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What’s Everyone Do?

Printed From: Unofficial Allis
Category: Other Topics
Forum Name: Shops, Barns, Varmints, and Trucks
Forum Description: anything you want to talk about except politics
URL: https://www.allischalmers.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=153590
Printed Date: 28 Apr 2024 at 9:49am
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Topic: What’s Everyone Do?
Posted By: AllisChalmers37
Subject: What’s Everyone Do?
Date Posted: 01 Sep 2018 at 11:10pm
Hey guys. Just a simple question and I think it would be interesting to see what everyone does for a living to fund their Allis addiction.

I’ll start us off. I’m a senior tractor technician for Schneider National


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1937 WC, 1950 CA, 1959 D14, 1967 190XT, 2006 Ram 3500



Replies:
Posted By: shameless dude
Date Posted: 02 Sep 2018 at 2:14am
I've seen them trucks on the road! i'm retired from law enforcement and farming now! still have a lot of my equipment, selling a piece here and there. my thoughts are young, but my body is getting old!


Posted By: shameless dude
Date Posted: 02 Sep 2018 at 2:15am
also glad to see you back here...I dun missed yer sorry butt! lol


Posted By: PaulW(NE)
Date Posted: 02 Sep 2018 at 4:55am
Work for the local JD dealer behind the parts counter and the forklift trainer. Did the OTR thing for 7 yrs and factories.


Posted By: DMiller
Date Posted: 02 Sep 2018 at 7:21am
Much as Shameless I retired last year, was a Power Station Operator for over twenty years prior to that a mechanic on almost anything for close to 25.


Posted By: plummerscarin
Date Posted: 02 Sep 2018 at 8:07am
After twenty years in the field I recently landed a job as the city's plumbing inspector. No overtime gives me more time to play with orange on our century farm.


Posted By: Thad in AR.
Date Posted: 02 Sep 2018 at 8:08am
Construction worker. I started with a company in 1988 building theme parks all over the country. I worked all over until the company sold in 2000. I then went to work for a builder a few years and then started my own company. The recession hit and I had to shut down. I now run a crew but subbed to a company called HCI. Doing residential and commercial construction.


Posted By: Lars(wi)
Date Posted: 02 Sep 2018 at 8:22am
Live and work in Midland TX, moved here 5 yr ago from Wisconsin. Dont have a single piece of Allis stuff currently.

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I tried to follow the science, but it was not there. I then followed the money, and that’s where I found the science.


Posted By: darrel in ND
Date Posted: 02 Sep 2018 at 8:23am
Farm and ranch on wife's family farm, which was a HUGE farm back in it's hay day. Now it's not even a good sized hobby farm. Recently took a job driving truck, delivering ag chemicals for a wholesaler. Darrel


Posted By: john(MI)
Date Posted: 02 Sep 2018 at 9:18am
Retired from the Govt, 12/31/2011.  I did computers and networks for the National Weather Service. 


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D14, D17, 5020, 612H, CASE 446


Posted By: JW in MO
Date Posted: 02 Sep 2018 at 9:38am
If you drank a Coke at a McDonalds in the Midwest from 1984 to 2000, I most likely installed the machine that made it plus all the refrigeration. Nowadays I specialize in ultra cold or as Lou in SWPA says "voodoo refrigeration," equipment from -20 to -150 degrees Celsius.

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Maximum use of available resources!


Posted By: Coke-in-MN
Date Posted: 02 Sep 2018 at 10:28am
Retired now but still drive dump trucks for some contractors , still have most of my equipment from excavating business I had for 40 years , but also during that time worked as a millwright, production foreman, maintenance foreman for a industrial plant, was a facilities manager for charter school , and got a degree in Building Inspection at age 60 going back to school then, and had Inspectors License along with design, soil testing, and instillation license for the On Site Septic industry here in MN . Drove truck for tanker div of local company hauling asphalt and heavy heating oil (top load) for a few years also and way back was tow truck drive along with gas station mechanic in local gas station  
 So now I rebuild British motorcycles and kind of collect machines that have been neglected and forgotten by others - A retirement home for old British iron manager ! 

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Faith isn't a jump in the dark. It is a walk in the light. Faith is not guessing; it is knowing something.
"Challenges are what make life interesting; overcoming them is what makes life meaningful."


Posted By: JC-WI
Date Posted: 02 Sep 2018 at 12:07pm
Born and raised on this old dairy farm, helped the folks and when dad got sick, took over running everything, Sold the cows in 98, and bought back some beef, worked for a peat processing company from 1999 to 2002, helping them get set up, fabricate and install machines for them, and run them, and then remove the equipment. And 2003 helped put them back up 120 miles from here, bad mistake  should have stayed home. Got the farm organic certified for several years but didn't really pay out so continued with the beefers... and I aren't smart enough to quit. 

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He who says there is no evil has already deceived himself
The truth is the truth, sugar coated or not. Trawler II says, "Remember that."


Posted By: Randy WI
Date Posted: 02 Sep 2018 at 12:57pm
Born and raised on a small farm went to work at a welding shop and retired after 39 years . We made Prentice log loaders. Now I have been sawing lumber for my sons cabin. Randy


Posted By: klinemar
Date Posted: 02 Sep 2018 at 2:53pm
Dairy Farmer in partners with my Dad for 35 years. When my Dad developed Parkinson's I ran the farm by myself. Sold the cows in 2005. Worked for several Custom Farm application services for a few years and a local Elevator driving Truck. Worked for Michigan Department of Transportation winter's plowing snow. Crop Insurance Adjuster for the last 10 years. I also Bale and sell hay and custom Bale.


