clad the thing in asbestos it's still made of aluminum....
@@s.marcus3669 I didn't know that about NASA, but your right about them being all aluminum. Ours had a 300 Detroit Diesel. I was a Track vehicle mechanic on all armored vehicles.
Good to see you here. Yeah, how awesome and well done was this? I worked in landscape, irrigation, and lighting when I was younger. I will forever have an appreciation for Bobcat. Very capable and very durable machines.
Yes, that was a fun video. I didn't even know they existed until I started watching Sonne Farms. Seeing how they were invented makes it seem more real. That's real history.
I figured that sadly those gentlemen had passed on by now. What amazing men and nice long lives they had. Really makes you ponder your own contributions.
It's my personal belief that these 2 brothers should receive the Nobel Peace Prize for this machine. If they gave that award to the man who invented dynamite, that blew things up, they should very well award it to these two. The unfathomable amount of man hours and backbreaking labor this machine does and has saved mankind from doing is a true blessing to the human race, the world over. It's an extraordinary, remarkable machine.
Only problem with that is the Nobel Peace Prize is for Peace. If you keep two countries from blowing each other up, for example, that might get someone nominated.
@kurtvonfricken6829 Since 1901, the Nobel Prize has been awarded in the fields of physics, chemistry, physiology or medicine, literature and peace, while a memorial prize in economic sciences was added in 1968. They can hand it out after the fact.
@Halofan830 A method of destruction gets the prize, under the premise that it helped railroad and mining operations. Seems to me the Bobcat machine saved more backs and made work easy, just like dynamite.
@@mike93eh. Doosan bought them out and began the downfall by not keeping up with state of the art improvements. What mods the have done are not what they need.
I believe it was 1967, and I was 11 when my dad took me with him to the Indiana State Fair to see a demonstration of the newest Melroe Bobcat. The operator dug a hole, and the entire machine fit inside the hole deeper than ground level. Then he dug himself out and refilled the hole. From that day on, the farm always had a Bobcat on it! Thanks for sharing and bringing back good memories. 😁👍🇺🇸
Eddie Velo was the turkey farmer that went to them with an idea. He was a hard working man whose idea of a break was to use a smaller shovel for a few minutes. He didn't pay employees much, but he was actually a fairly decent man to work for. Eddie was a hands on boss, he would get dirty with the rest of us.
The best bosses share the work. I remember the age of "Delegation" to subordinates was being drummed into corporate and middle management Americans by 1980's and somehow they forgot who was doing the real work. We do it to ourselves. I can remember on one hand my best bosses, employees and coworkers. They all believed in doing work. It is unfortunately a short list.
The boss whos willing to get down and dirty earns respect from his crew. FACT. I've got no respect for a guy who pushes paper all day giving commands but won't budge an inch to help when your backed up.
Did he get anything for bringing them the idea of the Bobcat? I realize the brothers actually invented and built it but it sounds like it wouldn't exist if Eddie Velo didn't bring them the idea.
And with now suspension you can beat them day and night for a year without a breakdown, as well as being one of the most versatile items ever designed.
I bought my first Bobcat in 1989. It's a used 743, that I still own today. When I bought it, it had just under 800 hours and cost me $10,000. That machine worked 3 to 5 days a week for about 15 years, helping produce millions of dollars. It turned into a yard machine. I keep her in great shape and will never let it go regardless.
@@corybuiltsean1900 Your 100% right... The new Bobcats are definitely not like the old style work horse's. These new Bobcats spend more time in the shop then they work. Most of the time they need to go to an authorized bobcat dealer. It's a scam how they need so much dealer support or they will refuse to run.
I never knew the story, but I figured Bobcat was old because we had a Gehl skidsteer and we always called it a "Bobcat", lol, so I knew there was something about that brand. Although, I'm glad we had a Gehl because it had a high seat position for great visibility and all hand controls. And while it was new enough to have a cage it was old enough you could take it off.
@@scottrayhons2537 Ours had a little Ford gas 4 cylinder. It was just used to move manure, snow, and other small stuff, so it worked for us. My dad would lay an electric bathroom heater right on the intake to start it in the winter. Amazingly enough, we never burnt the barn down, lol. I dunno where the choke was supposed to be, but, for us, it was a piece of wire laying on the floor next to the seat. Again, tho, the controls were brick simple and easy to use. Much later in life I worked for a company that had a Bobcat brand, and, wow, was it a lot more exercise, both physically and mentally, to operate. And the visibility was terrible.
That was a really fun watch. And the Keller brothers' emphasis on fun was great. And how they described the turkey farmer saying "If only I had a machine to clean the coops my job would be fun". And then the ending with the dancing Bobcats! Work's not always fun, but working to make it fun is worth it.
@@cdjhyoung heh I have no doubt. It could be a relative thing, since everyone had just gotten back from the war. On a scale of WWII to Your Favorite Thing To Do, surely turkey farming's not all the way on either side. Their words though, who am I to judge another?
@@herzogsbuick I've raised hogs, beef cattle, veal calves, chickens, turkeys and dairy cows. On a scale of the worse to smell, turkeys are a close second to veal calves, but not nearly as disgusting. The idea of keeping turkeys in a barn and only cleaning the pen when you move them out, that would be hard to take. No wonder he had a hard time hiring help, good or bad.
I started working as a welder for Melroe in Gwinner,ND in 1975- it was a great place to work back then- I stayed for a few years, we would get laid off every year for about 4 months and then they would call us back- as the sales got better and better, the plant got bigger and bigger- I made good money for 1975- the winters were brutal- but the money made us stay. I worked the night shift as it paid more than the day shift. I got a better offer at another company with no layoffs, so I left Gwinner behind.
As a young child, I remember meeting Cyril while ice fishing on Ottertail Lake. He was retired by then and always kind to us kids. He was known for taking his time to plow some snow roads on the lake with his skidsteer.
I wish to thank the company for including a lap belt on the model 600! I spent many hundreds of hours in a model 600 working for my Uncle on his dairy farm. Those clutches worked so smoothly and easily and after a time you could operate that machine like it was part of you. What an amazing tool!! That model had no cage and for those of you who spent time in such a model you know why I'm thankful for that lap belt! (For those who didn't, it turns out it wasn't all that hard to lift a load high and slow too quickly and tip it on it's nose! With the lap belt on you had just enough time to lower the load and flip yourself back upright! Without the belt, well that would be very bad!)
