View from the "top"
Many stories, many that should be left un-explained, but in all honesty, just maybe someone will benefit from the honest facts?
I know there are many CAT stories out there - and mine are just personal experience growing up in Northern Sacramento Valley farm country. Often the equipment was beyond tired, it was well used and in some cases held together with a promise, baling wire and bubble gum. I do not ever recall operating a NEW piece of equipment except the 1954 Ford NAA grandpa bought for the 48 acres at home.
I was helping a good friend and neighbor - a hot summer day, pulling checks (contours if you like) with a pull disc ridger (two wheels supported a tool bar) behind a Caterpillar Standard Tread Orchard Seat Thirty ( aka - sidewinder). He said he needed a break and gave me the seat along with the caution of being careful when crossing the cross checks. I heeded his advice! Was in second gear, doing fine, came to the junction of a cross check, threw the clutch, put in Low Gear, pulled the clutch in, pulled a friction and slid up on the half built check, all fine - ha ha ha!
Tractor was well onto the cross check and I was confident it was all ok, when the tractor BROKE OVER and I left the seat! I was half astride of the gas tank, looking at that RED HOT EXHAUST MANIFOLD AND PIPE, as I was grabbing for the clutch! FEAR IS AN UNDERSTATEMENT - A lesson I never forgot - ( you can view a posting of me loading the Wide Gauge Thirty - it will show you I heeded my lessons! and yes, those lessons served me many times over with many types of equipment!) I am certain to this day if I had been above an idle and in second gear, I would have been thrown off the machine! (WHAT YOUTH PROVIDES ONE - ALMOST INVINCIBLE)
Now for my 3J D2 story --- Juiceman was very kind and took that particular tractor off my hands! I think he was just being kind hearted and caring, did not want to see it run over a cliff or me getting hurt! I honestly thought I said goodbye to it when I left high school. Well some "good" things have sticky habits. It was gifted to my father when the owners passed on, steering clutches beyond frozen, many other details needed 'fixed'. Dad and Florin Tractor (supplied the parts) got it back running and it sat under cover for many years. At Dad's wishes, I was tasked with finding homes for his "accumulation".
Nothing rides like a tail seat CAT --- NOTHING I have ever experienced. I am not too sure they were not the model for those mechanical bulls. Certainly no operator protection or comfort, maybe a few burlap sacks for seat cushion and that wonderful device that was 5/8" round bar around the seat, that grab bar - only if you had the chance to grab it!
A Standard Tread 3J D2 in soft premium river silt/loam is about as helpless as one could find. They get stuck pulling a straight line and do not expect them to turn with a load.
Well, this particular "tractor" was always stored outside, never under anything but a sheet of corrugated iron roofing and maybe a tarp. It was near impossible to start cold and if warm it was worse. Couple that with my XLARGE hands and 6 foot frame - struggle to get the rope around the flywheel of the starting engine and pull till the air turns blue! Oh - I should say I was about 13 years old too - no quality of patience for cantankerous starting engines!
After getting started and hooking to a 7 1/2 foot offsett disk, first pass in the tall Johnson Grass after the winter high water flooding, I went over a hidden "LOG" if you will, all of about 6" in diameter and almost square with the tracks. YEP --- launched onto the hood, of course there is nothing to hang on to but the levers you catch with your unmentionables! Feet hanging in the small "wells" and thinking NOW WHAT! [In case you do not know, there is little or nothing protruding above the radiator cap, if there was, you invite a limb to take you off when it released from whatever caught it! Exhaust to the side, generally straight out of the manifold over the track, makes a great dust storm besides being deafening! If we only knew then what we know now!]
Another D2 story --- working in the same orchard as I was with the Thirty above - Spring first discing, Wide Gauge Cruiser Deck D2, mustard as high as the tractor or higher.
I knew where the irrigation pump was and it's discharge - always washed a big rut there. I was in low gear, just above an idle, dropped in and climbed out of the depression. Watched the disc come through and on flat ground. Stopped, shifted to 3rd gear and eased the clutch in, pulled the throttle back and moved maybe 10 feet. That Tractor literally JUMPED up,
scared the britches off me - I threw the clutch! All stopped, out of gear got off and looked at the left track! Rollers still on the rails, idler in place, sprocket was fine, track still on the top roller BUT there was a separation in the track --- RAILS BROKE BETWEEN THE PAD BOLTS! Nothing beats worn out tired equipment, going for the last inch one can get out of it.
John Deere 55 combine used D2 tracks -- and the owner new where there was a 55 available - a few days later, "new" rails and new pads on one side, cut the pads to fit with a torch.
Ran all season that way, I do not know what happened to that tractor.
Now the question --- ARE YOU HAPPY JM?
Stay Safe out there!
"keep 'em crawlin"
CTS