Posted By: jaybmiller
Date Posted: 02 Sep 2018 at 6:34pm
retired 1/2 my life, since the Feds effectively shut down my remote control energy management company(saved customers 35% of their energy costs). That's after I quit Stelco cause boss and me didn't see 'eye to eye',so no pension from there. With no paycheck coming in, still managed to pay off house and buy orange. No, I don't eat thick steaks at fancy restaurants every night, but seem to make ends meet.
Jay


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3 D-14s,A-C forklift, B-112
Kubota BX23S lil' TOOT( The Other Orange Tractor)

Never burn your bridges, unless you can walk on water


Posted By: JoeM(GA)
Date Posted: 02 Sep 2018 at 7:00pm
Retired three years ago at 55, spent my working life either in the shop or at the parts counter at several Blue, Green, and Kubota Orange dealers. The dogs and I enjoy our days drinking coffee and choosing the “chore of the day”

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Allis Express North Georgia
41 WC,48 UC Cane,7-G's,
Ford 345C TLB


Posted By: HD6GTOM
Date Posted: 02 Sep 2018 at 7:06pm
I got out ta service in 1973. Worked as a mechanic for a FS coop for 1 year, bought a fleet of trucks, a farm fuel business was included. Did that for 14 years until the guys I was leased to wanted to buy me out. I sold those and hooked up with another guy who was 10 years older than me, we started a tire shop that sold everything from 4" tires up to the huge loader tires for the rock queries around here. After 22 years the partner wanted to retire and my back was so bad I could not continue. I then spent 11 years as credit manager for a car/truck/equipment dealership. Along with farming. My darn back continued to get worse, the pain effecting my memory. As a result I had to sell the farm, but still have a few acres of hay. Retired from farming/credit manager last June 30th. Now do farmers markets/flea markets enjoying the sights, (the young ladies). And have 30 hived of bees to take care of. Been raining here all week so I haven't been able to work with them this week. Now doing light construction work, skid loader, and doing some small electrical jobs. I'm sure glad the old gal got me into the flea/farmers mkts. The seenery is a pleasure to look at. Gonna do What Cheer flea MKT next weekend. I hope its warm/hot, the college cuties will be there in force.


Posted By: Gordy
Date Posted: 02 Sep 2018 at 8:20pm
Retired in 95 from ATT after 37 years as switching equipment tech. Always kept a 5 to 10 feeder cows and showed and trained horses and farmed enough sell some hay and feed my own animals.
Wife  started having dementia problems couple years ago so I am the caregiver now, still feeding 3 horses and bale couple acres of hay but don't get far from home any more. 


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“If you can't explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough”


Posted By: wfmurray
Date Posted: 02 Sep 2018 at 8:33pm
Worked in textile, went to trade school worked in furniture factory,uncle sam ,traveling salesman,36 years in maintance and been retired 17 years .Got a few acres and grew a few calves.Got rid of d/14, still have my restored B  and finish mower and do a few acres.Wife been dead 7 1/2 years, live alone ,turned 80 last week.


Posted By: Hubert (Ga)engine7
Date Posted: 02 Sep 2018 at 8:45pm
Was a department manager at Sears, sold building materials for Lowe's, serviced cooking equipment for a steakhouse chain, and then was aircraft mechanic and technical inspector for Department of the Army for 22 years. During all of this time I spent 2 years active, 4 reserve with the Air Force, then 30 years with the Army National Guard and 38 years as a volunteer firefighter. Have been officially retarded since October 2006 and left the FD in 2016. Still own and look after the small family farm but lease out the hay and pasture land plus I do whatever my wife tells me to do.

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Just an old country boy saved by the grace of God.


Posted By: thendrix
Date Posted: 02 Sep 2018 at 10:16pm
Spent 16 years in machine shops as a mold maker, production operator, and maintenance machinist. Quit that 2 years ago and took over my in-laws poultry farm. We grow broiler chickens for Pilgrim's. If you go to Chick-fil-A there's a possibility you've eat one of my birds. We're going to be striking out on our own soon. We have signed contracts on 69 acres to build 6 50'x600' chicken houses on probably within the next 2 years. Should house around 220,000 birds. Also cut a little hay just to have a place to get away and be by myself.

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"Farming is a business that makes a Las Vegas craps table look like a regular paycheck" Ronald Reagan


Posted By: HaroldOmaha
Date Posted: 02 Sep 2018 at 10:32pm
Born and raised on a dairy farm in upstate N.Y. after collage, When I got my draft notice I ran down and joined the Air Force. Spent my service in the states. The last 2 years at Offutt, Neb. One day at the barracks the phone rang, I answered it, Farmer was looking for help picking up baled hay. I got a crew together of roommates that were off duty, it turned into working for 5-6 local farmers. We did all kinds of farm labor, with me milking cows so people could take vacations, and other family things.
After I got out of the service, Married the farmers daughter. Went to electronics school, got my commercial pilots license. After a variety of jobs got into remodeling homes and doing odd jobs for businesses. Retired at 73. Glad I came to Nebr., its a 150 years newer than New York. Play with tractors, did lots of tractor pulls with my son and daughter. Last time my daughter pulled, she beat 4 JD tractors, the closes one was by 30 feet. Wish I could have filmed it.
2 years ago I met Shameless ! Might see him again next month.