I can't imagine some idiot trying to put one of those on a trailer and having it roll on their head. When I was 18 I was working for a landscape company and the foreman kept flipping it over loading it on the trailer. I put it up there no problem and from that day forward I was driving that thing all the time
Had a bobcat for my landscaping company in the late 80-90. Teaching new hires not to raise the bucket with a full load and back quickly or stop the dump half way was quickly learned when one new hire thought he could just jump in and go to work. After he launched himself out of the seat he quickly got the message.
@@ranlove47I drove a different brand called New Holland and those things would not start without the seatbelt on. Which was fine I could not figure out a scenario where you would want to drive it without the seatbelt on.
This was a great video. I am speaking as a proud grandson of my grandfather , as a fireman invented two things. First off, a portable fire fighting water machine is capable of providing water to multiple areas within short distances, primarily for high-rise buildings and domestic dwellings. No.2 is the swing check valve for allowing pumps to suck water from ponds, lakes, rivers, and oceans. He was a great man. And it makes me more proud that there are men just like him who made this world easier for the betterment of us all. Thank you, Grandad. 🙂👍
May they tinker away forever in the great machine shop in the sky. Rest in peace Louis and Cyril Keller, two of the brightest minds the 20th&21st century
I can't put into words what the Bobcat has did for our farm. I'm a young age of 52 a started driving the 610. Dad retired now, we still have a 642B bought new in 1991. The hand foot feet sequence I do without thinking. Raised 5000 pigs, no slat equals alot of bobcat time. Love love you all and a big thanks to all the Kellars. John T.
Hello there we’re in the concrete business in Iowa and no wonder my brother always said those hand foot feet models were to push manure heck you can’t do any efficient fine grading in them😂
As someone who is a long-time fan and operator of Bobcats, I had never heard their backstory - to my shame. This was awesome and the way the Keller Bros handled their success is… inspiring , if that is not too cliche.
Hi. I am Russian. It probably will sound strange, but I proud that America have people like this two brothers. They a really great people. It was interesting documentary film about brothers, who work hard & make products, which know in all world. I hope they will live a few happy decades more, & I hope new American's will be like this brothers.
My uncle and my dad were both in the integrated poultry business at its inception. Scooping out the litter between flocks was indeed a hard, labor intensive, time-consuming job. That's why my uncle purchased a Melroe Bobcat 500 in the early sixties -- brand new and yellow in color at that time, for some reason. Later on my dad purchased a used one of his own -- a white Melroe Bobcat 500 much like the ones at the end of this video -- no roll cage. After much use by my late dad and myself over the years, the thing is still operational and reliable, and I still have it and use it. The engine -- a 23hp Onan "opposing 2 cylinder" -- has been rebuilt twice, the last time by me. The cylinders were worn so -- beyond the use of the available oversized pistons and rings -- it had to bored and sleeved, but it's still running. The Bobcat is truly a labor-saving miracle machine and many thanks to the Keller brothers for their God-given gift of engineering genius. My back and the backs of countless others are eternally grateful.
My Dad bought a used M500 in '75... no roll cage. In the early 80's he traded for a used M610 and the 1st thing he did was take off the roll cage. Don't know why they quit the hand/foot control... so, intuitive! I hauled a lot of rocks, hog manure, and what have you, with both of them. He threw me on the M500 at the ripe old age of 8! Miss you so much, Dad!!!!!!!!!!!!
@@atomicwedgie8176 I hear ya, Atomic, I miss my dad still and after over 30 years gone. He absolutely loved his Bobcat and could use it as if a part of himself. I imagine your dad removed the cage for 2 reasons: !. It obscured his side vision, and 2. The 'Cat was used on mostly level ground where there was little chance of a rollover, which, because of the low center of gravity of the Bobcat, little chance of a rollover on any ground. EDITED TO ADD: 3. Sometimes they were removed to provide greater overhead clearance, as in a chicken house with low hanging equipment. In reality, they were useless appendages mandated by the government. I seriously doubt a complete "rollover" of any Bobcat from that period. Maybe teetering to land one side or the other, but the sheer, flat construction of the 'Cat on either side, plus the high boom mounts on either side, would prevent any complete "rollover" on either side, and that on the steepest of grades. Your dad was no doubt a better, and more realistic, accident actuarial than any employed by the government or any insurance companies, at least when it came to these amazing machines. I really haven't kept up with all the newer models and innovations, but I've really had little need to except for where to get parts when needed from whatever ownership changes over the years -- (in order of my memory) Melroe, Clark, Ingersoll-rand, to whoever has them now (I think it's still Ingersoll- Rand, but not sure). And I have had machinist fabricate parts, as have others I have known, simply due to the age, and sometimes the price of replacement parts for the 500. Fortunately, they're so well built, that is a rare occurrence.
@@tablature6121 Yeah, lost him last February, on Mom's birthday. He treated everyone like they were a long-lost friend and was ALWAYS in a good mood! He took the cage off, because it was safer to exit if the arms were up. They were used hard, but always parked in the machine shed overnight. Hope you get your 500 purring, again!
@@atomicwedgie8176 Condolences for the loss of your dad. All too well do I know your grief. I pray the Good Lord extends some comfort and peace. Yeah the 'Cat is still purring although I haven't had need of it since retiring, so it's still parked in the shed awaiting the completion of a restoration started some time ago. I've hopes of making it a showpiece of museum quality. It's more than earned it.
These men and my dad all went to school at a time when an 8th grade education would give you a start in life. Why because in school then reading writing and math was really taught and comprehended before a child move to the next grade. My dad built boat, homes fixed anything that broke. He worked for other then started his own business and him and my mom with 1 8th grade education the other a high school education started and sold 3 different companies that they dreamed up and started. Amazing people that generation.
The first bobcat I ran was a M500 in 1973 and 50 years later at 66 years old I have a bobcat in the barn I use a good bit!. I never new the history on how they got started, great video!. I wouldnt own anything else but a bobcat!, I've owned and operated them for 50 years!.
