My father had a TD-24 with a cable blade back in the 1970's. I operated it for about 6 months when we prepared the building site for a new mall. Ours had the planetary steering that you could operate with a couple fingers. When the steering levers were forward, both tracks were in high range, and if you pulled one or both back a notch, it would slow that track, That made it easy to make smooth turns. It started the 1091 cu. in. engine on gas, and after a minute or so warmup, switched over to diesel. It was a real dirt pushing beast with it's 11 foot wide blade.
We had an IHC crawler with over 35000hrs on it ,very reliable.Very sad to see what happened to such a great company in 1984.Thank you very much for posting this video.
Trabaje mi primera juventud con Bull dozer IHC TD9 TD 14 TD 18 TD 20 y TD 24. No creo que haya habido en el mundo mejores maquinas que las IHC La unica empresa que proveia maquinas para trabajar desde el Scout hasta el poderoso TD 40 desde la L110 hasta el Payhauler La mejor pala cargadora IHC Payloader Hough , , Lo bueno y la exelencia no pude ser por siempre Hoy dia la serie TD se sigue haciendo por Dressta en Polonia La compañia Stalowa wola los hace siguiendo la tradicion de aquellas maquinas INOLVIDABLES Gracias por el video
While it was only ONE tree, I still have memories about 45 years ago sitting beside my dad on his own TD24... showing me how easy it was to shear off a tree with it! Also, he and a friend pulling out the official IH wrench that was taller than me, used to tighten the treads.
man those were some beasts. wish I could have experienced this in real time. the pure "dgaf" attitude of just plowing straight into multiple trees at once, without stopping, is awesome.
It’s crazy that there weren’t chainsaws at this time so a couple men had to cut each tree with an axe. One swings and pulls back and the other swings and pulls back every couple seconds. The farm tractor with the loader is rare today. The international KB and R series trucks are very cool
love this is the type of Australia I have always liked the time when we could do anything great to see those red machines got any other films like this for IH gear
SOY OPERADOR DE.BULDOZER PERO ME ARREPIENTO DE.TODAS LAS MONTAÑAS QUE ASESINE EN MI VIDA POR UN SALARIO , SALUDOS DESDE COSTA RICA ❤ EL MAYOR DEPREDADOR LOS HUMANOS Y NO POR HAMBRE SINO POR AVARICIA 😭🙏
Notice that wood has had a fire through those big trees at some stage,i fell hardwood after the big fires in East Gippsland after the big fires,not nice cutting.
Looking back, they probably shouldn't have altered the jungle, the agricultural production that resulted really wasn't needed, the Australian continent could have provided all that was grown in Tasmania without the destruction required in this endeavor.
@@dave4854 let us be accurate, while what you're saying is true to some extent, many of these men were indentured migrant labour and had little choice but to take up jobs that plenty of Australians would not. They were housed in camps - many converted internment camps from WW2 - and assigned to projects for a specified period of time before they were allowed to move freely.
Regenerative agriculture will bring this back for genorashons down the line if we support it Will it take a long time and a few big dozers to stop the eroshon caused by this distructon
I agree, but you have to remember that virtually NO one saw the value of preserving such places in those days. Odds are, if you had been the age you are right now, but back then, you wouldn't have cared either. Sadly, or happily, depending on the situation, people are products of their times.
@@ericl2969 Unfortunately your right about that . It's really too bad. The damage is done now. Just look at our weather patterns.They are changing drastically. I'm sure draining a rain forest contributed to it some way.
Still better than Netflix originals.
My father had a TD-24 with a cable blade back in the 1970's. I operated it for about 6 months when we prepared the building site for a new mall. Ours had the planetary steering that you could operate with a couple fingers. When the steering levers were forward, both tracks were in high range, and if you pulled one or both back a notch, it would slow that track, That made it easy to make smooth turns. It started the 1091 cu. in. engine on gas, and after a minute or so warmup, switched over to diesel. It was a real dirt pushing beast with it's 11 foot wide blade.
We had an IHC crawler with over 35000hrs on it ,very reliable.Very sad to see what happened to such a great company in 1984.Thank you very much for posting this video.