Posted By: copyrite1972
Date Posted: 02 Sep 2018 at 11:00pm
20 year Correctional Officer, Ore Dept of Corrections. Play farmer for the last 8 years Smile

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D15 Series II


Posted By: JohnCO
Date Posted: 02 Sep 2018 at 11:36pm
Other then two years with Uncle Sam and 6 months with the University of Colorado, I've been self unemployed.  Had a small excavating business for 20 years, farmed or at least followed the neighbors around since I was 8 years old.  Still farm 80 acres of hay, small grain, and pumpkins.  Drive a hayride for a friend for 5 weekends in the fall.  Own an orchard in western Colorado with a partner who works the place.  Go to Farmers Markets on Saturdays and Tuesdays most of the summer until mid Sept, selling our fruit and flour I mill from my grain.  Do the Farmers Markets as my social outlet, and the sights, as Hd6 points out, so I can spend the rest of the time by myself.  Also am a ditch rider for two irrigation ditches.  Turn 70 this fall, don't feel like quitting quite yet...


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"If at first you don't succeed, get a bigger hammer"
Allis Express participant


Posted By: shameless dude
Date Posted: 02 Sep 2018 at 11:57pm
HD6DTOM forgots to tell you that he also raises goats and loves them! oh...and Plummerscarin...if'n you is a plumbing inspector....stay the heck away from my place!


Posted By: AllisChalmers37
Date Posted: 03 Sep 2018 at 12:02am
Originally posted by shameless dude shameless dude wrote:

HD6DTOM forgots to tell you that he also raises goats and loves them! oh...and Plummerscarin...if'n you is a plumbing inspector....stay the heck away from my place!


Surely you ain’t got some shady plumbing do ya buddy? lol

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1937 WC, 1950 CA, 1959 D14, 1967 190XT, 2006 Ram 3500


Posted By: shameless dude
Date Posted: 03 Sep 2018 at 12:36am
who me? oh heck no! i'm a law abiding citizen...


Posted By: cabinhollow
Date Posted: 03 Sep 2018 at 8:15am
Have always farmed and been self employed.
For 40 years my main income was shearing sheep, etc.
I quit that two years ago.
For the last 15 years of shearing, I took ever $ I could and put in to my shop. I now have 4 employees and sale/ship metal signs/art all over the world.
On shearing, it is a seasonal job and I just did it part time. You are paid by the head. But I could shear at a rate, that I would net $100+ per hour on sheep and my net for Llama/Alpaca would be $250+ per hour.


Posted By: SteveMaskey(MO)
Date Posted: 03 Sep 2018 at 9:10am
Worked at a Gulf station when I got out of school in 1970. Got married in march 72 and drafted in oct 72. Spent 2 years in army got out in 74 helped local guy that had dump truck, dozer and backhoe. In 1977 went to work for Kaiser Refractories which became National Refractories until they went belly up in 2003. Then I went to work for Purina mills making feed until 2013 when I retired at 62. Grew up on farm and started farming on my own around 1977. Now rent 100 acres row crop and own 100 acres of hay and pasture for my 30 cows


Posted By: Dave H
Date Posted: 03 Sep 2018 at 9:11am
got drafted in 65 and did not have enough sense to get out.  Confused  Did that retirement in 90 and knocked around at various jobs After that.

Now kicked back on my 5 acre ranch and enjoying the heck out of it.


Posted By: Ted J
Date Posted: 03 Sep 2018 at 11:04am
Grew up on a farm (ALL A-C) and worked for my uncle fixing cars at a Shell station part time.  RIGHT after high school, My old lady........er my lovin wife and I ran off to Niles Michigan (67) where I worked for a Co-op in Buchanon, MI for a year.  I then took a vacation in SE Asia free of charge from Uncle Sam for two years.  After I got out, I got a job as a full time Fire Fighter for the city of La Crosse, WI.  Retired after 33 years and never looked back.  During all that time, I had to pay to feed and clothe 5 kids, (1 boy and 4 girls), so I had part time jobs as a concrete installer/finisher, house and barn builder, installed windows for Auto Glass, catered and cooked for weddings etc. and tended bar.  I've been retired now for 16 years and have my hobby farm and a few (7) A-C tractors that I work with (and on).  Life is good!! Clap

My latest part time job (part time) is,,,,,,,,,,,,agitatin certain guys on the forum. Big smile

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"Allis-Express"
19?? WC / 1941 C / 1952 CA / 1956 WD45 / 1957 WD45 / 1958 D-17


Posted By: JohnCO
Date Posted: 03 Sep 2018 at 11:32am
And, Ted J, you do a good job of it!


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"If at first you don't succeed, get a bigger hammer"
Allis Express participant


Posted By: Johnwilson_osf
Date Posted: 03 Sep 2018 at 11:36am
I burn the candle at both ends.  I am a faculty member teaching geology at a local college.  Married my wife and we took over her family farm.  We run about 200 acres of hay and corn.  Raise beef and pork. 

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Allis Express: Eastern PA on Rt 80
8050, 8010, 6080, 190, D14, DA 6035, AA 6690, 5650, Gleaner F2


Posted By: Dave H
Date Posted: 03 Sep 2018 at 11:42am
Ted, where was your base camp onn the nam vacation?

Mine was a camp Eagle between hue and Phu Bai


Posted By: Red Bank
Date Posted: 03 Sep 2018 at 1:21pm
My brother and I bought a horse boarding farm in 2002. I am a diesel mechanic and in 2009 I built a shop on the farm and Sept 1, 2013 I went full time on my own. 5 years later I have one full time employee and the one part time employee I started with. I decided to back off the number of horses we were boarding when my brother left the farm for a job in California and to keep the pastures from growing up I started making our own hay. I bought a square baler in 2017 and the guy had a 5040 Allis Chalmers he pulled it with so I bought it too and now I have a 5040, (2) 200s a Kubota 3830 with a loader and a Ferguson 30. We bought the Ferguson and the Kubota when we bought the farm.