We still have a 642B on our farm. Grandpa bought it new in the mid 80s, she’s old and haggard but still works as it should. These gentlemen changed a lot of industries with the Bobcat. Pretty cool to learn it was invented not terribly far from where I farm today.
What a lovely story. It is The American Dream: hard-working people with the vision see the solution to an unfilled need. My own dad grew up on a farm in Kansas and he learned how to fix what was broken--whether it was a tractor, or plumbing, or a door, or a washing machine. And he passed all that on to me. I am fortunate to have that sort of connection to the Keller brothers. Much respect!
Worked all thru high school and most of college on a landscape farm. The skidsteer/bobcat was the most versatile piece of machinery we had and was fun to operate!
My hat is off to the two of you gentlemen and all who helped it come to fruition. Possibly two of the best financial moves I've ever made...not to mention therapeutic.
At General Mills Elevator A in Duluth Mn there were electric powered Bobcats unloading grain from boxcars. They were 440 volts and really quick. When the good guys were operating them they just kind of bounced around. When the cord got pinched between the wall of the car and the cord, there were huge sparks and the machine was shut down until a new cord was put on. Tons of fun to operate and everybody wanted to operate one.
Very interesting to see how a couple of clever guys filling a need, has expanded into a universal name worldwide! And that little dance at the end, priceless!!
What a fantastic and homely story proving once again that necessity is the mother of invention, especially when you've got some very clever country boys.
Thank you so much. It just shows that sometimes less is more. Smaller can do Bigger. Great work to the inventors for their perseverance and determination.
Their statement about its use for cleanup is 100% accurate. I work in an aluminum smelter, and we absolutely use front-end loaders to move material, but it's a skid-steer that cleans up.
I've been an engineer designing custom equipment for 9 years. Seeing the simplicity of that belt reverser at 9:41 was humbling... It's a very clever way to do the job with minimal complexity.
Credit they do deserve, however . . . . . Necessity is the mother of all inventions proven successful. Therefore without a doubt, had these two men never been born, another two, or even perhaps just one, would have been there to fill the need.
Amen. I've said for years, when they put a computer in a Bobcat it was the beginning of the end! Now look at what this stuff has become. A bunch of over engineered junk that the average person can't afford. Or if we're to buy a used current model can't afford to fix.( Even if you can get the parts.) I bought a new Bobcat in 93. Still have it today. Very reliable and simple. Just before things got out of hand.
I picked up a case 1835c diesel skidsteer that was pretty neglected for $500 a couple years ago, it only had 3 wheels because someone literally drove the wheel off it. Being a disabled fabricator I didn't have the $1200 for the new part so I added material where there should have been for the bearings and shaped it back propper. It only cost me about $150 to get that fixed and a couple hundred in all new fluids and I was now feeding the cows the big rounds instead of hand feeding small bails 😊. I had to rebuild the motor last year because I ran it out of fuel and I didn't see my dad dumping a half a can of starting fluid in the air box while I was trying to start it and sucked it all in at once causing the piston skirts and rings to end up in the oil pan 🤦♂️. I dont know how I got anything done before having this machine, it is the most versatile piece of equipment anyone could have. Best invention ever created and hearing this story filled my heart with joy, I love making my own tooling and equipment and could see myself being best friends with these two brothers if I ever crossed their path. I would have loved growing up in their time, back when there was so much to be discovered 👍❤
Another Minnesotan here. The Bobcat, and the skid steer system, has fascinated me since I was a teenager long, long ago! And to think that neither brother required a high school diploma, college, computer programming, outsourcing for drafting services… Good going!!
as a skid steer operator and heavy equipment operator myself of 7 years so far and counting, i always wondered how bobcat came about, good to know lol now i know lol im very good in a skid steer no one at my work can keep up with me in another skid steer im so comfortable in one its unreal. its like 2nd nature to me. great video, mad respect to my elders and 4 fathers .
Hello from VA!!! I built a beach with one, I actually drove it into water submerged with sand, and the bobcat never stopped, from building crossties to pushing sand all the way so kids could enjoy the water. Still to this day families enjoy that beach we built, we I mean me and these geniuses
About two years ago, I worked at the Gwinner plant for an engineering internship for half the year. I learned a whole lot in my time out there, but seeing the scale of production the plant can churn out in a day is mind-boggling. From an idea built in a garage to a household name. It's also insane how big Bobcat has become, even since 2003. They make it all now, from lawnmowers to forklifts to tractors.
Truly one of the best videos I’ve ever seen. I loved seeing these two small town brothers bring their idea to life. Very cool how Cyril still has an original caster model for himself. Amazing how many companies started like this back in the day. I’d be honored to invent such a machine with my brother.
I have an older Melroe 843 that I love and refuse to get rid of. It's outlasted a lot of newer machines with far fewer issues. This was a great video that has answered a lot of questions. I wish this generation could learn from men like them.
Absolutely awesome story. You never hear these origin stories and this one definitely a good one Also the bobcat dance at the end was as impressive as it was goofy 🤣
Very cool video, what a story! My dad had one of the first 610's in our area. My brother still has it and uses it. I have an 853 Bobcat and I'd be lost without it!
my dad ask me in 1975 if i wanted to work on the farm (just graduated) I said NO unless you get a bobcat . Seem like all i did was run a pitchfork /shovel --Got a 610 two days later-Been farming ever since ! !
An awesome video and machine! I have an Bobcat model 610 that my dad left me when he passed away in 2015. He used to run that little Bobcat all the time and made a good little living with it, after he retired. It has since been setting and I would love to get it back up and running. Maybe I can some day, thanks for this video, loved it. Have a great day!
Incredible story about two brothers and determination. One of my brothers I could see us doing something like this, the other one doesn’t know what bathroom to go to.
I've put tons of hours on Melroe and Clark Bobcats, excellent machines! I've used a few of the other skid steers as well, but always preferred the Bobcats.
I am extremely proud to call Louis my grandpa. I only wish I would have had more time to have real conversations with him. I was only 17 when he passed. I distinctly remember his funeral, the dirt was filled in with one of the first machines they made. It was a very beautiful to see such a machine, made by the two of them, come full circle. Amazing men the both of them.
