Great informative video. I have always been fascinated with four wheel drive tractors and being a North Dakota native I have always had a fondness for Jackson tractors. I do have a couple of comments on the subject that I would like to add. There were actually 19 Jackson tractors built though it is unknown how many of each of the three models were produced as there are no company build records left. The other thing that I would like to add is the fact that Erval Jackson did not die in 1972. He actually died of cancer in January of 1987, fifteen years after he stopped building tractors. The reason that he ended the tractor production was due to the simple fact that there was far too much competition from other manufacturers and he could not compete profitably. After he stopped building tractors he manufactured self-propelled swathers and swather transports for a time and at the time of his death he actually had just built a factory for producing small aircraft. I have actually had the pleasure of visiting his widow and it is where I got all of my information.
Even though I worked at John Deere Waterloo for 35 years, my favorite in this video is the Big Bud. I'm lucky to have been able to see it up close when it was on display here in Independence, Iowa.
Allis Chalmers is my favourite tractor company. Thanks for including the 4wd 220 . I had no idea there was only 175 of them produced. Love your channel!!
6-71 is 6 cylinders at 71cid each. Not 671cid. Love the video. Thank you for bringing us so many unique tractors to watch and listen to! You do us all a service, sir!
I would take my birth year 1986 challenger to high school in the early 2000’s or take it to my grocery store where I work!!! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔😬😬😬😬😬😬😬😬😬😬😬😬😬😬😬
Steiger tractors are always awesome. Big Bud..... What more to say? But my favorite was the International 7288. I loved the beautiful style of it and all the final Internationals produced before the merger.
Had a friend who had 4 steigers. He bought my grandparents estate ground in 1980 560 acres more or less he put down at least 4 and maybe 5 16inch irrigation wells. And used the Steigers to pull 16 to 18 foot wide Kilifers to mud level the farm for rice and bean production in the winter of '80 '81...that was a sight to see....
@@bigtractorpower other rare tractors are the fendt 626ls and 622ls Fendt they produced not even 80 peices of both and where the some of the strongest 4wd standard tractors
Awesome video as always. I love all big tractor videos. My favorite of these is definitely the 1156 Ford. I've always loved Ford tractors. Wish they still made them. But also still have to love BIG BUD period.
Our neighbor has two tiger III. One has been sitting on the rims for 10 years now but the other is used every year for spring field work. It's pretty cool to watch it work among all the modern tractors while easily "pulling it's weight".
You should also include the Big Boy tractor produced by Versatile and on display at the Austin museum in Manitoba. The 6 71 Detroit engine you mentioned is not 671 cubic inches but has 6- 71 cubic inch cylinders.
Congratulations on 2000 videos🎉👍 I watch your videos for several years now, and all I can say is that every video you share with us is just awesome! It is amazing to see how big your channel got😉 I'm looking forward to see another 2000 videos😁👍 Thank you jason!😀
Love the videos. There were less than 100 8010's built and all but 1 was updated to 8020 specs. They used a 426 ci detroit diesel 6-71 engine. Not a 671 ci engine. The only remaining original 8010 is in the keller collection.
Congratulations On 2k Jason That's a Milestone, Thanks For All Your Time And Effort Recording, Editing And Uploading For All Us To Enjoy, Big Bud 747 Is My Favorite.
Thank you for watching it’s a lot of fun tracking down these rare tractors and filming all the machinery that I’ve been able to see over the past 11 years.
What a Mile stone. It's because of this channel that the best and good old days of farming is kept alive by featuring some of the best and rarest equipment doing what it dose best. Love it and can't wait to see more.
BTP, congratulations on 300K Subscibers and your 2000th video, I have always enjoyed your content, history, specs and price of the equipment. Thank you for sharing all of this with us. I have to go with the Big Bud myself.
Big Bud, without a doubt, is my favorite tractor.The enormous size and power is without question the most powerful tractor ever constructed. The tires alone are extremely expensive and new. John Deere's and Case IH tractors are large, but fall short by comparison too the Big Bud 747. Really the video doesn't do this tractor any justice. In person, a person is awed by its shear size and the implements it pulls are equal to this tractor. Montana is a huge state. Many fields are just too big for smaller tractors. Thus, a much larger tractor is employed for work. Note; Even the scaled model 1/16 is huge. I enjoyed the video allot. Thank you. Pete
Great video. Detroit Diesel engines displacement designations were kind of different. A 6-71 engine means it’s a 6 cylinder and each cylinder is 71 cu inches for a displacement of 426 cu inches not 671 cu inches.