Posted By: Wayne180d
Date Posted: 03 Sep 2018 at 6:44pm
Was a chef for 15 years, sold Schwans Ice cream for 12 years, ,managed a fast food joint for 12 years, semi retired at 62 and my old manager called one day and asked to come to work for her again at a Pilot station so until I turn 65 I will be there.


Posted By: Sugarmaker
Date Posted: 03 Sep 2018 at 8:00pm
Folks,
 Always interesting to read these. 
The title of the OP is: What's everyone do? 
Well the wife will tell you I do what ever I want. Some days more of that gets done than other days!
Have been retired 4 1/2 years and just like a kid in a sandbox!  60 years of school and work just cut into my "playin" time!
Regards,
Chris


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D17 1958 (NFE), WD45 1954 (NFE), WD 1952 (NFE), WD 1950 (WFE), Allis F-40 forklift, Allis CA, Allis D14, Ford Jubilee, Many IH Cub Cadets, 32 Ford Dump, 65 Comet.


Posted By: desertjoe
Date Posted: 03 Sep 2018 at 9:44pm
 Well,,,I graduated High School in 1965 and headed off to IBM school in Albuquerque,,,was havin a wonderful and great time,,,, til they asked me to leave,,Wink I go back home and while on a nite on the town a bunch of us decided to join the Navy on the " Buddy-Buddy Plan",,,We gets a big send-off,,everybody cryin cause Vietnam was just gettin serious,,,, While goin thru physicals,,The base Commander calls me to his office and tells me I can't go as I flunked the hearing test,,!! WHAT,,?? I wount up takin the friggin hearing test 4 times before the commander finally tells me they sending me home. I gently informed the commander all 6 of us were on the Buddy-Buddy plan and if I couldn't go,,,,,none of the others would go either,,,he told me, "Son,,your "Buddies" flew out two hours ago,,,chit,,!!
 I go home and 3 months later another bunch of us head out to California to make us a million dollars,,,,met my future wife at a Beach Party at Point Fermin when I was with another girl,,,and,,,,and,,,the fight was on,,,,,Ya see,,I was with Donna at the Beach Party and my girl cousin introduced me  to my future wife, Joyce, when Donna had to go Pee and Joyce comes over to,,,,,"talk",,,Wink bout that time Donna shows up at a very unfortunate time and starts cryin and then runs off ,,and threatening to jump  off the cliffs at the Point,,,,and,,,,and,,,there is Joyce yellin" Let the bit** jump,,let her jump",,,,,thas when I KNEW she was the one for me,,,,,LOL
 Three months later we get married in Los Angeles and decide to move back to New Mexico because of all the drugs and crime,,,Wink  We have our first of 5 boys the first year,,,,
 In 1969, I started working at the local refinery as a yard hand at,,,,$3.01/hour,,big money,,Wink I started moving up as relief foreman during the annual Shutdowns and became permanent yard forman in 1974. In 1985 I was promoted to Maintenance Dept Co-Ordinator and was responsible for instituting a grass roots "process Safety Management" program working with Federal OSHA inspectors and our system became operational within two years.In 1990 I was promoted to Assistant Maintenance Superintendent over the whole maintenance dept,,,,,lots and lots of weekends working and many,many hours worrying about keeping the plant operating and people safe.
 After 31 years, the Company went thru a "reorganization" and an early retirement plan was offered to 51 employees. Even tho I KNEW, I was one of the ones going to stay,,,I decide I had had enough and with that many people leaving,,,things were just not gonna be what I wanted to fight,,so I decide to take the early retirement. I sometimes wonder of the possibilities but after listening to the old timers...I'm glad I left,,,
 Kinda of a boring life,,,huh,,,???? 
 I started my love affair with Allis Chalmers bout 10 years ago when I was lookin for a backhoe/loader and I found the D14 Industrial in a wrecking yard. Had no idea what I had but I bought it anyway. After looking for an engine,,I find a D15 Series II LPG over in West Texas and rebuilt it while the D14 sat. Sold the D15 to an older gentleman that would not take no for an answer,,I then had plenty of money to buy an engine for the D14 and I love it,,,,,Now,,I'm looking for a certain Chevy Allis for a Parade Tractor,,,,Clap  


Posted By: FloydKS
Date Posted: 03 Sep 2018 at 9:52pm
I will chime in...Grew up on a farm...took welding in High School, (graduated 1969) then helped parents pay my college / University by welding in the summer...majored in Manufacturing Technology...worked in Quality control for bout a year and had girlfriend... God said I want you in the seminary so my girl dumped me and so did the foundry where I was working...God has a way of being persuasive...With the help of other "hints" in my life I figured why not... so 38 years ago after several years in the Seminary I was ordained.  I have a WD-45 that I play with mostly a wagon and Oxnard blade on less than 2 acres..on my free day a week... ... ...thanks for asking


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Holding a grudge is like taking poison and expecting the other person to die


Posted By: shameless dude
Date Posted: 04 Sep 2018 at 1:10am
I too like Steve Maskey started working at a Gulf station in 1970, then promoted to manager of another Gulf station in the same town, then started working with the Sheriff's Dept at the same time, eventually going full time with the Sheriff's Dept. did a lot of moon lighting jobs thru the years of just about anything and everything. started at the farm in 1977 when Dad retired, kept that going til 2016. retired from the law job in 2015. i'm just a bum now, started with the orange tractors in 1980 when I bought my 7010 brand new, and went on from there with a 180 diesel, and a 190XT diesel, then a 7080 came home with me one day. used it for several years then parted it out. all the others I still have and still use for various things.