That's so sweet. 😭 What a loss.
The kellers are my great uncles on my grandmas side. Ed schillinger is my grandpa. Name in credits.
What a cool story. He was a certified badass!
You got some of that bobcat money?
skid steer loaders made it a lot easier and faster to build.
there is probably entire airports, malls, suburbs/towns, etc (and 100+ million people) that would not exist without your grandpa.
"We can fix anything but a broken heart". Two wonderful gentlemen with gifts of service to their community.
@Repent and believe in Jesus Christ . . . . did you really need to taint that thoughtful comment? You bring disgrace to the truth with your misdirected quotes from the book. As you probably know, you actually serve the Devil by stirring malice towards those who truly believe.
@repentandbelieveinJesusChrist8repent to deez nuts
True facts ,🤔🎯☝️✌️🙏
@Repent and believe in Jesus Christ WTF ?????
Oh with this story, I think they fixed broken harts after all.
Astounding to think of the millions of people who's backs aren't killing them due to the ingenuity and perseverance of these two Minnesotan brothers.
Skid steers are hard on your back, trust me.
@@tacomas9602 I sure doubt a 20 minute bumpy ride in a bobcat is anything even close to as bad as shoveling all day.
@@contraband1543 You have never been in a machine that has ZERO suspension. You get sloppy with the operation and the machine beats you down in a big way. Especially with foot controls. You can drop the boom like a sledge hammer and it rings your spine like a bell.
@@contraband1543 imagine spending 8 hour days in one doing sand bedding every week or hauling sawdust..my back is fucked. I’ve put a thousand hours or more on one unit alone. My back is shot.
@@ShainAndrews If you're shitty at running the machine then yeah, of course it's going to beat you around. That goes without saying.
That the same thing as saying riding a horse is painful when the problem is you just don't how to ride a horse.
I've driven foam filled tires skid steers on concrete all day and my back had no complaints.
Probably because I wasn't in there jerking the controls around like you, thinking it's a lonely Saturday night or something lmfao
Nowadays it's hard to imagine a construction site without a skidsteer, these guys truly changed the equipment industry. Great documentary!
Imagine how many backs these two old timers saved, I can’t imagine doing demolition without them, they can do the work of10 laborers
@@jakemocci3953 more like 100, a skidsteer never gets tired and lifts a ton xD
Well today there are traditional stering loaders with the same size of a bobcat opperate more gentle then skidsteers.
@@arjanvanraaij8440 dont rain on this parade.
@@arjanvanraaij8440 such as?
My family was the proud owner of the orange Keller Loader that Cyril was driving in the video. My father bought it at auction in the early 1990s in WI and while the auctioneer told the story that it was one of the first Bobcats he wasn't entirely convinced. A few years later the Keller family tracked us down and bought it back and now it seems that it became Cyril's personal loader.
Really cool Story that U Tell us.thanks😊
My dad, Joe Keller, saw your comment. He was the one who picked up that Keller Loader from Robert Johnson. I was on the trip too when I was still quite young. He's tried to find a contact number for anyone in Robert's family. He would love to talk with anyone if that is possible.
The two brothers are my great great uncles. Are you related to them at all? Because if you are we could be related.
@@kellerthesciencefeller3436 nice plan.good luck.😁
@@kellerthesciencefeller3436 I'd love to get in contact with you. Can you send me your contact info?
It's rare that you see two brothers create something so influential and not fall apart to greed
I spent a week with Cy in Gwinner in 1973 at Bobcat Operators School. I was the only one to attend that week, so I had him to myself. Great guy, we went to the bowling alley every day after class to drink Grain Belt Beer. He told me the whole story as you hear it now. I was honored to be there with the original guys that created it. I did 20 years with the Bobcat store in Orlando Florida.
The two brothers are my great great uncles. Wondering if you could share any more cool stories like that.
@@LoganBraaten-wm1lh Not sure how much I could tell you, I spent the better part of 5 days with Cy showing me about operating the Bobcat. I had experience already so we stopped early and went to the bowling alley, 3 lanes if I remember right, and drank beer and talked. He was a really nice guy, I never met Louis. He gave me a signed book about the evolution of the Bobcat, but someone nabbed it many years later. Pictures of them running the first machine in the turkey stalls, and how it evolved. I wish I had the book, but gone now.
Awesome!
@@waynejohnson5611 theeves, rotten bastages!
sounds like quite the honor
I always wondered about the history of the Bobcat. I used to run a Bobcat back in the mid 70's on a dairy farm running Silage carts, cleaning barns all kinds of various duties, then I joined the Army driving the APC 113 which steered just like a Bobcat. The instructor said you drive this like a pro, I told him I used to run a Bobcat every day. Thanks for the upload. I hope these brothers got rewarded financially for all there efforts and hard work. They deserved it.
Cool story! I too, lived on a farm in Israel and drove an M-113 in the Israeli Army. Fun fact: NASA used to (or maybe still does) use an M-113 for an escape vehicle in case something goes wrong with the Space Shuttle/newer rockets. It's not really the best choice, if you think about it; even if you clad the thing in asbestos it's still made of aluminum....
@@s.marcus3669 I didn't know that about NASA, but your right about them being all aluminum. Ours had a 300 Detroit Diesel. I was a Track vehicle mechanic on all armored vehicles.
I can't even think of cleaning out barn with out a skidsteer any more all of the attachments out there for them now
@@dons8122 My Dad made sure me and my brother knew what it was like to clean barns by hand.
Yes, I read they each got a $100 Home Depot gift voucher for their hard work developing the Bobcat.
That was fantastic! I really enjoyed this.
Good to see you here. Yeah, how awesome and well done was this?
I worked in landscape, irrigation, and lighting when I was younger.
I will forever have an appreciation for Bobcat.
Very capable and very durable machines.
Very kool.
Yes, that was a fun video. I didn't even know they existed until I started watching Sonne Farms. Seeing how they were invented makes it seem more real. That's real history.
@Chimpin Out Chicago last weekend, am i right.
I find you in the most interesting places
It's always fascinating to me how something goes from a novel idea to an industry standard.
RIP Louis (2010) and Cyril (2020).
I figured that sadly those gentlemen had passed on by now. What amazing men and nice long lives they had. Really makes you ponder your own contributions.