Thank you very much somehow I messed up in my notes I didn’t look at something right when I narrated that. This video took over a week to put together with all the details and I just missed that one and I wish I had not.
Man your channel is one of my favorites on TH-cam! Congratulations to the 2000th video! Honestly I didn’t think many people would be interested in watching tractors on TH-cam, but then again many people say the same about those who like cars or watching people farm.
Congratulations on the success of your channel, i have always had a passion for big tractors after visiting the Cheshire show (Uk) in the early 80's The biggest tractor's in our area were a ford county used for drainage & a ford 9600 , big bud has to be the daddy in my book 👍 thankyou for all the interesting content
A steiger tiger with a big ol 3408 cat sounds like a monster, people think v8s are junk but the 3408 is arguably the best large V8 diesel engine built and put in so many different uses.
You’ll probably call bs on this, but I can back it up. Yeah v8 diesels aren’t torque monsters but the 3408 cat will typically match a K model cummins torque output at the same RPMs
The Wagner tractors that were branded JD were just Deere skirting a lawsuit that centred around the Dropbox being copied, Deere just agreed to have Wagner make tractors as it was cheaper to buy them out than go to court. I had 3 of the WA 14 tractors in green, they were stickered as WA14 but they were 17 axles and had the 290 up Cummins engines. Great machines that were virtually indestructible and easily rebuilt. Rite tractors in Great Falls Montana aquired the patent on the drop box when it lapsed after JD dropped Wagner. Dave Curtis built a great tractor that was ahead of the curve, I owned 8 Rite tractors and know most all of them are still working.
That is pretty interesting actually - don't often get so much detail on the background detail of such goings on. I thought John Deere had a non compete clause in their contract with Wagner, which was pretty much why they went out of business. Wasn't aware of the Drop Box issue
@@joescheller6680 they certainly copied MFs combine layout when they introduced their large combine range. Offset cab, engine to right of cab, grain tank behind both items. I think the range was the 'Titan' combine range ? To be fair though, there are only comparatively few ways to configure a combine - it's not like MF patented their layout - more than likely not a dosble thing in any case. These days, pretty much every combine manufacturer follows the same layout - mid mounted cab, grain tank mounted high up and behind cab, with engine installation behind that.
Hey big tractor guy,love ur show its awesome, but might I suggest a minor change to the 8020 John Deere,the GM motor was called the 671,but that 2 stroke Detroit actually displaced 426 cu inch and was a Fantastic motor, thanks guys ,great show
The 6-71 designation tells us it’s a inline motor,6 cylinders and 71cu per cylinder. If it was a V6 the designation would be 6v-71. 2stroke Jimmy’s we’re about the coolest way to convert diesel fuel in to noise lol
@@lolatingey3608 this past April marks my 32 year milking cows and 17 as a herdsman. A lot of those years has also been a lot of ass in the seat time doing fieldwork too and I grew up on a farm,we used to bleed Oliver green and Clover white.
@@SkipShooter Yes the 6v71 was a 70.9 cubic inch per cylinder (rounded to 71) and the v ment it was a v series design and the 6 meant it had 6 cylinders. if it had a N after it meant it was 4 valves per cylinder and a single T meant it was Turbo charged in the last years of the 2 strokes they had the TT series as well but it didnt mean Twin turboed... it meant torque taylored. and due to the growing emission issues these torque taylored made less power and were more emission friendly.
The old 8850 John Deere is one of my favorite four-wheel drive tractors of all time. I put 4,500 hours on it, and then we rebuilt the motor and started over again. An unfortunate family incident allowed the tractor to be sold, and I regret that. However, I just purchased a Steiger tiger, rated at 525 horsepower. It is restored, and looks like the one on the Renner farms video. I love it.
@@bustersmith5569 the 8850 was only supposed to last about 44 to 4500 hours. John Deere told us this when we bought it. It was a short life motor, and very expensive to rebuild. But that's all they would last, that's one of the main reasons there's not more of them still around today with original motors in them. If they could ,they went to Kenzie repower, and an 855 Cummins.
Didn't 2+2s bankrupt IH? They were a novel concept that just didn't sell, after alot of $ had been spent in development. I knew of a few who had them, and they didn't keep them long. The ide made sense, but didn't sell.