Posted By: matador
Date Posted: 04 Sep 2018 at 7:41am
Mine isn't as exciting as most of the stories here, but I help the neighbor's farm. I run tractor and drive the semis for them during harvest. I also sell computer parts on the side. Sadly the only Allis things I run are an old Gleaner F2 and an Allis field ripper. The joys of being in an area that never had an A-C dealer


Posted By: Brian F(IL)
Date Posted: 04 Sep 2018 at 8:47am
I've worked for the Farm Credit System since 1980 analyzing credit and managing staff to loan money to the greatest people in the world... farmers.  Own the family farm and help my buddy who farms +/- 2,000 acres.  Still have some of the family AC tractors as well as buying my own and acquiring a few implements.


Posted By: Dusty MI
Date Posted: 04 Sep 2018 at 9:01am
Grew up on a diary farm and continued with the diary farm for 5 years, then spend 3 years working in the Olds factory building gas tanks for the F-85s, fell into an apprenticeship with the IBEW, a very good thing. Along the way I got into home heating work and ended up with my own sheet metal shop.
I retired from the IBEW in Feb. 2001. 
Still like fabricating and repairing things.

Dusty 


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917 H, '48 G, '65 D-10 series III "Allis Express"


Posted By: Thad in AR.
Date Posted: 04 Sep 2018 at 9:08am
Gonna add to mine. Born and raised on a 2000 acre irrigated corn/pinto bean and dry land wheat farm. 200 head of beef cattle a small feedlot and 25?? Or so head of useless horses.in eastern Colorado right on the Kansas line. Gmaw died in 79 after a battle with cancer and they had to sell part of the farm to pay bills. The rest sold when I was 16. I left for Arkansas at 17.


Posted By: klinemar
Date Posted: 04 Sep 2018 at 9:36am
I am adding to my original post. My Grandfather was the original Allis Chalmers man in our family as my Dad was an IH man. I remember the first cuss words I ever heard was my dad cussing a WD with a 2 row mounted planter!Then a 1959 D17 appeared with a 4 row cultivator attached! My granddad loved to cultivate! That tractor did a lot of work when the IH 560 diesel was not broke down! We had 45 milk cows,60 sows,120 feeder pigs and 450 laying hens. When the D17 I was not cutivating, conditioning hay it was grinding feed! On slow days it hauled manure! I pointed this out to my dad years later when he wanted to replace the 560 and IH was on strike and couldn't get tractors. So he bought a 185 which I still have! Along the way we had a 170 which replaced the D17. A 200,7000,7060 which I still have and a 8050. We also had a 560 gas that was a good tractor and a true blood IH man wanted it worse than I did! We also had a 1086 IH that was the tractor from hell! That tractor was not here very long as I traded it for the 8050! When I sold the cows I downsized and sold the 170,560 and 8050. I can honestly say the Allis Chalmers tractors gave a lot less problems than the IH tractors!


Posted By: CAL(KS)
Date Posted: 04 Sep 2018 at 10:46am
WOW, alot of you guys worked and retired longer than I have been around.  I grew up on a Dairy just west of Kansas City that my dad and uncle ran together until 1992 when i was 12.  After that we moved west and started dryland farming in central ks.  I graduated from college in 04 with a bachelors in Business but wasnt a desk job guy so went to work at the local coop and helped on the farm for a couple years.  I started working as a farm truck/tractor mechanic with a friend of mine and loved it until early 09 when the economy was bad and had to move on to pay the bills. I have worked full time at a rock quarry since 09. I have 5 kids 2-12 yrs old.   My Dad still farms full time and my brother with him and I have 50 acres i farm on the side as well as helping them out. We have always had orange on the farm and i enjoy using and collecting tractors and equipment, tractor pulling,going to shows and sharing orange with others.  We also do dirt work and tree removal on the side with our AC construction equipment.

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Me -C,U,UC,WC,WD45,190XT,TL-12,145T,HD6G,HD16,HD20

Dad- WD, D17D, D19D, RT100A, 7020, 7080,7580, 2-8550's, 2-S77, HD15


Posted By: ihc pickups
Date Posted: 04 Sep 2018 at 11:17am
Graduated high school in 1965. Went to work for an Alfalfa dehydrating Company 12 HRS a day 7 days a week thru the summer then delivering pellets and sack feed to local farmers and feed lots once Winter came. I had registered for the draft at that time you could get a deferment for certain things. The Company did that for about a year finalyy I told them I was going in to the military was in Army for 2 years spent a year in Nam. Came out went to driving a dump truck made good money when the weather was warm but about starved to death in the winter had a wife and bay knew I needed something different. Came to a Steel company the guy finally hired me on the 3rd day. His philosy was if you came back on the 3rd day you proably nnede a job. Worked in the warehouse packing steel for about a year then went to work driving a truck for them delivering Steel. I now work as traffic manager for them running 80 OTR trucks and about 275 flatbed trailers delivering from the gulf of mexico to almost the Canadian Border. Been here 47 years. 70 years old may retire in January 2020. I was raised on a small family farm and we used WD and WD-45 raised hogs and beef cattle. The Aunt and Uncle who raised me were tough folks and when it came to fly the coup I did the land got sold. life goes on.

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Mike


Posted By: HaroldOmaha
Date Posted: 04 Sep 2018 at 3:13pm
You are an amazing bunch of guys ! Born and raised in the Golden age of Agriculture.