Two men that left a lasting legacy behind.
I'm happy for them that they don't have to see what becomes of this country they worked and fought for.
It's my personal belief that these 2 brothers should receive the Nobel Peace Prize for this machine. If they gave that award to the man who invented dynamite, that blew things up, they should very well award it to these two. The unfathomable amount of man hours and backbreaking labor this machine does and has saved mankind from doing is a true blessing to the human race, the world over. It's an extraordinary, remarkable machine.
Only problem with that is the Nobel Peace Prize is for Peace. If you keep two countries from blowing each other up, for example, that might get someone nominated.
I understand your sentiment .
@kurtvonfricken6829
Since 1901, the Nobel Prize has been awarded in the fields of physics, chemistry, physiology or medicine, literature and peace, while a memorial prize in economic sciences was added in 1968. They can hand it out after the fact.
Alfred Nobel, the man who invented dynamite also invented the Nobel Prize :)
@Halofan830 A method of destruction gets the prize, under the premise that it helped railroad and mining operations. Seems to me the Bobcat machine saved more backs and made work easy, just like dynamite.
Every single skid steer manufacturer in the world owes you men a debt of gratitude.
And every skid steer manufacturer today is superior to Bobcat LOL
@@mike93eh I didn't mention Bobcat.
@@mike93ehkinda sad tbh idk what’s happening to bobcat
@@guamazolopez6456 better engineering.. Bobcat slacked off hard the past 2 decades
@@mike93eh.
Doosan bought them out and began the downfall by not keeping up with state of the art improvements.
What mods the have done are not what they need.
I believe it was 1967, and I was 11 when my dad took me with him to the Indiana State Fair to see a demonstration of the newest Melroe Bobcat. The operator dug a hole, and the entire machine fit inside the hole deeper than ground level. Then he dug himself out and refilled the hole. From that day on, the farm always had a Bobcat on it! Thanks for sharing and bringing back good memories. 😁👍🇺🇸
Eddie Velo was the turkey farmer that went to them with an idea. He was a hard working man whose idea of a break was to use a smaller shovel for a few minutes. He didn't pay employees much, but he was actually a fairly decent man to work for. Eddie was a hands on boss, he would get dirty with the rest of us.
Smaller shovel break... Classic!
The best bosses share the work. I remember the age of "Delegation" to subordinates was being drummed into corporate and middle management Americans by 1980's and somehow they forgot who was doing the real work. We do it to ourselves. I can remember on one hand my best bosses, employees and coworkers. They all believed in doing work. It is unfortunately a short list.
The boss whos willing to get down and dirty earns respect from his crew. FACT.
I've got no respect for a guy who pushes paper all day giving commands but won't budge an inch to help when your backed up.
Did he get anything for bringing them the idea of the Bobcat? I realize the brothers actually invented and built it but it sounds like it wouldn't exist if Eddie Velo didn't bring them the idea.
@@Swarm509
He didn't do as well as he could have, but he did get good deals on bobcats and attachments for his farms.
The simplicity of the first steering/clutch system is a thing of beauty.
to conceive of that setup is pure genius
And with now suspension you can beat them day and night for a year without a breakdown, as well as being one of the most versatile items ever designed.
I bought my first Bobcat in 1989. It's a used 743, that I still own today.
When I bought it, it had just under 800 hours and cost me $10,000.
That machine worked 3 to 5 days a week for about 15 years,
helping produce millions of dollars. It turned into a yard machine.
I keep her in great shape and will never let it go regardless.
You have a good one new ones tho trash
CBS is a brilliant genius.
millions of dollars? What did you use it to rob banks?
@@SHANECatLovinActivistHistorian hey edge lord, being hired and doing work may be a foreign concept to you
@@corybuiltsean1900
Your 100% right...
The new Bobcats are definitely not like the old style work horse's. These new Bobcats spend more time in the shop then they work. Most of the time they need to go to an authorized bobcat dealer. It's a scam how they need so much dealer support or they will refuse to run.
I had no idea the bobcat brand was that old. The brothers seem to be extremely good people. Definitely an interesting story.
I saw my first one in 1981 when it dug out our pool as a kid. Not a farmer, have no land or use for one, but damn I still want one some day😁
Those guys are what America needs more of today. Been running skidsteers for over 20 years. Had no idea that it came from such humble traditions.
I never knew the story, but I figured Bobcat was old because we had a Gehl skidsteer and we always called it a "Bobcat", lol, so I knew there was something about that brand.
Although, I'm glad we had a Gehl because it had a high seat position for great visibility and all hand controls. And while it was new enough to have a cage it was old enough you could take it off.
@l337pwnage I had a Gehl also. Simple machine to work on but underpowered.
@@scottrayhons2537 Ours had a little Ford gas 4 cylinder. It was just used to move manure, snow, and other small stuff, so it worked for us.
My dad would lay an electric bathroom heater right on the intake to start it in the winter. Amazingly enough, we never burnt the barn down, lol.
I dunno where the choke was supposed to be, but, for us, it was a piece of wire laying on the floor next to the seat.
Again, tho, the controls were brick simple and easy to use.
Much later in life I worked for a company that had a Bobcat brand, and, wow, was it a lot more exercise, both physically and mentally, to operate. And the visibility was terrible.
That was a really fun watch. And the Keller brothers' emphasis on fun was great. And how they described the turkey farmer saying "If only I had a machine to clean the coops my job would be fun". And then the ending with the dancing Bobcats! Work's not always fun, but working to make it fun is worth it.
I've been around large scale turkey farming. I can't imagine this machine making it 'fun'. But maybe tolerable.
@@cdjhyoung heh I have no doubt. It could be a relative thing, since everyone had just gotten back from the war. On a scale of WWII to Your Favorite Thing To Do, surely turkey farming's not all the way on either side. Their words though, who am I to judge another?
@@herzogsbuick I've raised hogs, beef cattle, veal calves, chickens, turkeys and dairy cows. On a scale of the worse to smell, turkeys are a close second to veal calves, but not nearly as disgusting. The idea of keeping turkeys in a barn and only cleaning the pen when you move them out, that would be hard to take. No wonder he had a hard time hiring help, good or bad.
