A very close friend and neighbor had been on me the past 5 years or so to come pick up a non-running 9U that he gave me. I go way back with this friend. I first met him when I was around 5 years old riding with my dad in the pickup to take things over to their shop to be fixed. My friend had to have been around 27 years old back then. His dad (since passed) had the only welding shop in town. Those guys could fix or build anything. And if they welded something up for you, it would never break again. Over time different unfortunate things happened and the welding shop closed. But all the equipment and parts and pieces and stock still remained and my friend still worked out of there every day.
Unfortunately, my friend passed away on the 4th of this month. His cousins immediately took on the job of cleaning out the shop and yard because my friend already had a deal in place a few weeks prior to his passing to rent a local trucker space to park his trucks in the yard and have a spot in the shop to work on his trucks if need be. The stuff that was thrown into the scrap metal bins last week was enough to make me want to cry. Prime example, a box of gears that was sitting near the lathe….into the scrap bin. The story I got was their reasoning was “oh, they rigged up a transmission out of a jeep years ago to control the speed of the lathe instead of messing with changing the belt to different pulley sizes so those gears were useless anyways.” That sounds like good logic if you don’t know any better and aren’t familiar with a lathe. But if you know better, those gears actually change the feed speed of the lathe relative to the spindle to accomodate for cutting different pitches of threads (i.e. standard vs. metric). Anyhow, lots of useful things got tossed out 😢.
The 9U parked behind the shop belonged to an old timer that was a fixture at the welding shop since I could remember. This man was a jack of all trades in his lifetime. He farmed. Did custom land leveling (which I believe is where the 9U was used), built several homes and was a general wealth of knowledge. We removed the vey last block of 100 year old walnut trees when I was in high school. In doing so, a rusty metallic ball that was a bit bigger than a shot put got unearthed. I had no clue what it could have been from. <<Cannon ball??>> So I took a ride over to the welding shop with the ball to go see the old timer because I knew he would have an answer. Sure enough, I set it on the counter top and he took one look and before I had the chance to even pose the question, he said “Yuba Tractor track ball!!” Then he went on to explain to me the concept of the Yuba Tractor and how it used the balls that were essentially like ball bearings that were packed all the way around in between the rails and swing frames and were used in lieu of track rollers and how over time the balls would wear down and decrease in diameter until they would eventually fall out of their groove and drop onto the ground and that the operator would have to periodically stop and open a compartment and drop new replacement track balls in. Sadly, he too passed on a few years back.
The 9U was originally the old timer’s, and he left it to my friend who in turn gave it to me.
I tried a local lowbed man that I am friendly with when my friend first gave me the 9U, but the lowbed man didn’t have a trailer equipped with a winch to pull a dead machine onto the deck. I fully intended on getting the machine out but there was no sense of urgency as it wasn’t going to go anywhere else. That is, until my friend passed, and the family wanted to clear everything out for the new tennant.
So I picked up the phone and called the only man I knew with expertise in dead Cat recoveries, who I also knew was most likely to have the appropriate trailer for the job with a winch…. none other than our very own Juiceman!!!
I know it’s a huge pain in the rear to have him make an hour and a half trek down my way to do an extraction, but lucky for me he oblidged. It wasn’t until he arrived that morning that we learned the recovery wasn’t going to be as easy as we had hoped. Both sets of steering clutches were locked up and wouldn’t free up. So it wouldn’t winch up the trailer easy as I had hoped.
We borrowed a 6,000lb capacity Case field forklift that was onsite and used it to lift the front end of the 9U off the ground so we could place blocks under the mid point of the tracks to get the front edges of the tracks up off the ground so that Juiceman could get the trailer under the tracks and be able to drag it the rest of the way up the deck. About that time, my cell phone rang and it was my mail carrier saying that she had thrown a package for me over the fence at my parents house and that the dogs were biting the package (whose contents were the remaining small parts the radiator shop needed to finish the radiator for the 8U nursery tractor engine rebuild I’m almost done with). So I blasted out of there to retrieve the package before my German Shepherds destroyed the contents. When I returned, Juiceman already had the 9U on the trailer and had walked the axles back in place and flattened the deck out.
In the process of winching it on, the right side steering clutch freed up and the right side tracks rolled free. Which made it a challenge to get the machine the rest of the way on the deck in a straight line with one stuck track and one free spinning. Fortunately the Case field lift was able to prod at the rails and square up the 9U on the trailer so it would be secure for its whopping 1.8 mile ride to my yard.
Then came the challenge of how to get it off the trailer. Which fortunately for me, my shop foreman is an excellent equipment operator and we used a chain and the backhoe bucket to fish the machine off the trailer and drag it to where it was out of the way enough for us to leave it be until all the rains are over and the ground dries enough to relocate it amidst my other Caterpillars and parts machines.
I felt bad for dirtying Juiceman’s immaculate trailer and for any of the paint that may have got chipped off dragging the grousers of the locked up set of tracks across his deck!! 😬
A big huge THANK YOU to Juiceman!! You went wayyy out of your way for me and I appreciate it and I really enjoyed the visit!! …..It’s always fun to watch someone at work who is a true master of their art form. Juiceman has definitely done that a time or two before!! 😂😂
Been wanting to write this up for a few days, but its been so busy with my friend’s funeral and a handful of other things going on. Hopefully I’ll have an update on the 8U nursery tractor soon.
-Nick
….and a bonus pic of Juiceman looking over a 7U in my friend’s yard.