Posted By: tadams(OH)
Date Posted: 04 Sep 2018 at 3:30pm
Was raised on a farm till 14 dad took job as Superintendent of local cemetery, after school worked a couple different jobs till I went to work in gravel pit running dozer, was going to get married and dad wanted me to join Ohio National Guard so people wouldn't say I got married to beat the draft, In 1965 went into army for basic and ATI and came out a medic. Started driving semi and in the next two year I missed 2 weekend meeting being stuck out on the road, bought a potato chip business to be home and gave two notice ended up in Flordia and the company was going to fly me home national guard said no don't worry come in when you get home so I went in and they told me forget in and go home. Well the forget it next thing I know is I am drafted headed to Fort Knox Kentucky and then to Georgia, ended up in Columbus, OH at Fort Hayes giving physicals for the next 18 month. Got out of the Army got a job at a New Holland farm equipment dealer & farmer, couldn't make enough money to pay off chip company so I went back to driving truck hauling livestock left that to haul steel and machinery and in 1974 quite that and went to work for the Village Street Dept. father retired in 1986 and Cemetery Board wanted me to take over cemetery Supt. job, after a few year the mayor asked if I would also be the Village Building Inspector retired and was starting to build our retirement home in 2006 and retired in 2007 and wife thought I needed a part time job so I got into Lowe's ended up in inside lawn and garden department, at the time I start a Lowe's employee could special order anything and buy it at 10% over Lowe's cost so I have the house that Lowe's built, retired again from Lowe's in 2014. While at the cemetery I bought a Allis Chalmers CA, that was what dad had on the farm, got it rebuilt so he got to drive it before he passed away in 1992, I have since redone 6 other Ac's and have 8 or 10 AC garden tractors. This past year my wife has went threw 24 weeks of chemo and Sept.13 she will be done with 4 weeks of radiation so I have been busy as a care giver now all we need to do is to get her walking better, she has neurophaty.


Posted By: Ray54
Date Posted: 04 Sep 2018 at 7:46pm
Originally posted by HaroldOmaha HaroldOmaha wrote:

You are an amazing bunch of guys ! Born and raised in the Golden age of Agriculture.

I agree some amazing guys here.Thumbs Up

 But......but ...........the smart alec Big smilejust had to say this.The history books do have a Golden Period of American Agriculture. But of course they don't all use the same years but from 1900 to 1918 when WW1 ended. Europe was out of food and paying really high price for anything they could get at the end of the war. So one bushel of wheat would buy the farmer more of everything than any other time.


Posted By: Gary (sw Wis.)
Date Posted: 04 Sep 2018 at 7:48pm
I was raised I a dairy farm in southern Wisconsin with all AC tractors.
Then I worked for Uncle Sam for four years in the US Navy.
I worked in a machine shop and then maintenance at the local hospital for a combined 10 years.
For the last 20 plus years I have been building roll dryers for a feed ingredient company.
My wife and I also live on a small farm where we farrow out a few sows, raise chickens and custom raise heifer for my neighbor. 


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190XT - D17 - D14 - WD45 w/loader - WD - (2)B110 - 616H - 610 - B-208 - WD with 190 Mounted Corn Picker - All Crop 60


Posted By: shameless dude
Date Posted: 05 Sep 2018 at 1:11am
Jeremy...you still have that BIG BAD DODGE?


Posted By: Animal Cracker
Date Posted: 05 Sep 2018 at 2:43am
Industrial maintenance mechanic for Seneca Foods.Pretty much factories most of my life,5 more years or so then i'm done.


Posted By: GARY(OH/IN)
Date Posted: 05 Sep 2018 at 9:40am
Income to eat and generally have insurance. 1965 to 1984 New Idea Farm Equipment except 2 years in Army 1966-1968 MP. Metal stamping plant 6+ years, bread route driver 6+ years. Conagra Eckrich route driver 1 year, real estate appraisal for county taxes traveling Ohio and Indiana 6+ years and a bunch of other jobs that filled layoff times, etc.
Things I did to get ahead. Torch, truck and trailer scrapping junk, carpet sales out of my car trunk, sold real estate, bought, repaired, sold and rented apartments, houses, mobile home parks, storage units and farm land. Selling off residential stuff one by one and buying land when I can find it now.
Had heart surgury November 2017 and able to do about 50% of what I used to.
Grew up on 350 acre farms 19 miles apart with 2 row equipment, helping milk 35 cows for room and board.
Guess I just had a meal and a place to stay all this time when you get down to it.
Oh yeah, had 45, wd, wc at home and now 9 5015's, 5 runners 2 parts, and 2 that will run or may need for parts.


Posted By: Unit3
Date Posted: 05 Sep 2018 at 1:32pm
Graduwaited (for my high school spelling teacher) high school in 1983. The day after, I started farming with my day. Been planting, cult, spraying, harvesting, and hauling corn and soybeans every since that day. I farm the land my grandparents bought in 1950 and live in the house they built in 1952.

The only planters I have ever used were Kinze's pulled by AC's(7080, 8050, and 8070"s and the only combines I have ever used were Gleaners. (N6's, R62, R75, R76, S77, and now S78. Still have my first car, 1976 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme, my original wife of 24 years, and one daughter who is wicked smart. She brings home 4.0's like I bring home pop and chocolate.

GREAT QUESTION!!!!! 5 STARS!!!!!


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2-8070FWA PS/8050PS/7080/7045PS/200/D15-II/2-WD45/WD/3-WC/UC/C


Posted By: shameless dude
Date Posted: 05 Sep 2018 at 10:59pm
Gary....metal stamping job??? hope it wasn't license plates? LOL


Posted By: GARY(OH/IN)
Date Posted: 05 Sep 2018 at 11:22pm
Shameless...... No, engine mounts for Ford and Chrysler, TV frames for back when they had tubes, and other stuff.
I was a supervisor and asst. plant manager there. My boss the plant manager did go to prison while I was there. Got thirty months and served 15 I heard.