Look at the views that a simple fun thing can get.
I started working as a welder for Melroe in Gwinner,ND in 1975- it was a great place to work back then- I stayed for a few years, we would get laid off every year for about 4 months and then they would call us back- as the sales got better and better, the plant got bigger and bigger- I made good money for 1975- the winters were brutal- but the money made us stay. I worked the night shift as it paid more than the day shift. I got a better offer at another company with no layoffs, so I left Gwinner behind.
Proud of you Sr. I hope you enjoy your life after the sacrifices. 🇺🇸 🇨🇦 ♥️
Are you retired now? And did you work as a welder for your entire career?
As a young child, I remember meeting Cyril while ice fishing on Ottertail Lake. He was retired by then and always kind to us kids. He was known for taking his time to plow some snow roads on the lake with his skidsteer.
Boy, that was ingenuity in action. We owe a LOT to those two gentlemen.
People like these is what kids should be looking up to these days ! Best story I've heard in a very very long time. This is awesome!🤓
@killacommieformommy don't lick the boot so hard son, you'll wear a hole straight through the leather
@@StoneTheCr0w😂
I wish to thank the company for including a lap belt on the model 600! I spent many hundreds of hours in a model 600 working for my Uncle on his dairy farm. Those clutches worked so smoothly and easily and after a time you could operate that machine like it was part of you. What an amazing tool!!
That model had no cage and for those of you who spent time in such a model you know why I'm thankful for that lap belt! (For those who didn't, it turns out it wasn't all that hard to lift a load high and slow too quickly and tip it on it's nose! With the lap belt on you had just enough time to lower the load and flip yourself back upright! Without the belt, well that would be very bad!)
Amen doing a lipstand off the windshield sucks
@@abefehr6155 Oh there was no windshield, you'd be doing a face-plant in cow manure !!
I can't imagine some idiot trying to put one of those on a trailer and having it roll on their head. When I was 18 I was working for a landscape company and the foreman kept flipping it over loading it on the trailer. I put it up there no problem and from that day forward I was driving that thing all the time
Had a bobcat for my landscaping company in the late 80-90. Teaching new hires not to raise the bucket with a full load and back quickly or stop the dump half way was quickly learned when one new hire thought he could just jump in and go to work. After he launched himself out of the seat he quickly got the message.
@@ranlove47I drove a different brand called New Holland and those things would not start without the seatbelt on. Which was fine I could not figure out a scenario where you would want to drive it without the seatbelt on.
A rare breed these days. Humble. Service-oriented. Smart. And always trying to improve things. Hats off to them!
Never in my life did I think I'd see 4 cowboys square dancing with bobcats, this video was worth it just for that alone
That was priceless.
This was a great video. I am speaking as a proud grandson of my grandfather , as a fireman invented two things. First off, a portable fire fighting water machine is capable of providing water to multiple areas within short distances, primarily for high-rise buildings and domestic dwellings. No.2 is the swing check valve for allowing pumps to suck water from ponds, lakes, rivers, and oceans. He was a great man. And it makes me more proud that there are men just like him who made this world easier for the betterment of us all. Thank you, Grandad. 🙂👍
Wow, that's so cool. I sure miss my Opa. Brilliant man, makes everyone in my generation look stupid.
Cool , thanks for sharing. I like the quote from the brothers " we can fix anything , welding anything but can't mend a broken heart "
May they tinker away forever in the great machine shop in the sky. Rest in peace Louis and Cyril Keller, two of the brightest minds the 20th&21st century
I just want to say publicly, thank you to the Keller brothers, Cyril and Louis.
Well done, gentlemen. Well done.👏👏
I can't put into words what the Bobcat has did for our farm. I'm a young age of 52 a started driving the 610. Dad retired now, we still have a 642B bought new in 1991. The hand foot feet sequence I do without thinking. Raised 5000 pigs, no slat equals alot of bobcat time. Love love you all and a big thanks to all the Kellars. John T.
Hello there we’re in the concrete business in Iowa and no wonder my brother always said those hand foot feet models were to push manure heck you can’t do any efficient fine grading in them😂
Yeah amazing machine
Have been driving one since 2000 but can't tell you what foot does what, it just happens.
Hand/Foot controls RULE!!!!!!!!!!! So, intuitive!
As someone who is a long-time fan and operator of Bobcats, I had never heard their backstory - to my shame. This was awesome and the way the Keller Bros handled their success is… inspiring , if that is not too cliche.
Two men who changed so many industries. Brilliant.
A truly inspiring story and I've never seen two more deserving fellas.
Inventing the skidsteer is a crazy badge to hold, single most useful piece of equipment on a site
The Bobcat square dance at the end really made this a complete minidocumentary.
The comments are almost as good as the video. Really enjoyed this. I've owned and run several bobcats over the years and can never get enough of them.
Hi. I am Russian. It probably will sound strange, but I proud that America have people like this two brothers. They a really great people. It was interesting documentary film about brothers, who work hard & make products, which know in all world. I hope they will live a few happy decades more, & I hope new American's will be like this brothers.
American here who likes Russian ingenuity and spirit
My uncle and my dad were both in the integrated poultry business at its inception. Scooping out the litter between flocks was indeed a hard, labor intensive, time-consuming job. That's why my uncle purchased a Melroe Bobcat 500 in the early sixties -- brand new and yellow in color at that time, for some reason.
Later on my dad purchased a used one of his own -- a white Melroe Bobcat 500 much like the ones at the end of this video -- no roll cage. After much use by my late dad and myself over the years, the thing is still operational and reliable, and I still have it and use it. The engine -- a 23hp Onan "opposing 2 cylinder" -- has been rebuilt twice, the last time by me. The cylinders were worn so -- beyond the use of the available oversized pistons and rings -- it had to bored and sleeved, but it's still running.
The Bobcat is truly a labor-saving miracle machine and many thanks to the Keller brothers for their God-given gift of engineering genius. My back and the backs of countless others are eternally grateful.
My Dad bought a used M500 in '75... no roll cage. In the early 80's he traded for a used M610 and the 1st thing he did was take off the roll cage. Don't know why they quit the hand/foot control... so, intuitive! I hauled a lot of rocks, hog manure, and what have you, with both of them. He threw me on the M500 at the ripe old age of 8! Miss you so much, Dad!!!!!!!!!!!!