Trabaje mi primera juventud con Bull dozer IHC TD9 TD 14 TD 18 TD 20 y TD 24. No creo que haya habido en el mundo mejores maquinas que las IHC La unica empresa que proveia maquinas para trabajar desde el Scout hasta el poderoso TD 40 desde la L110 hasta el Payhauler La mejor pala cargadora IHC Payloader Hough , , Lo bueno y la exelencia no pude ser por siempre Hoy dia la serie TD se sigue haciendo por Dressta en Polonia La compañia Stalowa wola los hace siguiendo la tradicion de aquellas maquinas INOLVIDABLES Gracias por el video
Too true 😢
While it was only ONE tree, I still have memories about 45 years ago sitting beside my dad on his own TD24... showing me how easy it was to shear off a tree with it! Also, he and a friend pulling out the official IH wrench that was taller than me, used to tighten the treads.
man those were some beasts. wish I could have experienced this in real time. the pure "dgaf" attitude of just plowing straight into multiple trees at once, without stopping, is awesome.
Back then ignorence was bliss
Man that would be so fun to do
It’s crazy that there weren’t chainsaws at this time so a couple men had to cut each tree with an axe. One swings and pulls back and the other swings and pulls back every couple seconds. The farm tractor with the loader is rare today. The international KB and R series trucks are very cool
This is how the Tasmanian Pattern axe became the world standard for cutting hardwoods.
Determined men working together. Those were the days.
and could say chinamen without anyone getting offended
Those are the good old days of our once great county, when men were men and women were glad they were 😂
I was born in the wrong decade. I was made to do this stuff at that time.
Genios los hombres de esos años!! Saludos de argentina
love this is the type of Australia I have always liked the time when we could do anything great to see those red machines got any other films like this for IH gear
IH in the house!
yeah lets f__k up the environment without a second thought. great work boys.
Farmland is more important than a few trees get over it
As you sit there typing on your computer. 🤣
SOY OPERADOR DE.BULDOZER PERO ME ARREPIENTO DE.TODAS LAS MONTAÑAS QUE ASESINE EN MI VIDA POR UN SALARIO , SALUDOS DESDE COSTA RICA ❤ EL MAYOR DEPREDADOR LOS HUMANOS Y NO POR HAMBRE SINO POR AVARICIA 😭🙏
You never hear a thing about Tasmania. Would't it be wonderful to be one of the few lucky ones to live there and be so free of drama?
Notice that wood has had a fire through those big trees at some stage,i fell hardwood after the big fires in East Gippsland after the big fires,not nice cutting.
This type of project would never happen today. The environmentalists would state this was a rare 3 legged red frog habitat.
And it would be. Ignorance is bliss, I suppose.
Looking back, they probably shouldn't have altered the jungle, the agricultural production that resulted really wasn't needed, the Australian continent could have provided all that was grown in Tasmania without the destruction required in this endeavor.
Where da tree Huggas at 🤣🤣🤣
Some men these were
back when men were men and happy to have a job and done it with no whining
@@dave4854 let us be accurate, while what you're saying is true to some extent, many of these men were indentured migrant labour and had little choice but to take up jobs that plenty of Australians would not. They were housed in camps - many converted internment camps from WW2 - and assigned to projects for a specified period of time before they were allowed to move freely.
@@dave4854 and no thinking
I remember the swaggies around this era,you either had a job or you were on your own,no welfare checks to tide you over,how we've all changed.
Some promotional footage for Marion too. Don't suppose you'd know if there are any Bucyrus or Marion films like this?
_We don't need no caterpillar._ 8:25-9:56
I wonder if they will ever recover from the loss of this rain forest.
didn’t take them long to destroy Eden. progress hell
Regenerative agriculture will bring this back for genorashons down the line if we support it Will it take a long time and a few big dozers to stop the eroshon caused by this distructon
Man the destroyer
Cry me a gender fluid River.
I have lived on a farm all my life and watching that bush being flattened makes me cringe
Music being slightly out of tune and speed is mint !
Greed rules !
This is an environmental disaster project. Who's idea was that ?
I agree, but you have to remember that virtually NO one saw the value of preserving such places in those days. Odds are, if you had been the age you are right now, but back then, you wouldn't have cared either. Sadly, or happily, depending on the situation, people are products of their times.
@@ericl2969 Unfortunately your right about that . It's really too bad. The damage is done now. Just look at our weather patterns.They are changing drastically. I'm sure draining a rain forest contributed to it some way.
@@MBTUE Absolutely. I find that videos like this are historically fascinating for one set of reasons, and totally heartbreaking for another.
How?
@@richardmaurer9002 Look up "environment"
🤩🇧🇷✌
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