Posted By: farmboy520
Date Posted: 06 Sep 2018 at 8:08am
I've been farming all my life starting with helping dad while growing up. Now I'm farming with my brother on our family land. We both work outside of farming. I work for FS (local coop) as a plant manager that started as being an applicator. We have always had mostly AC tractors and still do.


Posted By: Armand(AZ)
Date Posted: 06 Sep 2018 at 8:44am
I grew up in a small town (150 people) in South Dakota and worked for farmers from the time I was big enough to drive a tractor.   Decided that I didn't want to be a farm laborer for the rest of my life so joined the Air Force in 1962. My last assignment was working in the comm center in the basement of the Pentagon.  I planned to reenlist, but Philco had a large ad in the paper hiring guys for a big military contract.  I went to work for them and spent two years in Thailand and three in VietNam.   Came back to the US in 1971, got married and settled in Cedar Rapids, IA where I went to work for Pan Am.  In 1975 I went to work for Rockwell Collins and spent 28 years there in management.   9-11 caused a huge layoff and I took a buyout at age 57.   In the early 90's I joined the Allis Connection club and ended up restoring 8 AC tractors.  Snowbirded to AZ for 7 years before deciding to sell our acreage and my tractors, and move permanently to Mesa where we live today.  Spend the summers in ShowLow AZ in the White Mountains in NE AZ.   30 degrees cooler than Mesa and the trout fishing is great!!!  Spend about four mornings a week in the boat.   Still build AC models in my shops at both locations and enjoy several AC visitors in Mesa during the winter months.     Don't post here very often, but still read the forum every morning!!  Armand  acmodelsofarizona.weebly.com. 


Posted By: Stan IL&TN
Date Posted: 06 Sep 2018 at 11:04am
Grew up on a farm in southern Illinois.  Went to collage and studied electronics then medical electronics.  Got a job at a hospital and have been here for 35 years and 11 months and just submitted my resignation this morning.  Two more weeks and I'll be free.Thumbs Up

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1957 WD45 dad's first AC

1968 one-seventy

1956 F40 Ferguson


Posted By: Charlie175
Date Posted: 06 Sep 2018 at 11:48am
Did a few years in the Army, got out and went to school for drafting and computers. Started my own company in 2000 and we are still kicking around.
Play farmer when I can with my brothers.


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Charlie

'48 B, '51 CA, '56 WD45 '61 D17, '63 D12, '65 D10 , '68 One-Ninety XTD


Posted By: Brian Jasper co. Ia
Date Posted: 06 Sep 2018 at 2:45pm
Graduated from a trade school in 89 been wrenching ever since. Now I specialize in Powerstroke, Duramax, and automatic transmission in a new car dealership.

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"Any man who thinks he can be happy and prosperous by letting the government take care of him better take a closer look at the American Indian." Henry Ford


Posted By: shameless dude
Date Posted: 06 Sep 2018 at 10:24pm
congrats on your retirement Stan!


Posted By: bryan/silex
Date Posted: 07 Sep 2018 at 7:36am
I do all the pre deliver and assembly of new equipment at a local deere dealer.

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WD's and 45's B's and c's and a few red ones , ALLIS EXPRESS also


Posted By: Ray54
Date Posted: 08 Sep 2018 at 9:39pm
I cowboyed,I farmed, and then I had to go to school. My old man aimed  my head around to go to college,cause his kept him from graduating high school. I farmed a little on my own, got married had kids.Finally had 2 cents to rub together. My wife started teaching,I helped my parents in old age didn't farm much,had 3 cents. Inherited my dads cattle pasture leases, I custom farmed a little but rented nothing new to farm had 4 cents. Farmed less, custom farmed more tended a vineyard, ran cows, almost had a dollar. Spent a summer in hell called a hospital,wife retired to buying things for grandkids don't think any pennies left again.



Somewhere in there tecky kid said I needed to have "the net" and a confuser and that is how I landed here. Even though back in college I were teachedWink to program 2+2=4
and had the stack of punch cards to prove it to my kids. Proper English,writing anything down,except billing Thumbs Upcitydots for farming sends me running away.


I don't think I need to worry since I have my aluminum foil hat on right, but to put too much information out kinda scares me. But I consider most of you good people,well there could be 1 or 2 questionables hiding here. I enjoyed reading what others put out so decided I needed to contribute.






Posted By: psheridan
Date Posted: 08 Sep 2018 at 9:51pm
I am a self employed tooth carpenter in Omaha,Nebraska 50% of the time and work at the VA Omaha the other 50% of the time taking care of Veterans with tooth issues.
Farmer in heart, Dentist by trade

My grandfather had a Allis Dealership in the late 20s up until the war, when my dad and his brother went to the service.

My dad is still living at 97 , and we often talk about his days in his Dads dealership.

I have a 37 WC on steel, a 28 Model E 2035 on steel   both tractors ,like my grandfather would have sold in his dealership in Sutton Nebraska

Paul




Posted By: shameless dude
Date Posted: 09 Sep 2018 at 4:22am
howdy neighbor!


Posted By: fixer1958
Date Posted: 09 Sep 2018 at 10:12am
Grew up in the middle of KC KS. My dad was adopted and grew up in a tar paper shack (he took me there when I was 14) in the southern Missouri hills. He was adopted more as a farm hand than a son. Miserable life from what he said and others that verified that. Graduated the 8th grade and went to work as a homestead farm hand. Bailed on that as soon as he was old enough to join the Army and never went back. 7 years in Hawaii, Pearl Harbor, before and after.

Dad and Mom moved to KC for work and Dad never wanted to have anything to do with farming, growing a garden.....nothing. Just fishing and keeping the yard mowed. Didn't really do much hunting because he was sick of that too. Just showed me the basics but he could sure fish.