@@atomicwedgie8176 I hear ya, Atomic, I miss my dad still and after over 30 years gone. He absolutely loved his Bobcat and could use it as if a part of himself.
I imagine your dad removed the cage for 2 reasons:
!. It obscured his side vision, and
2. The 'Cat was used on mostly level ground where there was little chance of a rollover, which, because of the low center of gravity of the Bobcat, little chance of a rollover on any ground.
EDITED TO ADD:
3. Sometimes they were removed to provide greater overhead clearance, as in a chicken house with low hanging equipment.
In reality, they were useless appendages mandated by the government.
I seriously doubt a complete "rollover" of any Bobcat from that period. Maybe teetering to land one side or the other, but the sheer, flat construction of the 'Cat on either side, plus the high boom mounts on either side, would prevent any complete "rollover" on either side, and that on the steepest of grades.
Your dad was no doubt a better, and more realistic, accident actuarial than any employed by the government or any insurance companies, at least when it came to these amazing machines.
I really haven't kept up with all the newer models and innovations, but I've really had little need to except for where to get parts when needed from whatever ownership changes over the years -- (in order of my memory) Melroe, Clark, Ingersoll-rand, to whoever has them now (I think it's still Ingersoll- Rand, but not sure).
And I have had machinist fabricate parts, as have others I have known, simply due to the age, and sometimes the price of replacement parts for the 500. Fortunately, they're so well built, that is a rare occurrence.
@@tablature6121 Yeah, lost him last February, on Mom's birthday. He treated everyone like they were a long-lost friend and was ALWAYS in a good mood! He took the cage off, because it was safer to exit if the arms were up. They were used hard, but always parked in the machine shed overnight.
Hope you get your 500 purring, again!
@@atomicwedgie8176 Condolences for the loss of your dad. All too well do I know your grief. I pray the Good Lord extends some comfort and peace.
Yeah the 'Cat is still purring although I haven't had need of it since retiring, so it's still parked in the shed awaiting the completion of a restoration started some time ago.
I've hopes of making it a showpiece of museum quality. It's more than earned it.
@@tablature6121 Good luck and Thank You for the kind words! OOHRAH!
We had some in the foundry basement when I worked at a GM foundry in the 70s. They were a blast to operate and so very useful.
These men and my dad all went to school at a time when an 8th grade education would give you a start in life. Why because in school then reading writing and math was really taught and comprehended before a child move to the next grade. My dad built boat, homes fixed anything that broke. He worked for other then started his own business and him and my mom with 1 8th grade education the other a high school education started and sold 3 different companies that they dreamed up and started. Amazing people that generation.
goes to show, high school really doesn't have a academic purpose, mostly social
Indeed
Now we have laws that don’t allow just an 8th grade education.
@roadieman209 exactly, sad
I left school at 16 went to work then started a business and retired at 78. A lot of the youth today would rather watch TicTock than get a job
Well done boys, your engineering and ingenuity will live on forever. Great story.
The first bobcat I ran was a M500 in 1973 and 50 years later at 66 years old I have a bobcat in the barn I use a good bit!. I never new the history on how they got started, great video!. I wouldnt own anything else but a bobcat!, I've owned and operated them for 50 years!.
Which model do you have now
The time honored saying that necessity is the mother of invention is as true as ever. And these two ol' boys prove it.
We still have a 642B on our farm. Grandpa bought it new in the mid 80s, she’s old and haggard but still works as it should. These gentlemen changed a lot of industries with the Bobcat. Pretty cool to learn it was invented not terribly far from where I farm today.
What a lovely story. It is The American Dream: hard-working people with the vision see the solution to an unfilled need. My own dad grew up on a farm in Kansas and he learned how to fix what was broken--whether it was a tractor, or plumbing, or a door, or a washing machine. And he passed all that on to me. I am fortunate to have that sort of connection to the Keller brothers. Much respect!
Worked all thru high school and most of college on a landscape farm. The skidsteer/bobcat was the most versatile piece of machinery we had and was fun to operate!
What a couple of humble, wonderful gentlemen!!!
My hat is off to the two of you gentlemen and all who helped it come to fruition. Possibly two of the best financial moves I've ever made...not to mention therapeutic.
Love, and hard work. These brothers and those like them are what really built this country.
Arguably one of the most productive machines ever made. Thanks for the history lesson! :)
Drove Bobcats for quite a few years at work, but never knew the history. Very informative story. Thanks for sharing.
At General Mills Elevator A in Duluth Mn there were electric powered Bobcats unloading grain from boxcars. They were 440 volts and really quick. When the good guys were operating them they just kind of bounced around. When the cord got pinched between the wall of the car and the cord, there were huge sparks and the machine was shut down until a new cord was put on. Tons of fun to operate and everybody wanted to operate one.
This is amazing. These guys changed every farm, ranch, construction site since!
Fantastic! THESE are the kinds of stories a lot of us want to hear and celebrate.
Very interesting to see how a couple of clever guys filling a need, has expanded into a universal name worldwide!
And that little dance at the end, priceless!!
This kind of people made the world go round.
Even in Germany the Bobcat is very well known.
What a fantastic and homely story proving once again that necessity is the mother of invention, especially when you've got some very clever country boys.
Thank you so much. It just shows that sometimes less is more. Smaller can do Bigger. Great work to the inventors for their perseverance and determination.
Their statement about its use for cleanup is 100% accurate. I work in an aluminum smelter, and we absolutely use front-end loaders to move material, but it's a skid-steer that cleans up.
I've been an engineer designing custom equipment for 9 years. Seeing the simplicity of that belt reverser at 9:41 was humbling... It's a very clever way to do the job with minimal complexity.
Great story. We owned a BC when we had a fertilizer business. Aptly named, a real money maker, time, and back saver. Thanks, Keller brothers.
70 years almost where the world would be without these two men.
Credit they do deserve, however . . . . .
Necessity is the mother of all inventions proven successful. Therefore without a doubt, had these two men never been born, another two, or even perhaps just one, would have been there to fill the need.
These boys were from the see a need fill a need days.
I hope they know how much happiness they've given so many of us. Bobcats are great
What grand piece of Minnesota history... Bobcats are a blast to operate...
Such a heart warming story! The good days of AMERICAN ingenuity. We would be so much better off to get back to this mindset!
We still produce such men. The products are for the information age, not mechanical. Microsoft, Apple, Linux, Amazon, Google, Dell, etc.
@@ms.annthrope415 Not exactly the same thing. Yes, those men have much ingenuity, but, they are not all pure of heart.
Amen. I've said for years, when they put a computer in a Bobcat it was the beginning of the end! Now look at what this stuff has become. A bunch of over engineered junk that the average person can't afford. Or if we're to buy a used current model can't afford to fix.( Even if you can get the parts.) I bought a new Bobcat in 93. Still have it today. Very reliable and simple. Just before things got out of hand.
Fantastic video. Anybody that grew up on a farm in Minnesota in the 1900's had to have a great work ethic to survive .
Or a farm near-'bout anywhere, really.
Anyone who lived then is dead now.
I picked up a case 1835c diesel skidsteer that was pretty neglected for $500 a couple years ago, it only had 3 wheels because someone literally drove the wheel off it. Being a disabled fabricator I didn't have the $1200 for the new part so I added material where there should have been for the bearings and shaped it back propper. It only cost me about $150 to get that fixed and a couple hundred in all new fluids and I was now feeding the cows the big rounds instead of hand feeding small bails 😊. I had to rebuild the motor last year because I ran it out of fuel and I didn't see my dad dumping a half a can of starting fluid in the air box while I was trying to start it and sucked it all in at once causing the piston skirts and rings to end up in the oil pan 🤦♂️.
I dont know how I got anything done before having this machine, it is the most versatile piece of equipment anyone could have. Best invention ever created and hearing this story filled my heart with joy, I love making my own tooling and equipment and could see myself being best friends with these two brothers if I ever crossed their path. I would have loved growing up in their time, back when there was so much to be discovered 👍❤
This is amazing! I love the story and it's a nice little documentary. No fluff, No drama, just perfect.
I have had Bobcats for 35 years, Can't imagine life without one. These gentlemen have my gratitude.
That was a great true story of good ol' American ingenuity & the can do spirit of the Keller brothers! I'm inspired!
Another Minnesotan here.
The Bobcat, and the skid steer system, has fascinated me since I was a teenager long, long ago! And to think that neither brother required a high school diploma, college, computer programming, outsourcing for drafting services…
Good going!!
What a story! Wonderful people!
Living proof that experience is worth far more than college
Or both. Life isn't a destination, it is a journey. Everyone should continue to learn and grow throughout their lives.
Incredible men,,if they needed something they invented it,,if it broke they made parts to fix it,,people today could learn a lot from them.
as a skid steer operator and heavy equipment operator myself of 7 years so far and counting, i always wondered how bobcat came about, good to know lol now i know lol im very good in a skid steer no one at my work can keep up with me in another skid steer im so comfortable in one its unreal. its like 2nd nature to me. great video, mad respect to my elders and 4 fathers .
Hello from VA!!! I built a beach with one, I actually drove it into water submerged with sand, and the bobcat never stopped, from building crossties to pushing sand all the way so kids could enjoy the water. Still to this day families enjoy that beach we built, we I mean me and these geniuses
I am Mark Keller, and these are amazing machines created by two amazing guys. Never underestimate a Keller.
About two years ago, I worked at the Gwinner plant for an engineering internship for half the year. I learned a whole lot in my time out there, but seeing the scale of production the plant can churn out in a day is mind-boggling. From an idea built in a garage to a household name. It's also insane how big Bobcat has become, even since 2003. They make it all now, from lawnmowers to forklifts to tractors.
I grew up on a bobcat they are fantastic in every way. You can do so much with one. Awesome machine.
Wow. This just made my day! What an incredibly charming story.
This was like listening to old people tell stories. I love listening to old peoples stories because they are just so interesting
Great stuff. Nothing beats history and what can be learned
Truly one of the best videos I’ve ever seen. I loved seeing these two small town brothers bring their idea to life. Very cool how Cyril still has an original caster model for himself. Amazing how many companies started like this back in the day. I’d be honored to invent such a machine with my brother.
That was great to watch. So neat to see faces and a person behind such a commonly used item.
I have an older Melroe 843 that I love and refuse to get rid of. It's outlasted a lot of newer machines with far fewer issues. This was a great video that has answered a lot of questions. I wish this generation could learn from men like them.
Absolutely awesome story. You never hear these origin stories and this one definitely a good one
Also the bobcat dance at the end was as impressive as it was goofy 🤣
Very cool video, what a story! My dad had one of the first 610's in our area. My brother still has it and uses it. I have an 853 Bobcat and I'd be lost without it!
my dad ask me in 1975 if i wanted to work on the farm (just graduated) I said NO unless you get a bobcat . Seem like all i did was run a pitchfork /shovel --Got a 610 two days later-Been farming ever since ! !
What a great history of what these men did God Bless them for a great machine
And now bobcats are one of the hardest to work on skid steers in the industry.
Very cool! I've always worked around Bobcats, interesting to see how it all started with 2 brothers
Applied knowledge ! And drive !! Thank you .two brothers from Minnesota !!
An awesome video and machine! I have an Bobcat model 610 that my dad left me when he passed away in 2015. He used to run that little Bobcat all the time and made a good little living with it, after he retired. It has since been setting and I would love to get it back up and running. Maybe I can some day, thanks for this video, loved it. Have a great day!
Incredible story about two brothers and determination. One of my brothers I could see us doing something like this, the other one doesn’t know what bathroom to go to.
I've put tons of hours on Melroe and Clark Bobcats, excellent machines! I've used a few of the other skid steers as well, but always preferred the Bobcats.
My dad is the manager of a bobcat shop, has worked with to company for 15+ years now. Ive ran many of them, and theyre a lifesaver.
Bobcat has been in my life since I was 8 years old. 28 years later and we still have bobcats.
A very interesting history of Bobcat. Men like these with ideas like theirs are what made America the great country that it is!
Ran many of these in my 66 years. Never knew the history.. great story