I graduated in 76 and did worked odd jobs here and there. Oldest brother had an auto shop and worked for him some. Been around that as far as I can remember. Got a job at an independent auto shop and worked for him for 27 years. In the meantime got married to a farm girl. After a few years and a few kids we bought a house and 25 acres about 45 miles south. Around her home town. Never looked back and had no idea what I was doing.
Father in law is/was a full time farmer. He came over as said 'get off your butt we are going to get you a tractor....free'. He found a 49WD NF that had been sitting out for years and froze up. Pulled it 10 miles home. Got that wore out old dog running and all prettied up and used it for several years. I used it for everything. Found a 6' beat up backhoe bucket and made it into a 3-point trip bucket. That was a life saver.

Found another WD for $1000 and sold the first one for $1400.
Been using this one for the last 20 plus years modified to my liking.
During all these years I have had 2 bouts with cancer, got over both of those and a few more bouts of other BS in between. Back issues lately but doing much better. Still wrenching but not nearly as intense cause the SOB's will try to kill you if you let em.
30 year old stamina just ain't there anymore but I'm making it work.

The WD don't do much anymore. Keep it in the shed because it will never sit outside.
Saved my butt more times than I can count.
Got some different machines to make it easier but still have the WD to do what they can't. Not very often but it's there when I need it. Funny thing is, my FIL got me into Allis with his WD45 that he bought new and showed me the workings of it. Now he calls me when he has a problem with his.




Posted By: psheridan
Date Posted: 09 Sep 2018 at 7:38pm
hello shameless
been reading your posts for years.     probably met you out there in west O and didn't know it           have to buy you a drink some time

Paul


Posted By: WDman1951
Date Posted: 09 Sep 2018 at 8:19pm
Deliver steel all day not a glorious job but good co workers and an ok company so can't complain

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1951 WD 1945 C 1936 WC


Posted By: Pat the Plumber CIL
Date Posted: 09 Sep 2018 at 8:49pm
Yep

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You only need to know 3 things to be a plumber;Crap rolls down hill,Hot is on the left and Don't bite your fingernails

1964 D-17 SIV 3 Pt.WF,1964 D-15 Ser II 3pt.WF ,1960 D-17 SI NF,1956 WD 45 WF.


Posted By: Don(MI)
Date Posted: 09 Sep 2018 at 10:25pm
Some good reading on here...my answer is on the short side.

I am a product engineer and we make bathtubs where I work.

Grandpa and dad started me out on Allis tractors around 20 years ago now....Still a nut for them old orange beauties.


Dream Job- would love to own a small farm selling pumpkins in the fall, with hayrides and corn maze for everyone.

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Galatians 5:22-24

"I got a pig at home in a pen and corn to feed him on, All I need is a pretty little girl to feed him when I'm gone!"


Posted By: john(MI)
Date Posted: 09 Sep 2018 at 11:58pm
I guess I'll add to mine.  Before graduating I worked on a farm that was all AC, and I learned how to drive on our WC we used for truck farming.  Graduated HS in 71.  Went into the USAF in 72, and learned electronics and became a weather equipment repairman.  Got out in 75 and went right back doing the same job as a civilian.  79 I went to the National Weather Service.  Worked on radar and all of the field equipment at Detroit Metro Airport.  In 87 I transferred to the main office for the state of MI which was located downtown Ann Arbor, MI.  I loved when school started and ended.  I always said the roofs turned flesh colored!  It sure made driving around town dangerous!  In 92 we built a new office, with the new Doppler radar, and I got promoted to a supervisory position.  We maintained the weather sensor arrays at 7 airports, and on on the shore of Lake Huron, the radar, the weather balloon equipment, two networks, the tele system,  30 some pc workstations and the main operational workstations.  And about anything else they heeded fixed.  2 standby genertors, and 2 UPS.  Near the end we designed a system to use at marine sites.  Our first was in the middle of Saginaw Bay on a light house.  We eventually had four sites when I retired and the entire Great Lakes weather offices were using our design for their sensor locations.  As I said, I retired 12/31/2011 with 39 years and some months, I think 7!  I tinkered around a bit.  Had a couple part time jobs.  Now with this bout with cancer I'm just gonna sit back and enjoy life.  Did I mention that I'm on my third wife?  She has a daughter, and I have a son, and we have a 3 year old grand daughter.  The best kinda kids are grand kids!  I'll be 65 11/1 this year.


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D14, D17, 5020, 612H, CASE 446


Posted By: dave63
Date Posted: 11 Sep 2018 at 8:00pm
I grew up in Allis Dealership, Dad needed someone to work on dairy equipment so when I got my drivers license he turned me loose on teat pullers.  Learned refrigeration working on milk tanks and took over 30 years ago went on my own.  Lost most of those farms and had the opportunity to sell out 11 years ago. Went into Geothermal HVAC.  don't miss the work but I do miss the farms. 

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The universal answer to all questions is yes, how much do you want to spend?


Posted By: sho-man1
Date Posted: 12 Sep 2018 at 4:37pm
Have been building computer chips (integrated circuits) for thirty plus years. Celebrated Jack Kilby's invention  this week Texas Instruments integrated circuit...Electronics background with some HAM radio stuff in there. Work revolves around PVD, physical vapor deposition(sputter).


Posted By: blue924.9
Date Posted: 14 Sep 2018 at 10:13pm
Graduated the john deere ag tech program with an degree in applied science (which I'm not sure what that means but it came with the deere deal) and have been full time with the local deere dealer since June

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hi my names dan, I am a young guy. i have a problem, i prefer my tractors orange and my clutches mechanical, thanks for letting me share



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