All awesome !!! This is the best of online production. Nothing comes close. Born with the last name Steiger, very obvious which are my favorites. But truth is every tractor featured here are great. Thanks for all the great videos and narratives.
whenever woods and copeland moved from texas my great uncle bought the building where they assembled the woods and copeland tractors in wharton texas, it has been his machine shop for the last nearly 50 years and he has a woods and copeland that he bought that was built there.
I don't know why but i love this kind of stuff, i was never a farmer but my dad was, so maybe that's why, and i do remember being around these machines and many other kinds of tractors and cotton pickers and even dozer's my dad used to operate, he did a lot of plowing on dozers and i remember going out to the multiple acre fields he would be plowing bringing him his lunch and i remember the huge ploom of dust that was raisinup in the sky as he was way off in the distance, my dad loved farming and did it most of his life, i guess that's why i can watch hours of just plowing, sounds crazy but it seems to relax me. R.I.P. Pop i miss you, one of the hardest working men ive ever known.
I’ve always heard Deere made 100 8010s then there was a transmission recall and 99 went back, got their transmission fixed and rebranded as 8020, one 8010 didn’t go back
Serial number one is still an 8010 and is in a collection. The 8020 was offered for four years so I do not think they were all built in 1960 and stocked. I will have to find out how long they were manufacture.
Congratulations Jason, You put out out quality informative videos. .You sir have reached quite a milestone! That's a tough question. The Ford is a good looking tractor but all were amazing power houses for there day. My least favorite would have to be the ant eater styled IH
Thank you very much for watching there’s a lot of great classic iron out there to film. There are still several other rare tractors on my wish list but I hope to track down.
I was a mech.at a red dealer. Very proud to have worked on the bicentennial case tractor, big tractors, newest to the oldest, best job ever, Toners were the best people to work for, we worked for the customer, they welcome in our shop anytime we were open, our customers were our bosses and part of the co. Almost. The Toners were most decent employers you could want to work for.PERIOD...1 cust. Had a steiger, fun stuff, 3 steigers.
We farmed next to Woods and I built the with Jones Copland the 1st Woods-Copland tractor . Jones drove while I ran the equipment on demonstration day when Caterpillar flew their executives in to view this 1st ever farm tractor built with Caterpillar parts....the front and rear differentials, transmission and engine. Cat engineers said it had to much horsepower for the weight and that it would just spin the tires. Great power in a smooth running tractor. Woods and Copland sold tractors overseas as well as here in the USA.
Love your content especially 70s and 80s stuff. Brings me back to my childhood. I'm not in farming anymore but your vids are the next best thing. I can smell the air and diesel fuel
I would gladly include the 1080 in this video unfortunately I have not had an opportunity to film it. Hopefully someday I will for this video I was sharing the tractors that are rare that I’ve been able to film so far.
@@douglaskauffman2692 surprised me too. First tractor I thought of when I clicked on this video, as they were built 30 some miles east of where I grew up and still live and remember seeing them every year at the Divide County Fair. Jerome built a state of the art tractor!
Hi Jason, Congratulations to 2000 Videos on TH-cam. This Performance you can be very proud of. I guess its the mixture between great footage and well information within your clips that creats your success. So cary on filming great Videos. Best regards from southwest Germany 🎊🎉
Was just gonna mention this. For those who don't know, a Detroit 6-71 is called such because it is 6 cylinders, inline configuration, 71 cubic inches displacement per cylinder. The naming convention stays the same but adds a V for V design engines, i.e. 12V-71 being a V12, with 71 cubic inches per cylinder. A 4-53T is a 4 cylinder inline, 53 cubes per cylinder, turbocharged. They came from 1-24 cylinders and are notable because they are 2 stroke diesels, vs. the normal 4 stroke.
Congratulations on 2,000th video Jason - this was right up my street as I collect 1/32 4WD tractors and have quite a few of these, of course many aren't available so I'm going to have to try and make some - like a Doe, a Matbro Mastiff and a Northrop!
@@bigtractorpower Due to space and money constraints! I try to get one model from each manufacturer unless their models are significantly looking ie JD 8010 and 7020.
I found another 8850 John Deere for sale. It has a new rebuilt motor and looks great. We plan to totally restore it. One of the best looking tractors ever, and very powerful.
I have to thank you for showing me these great machines. I am just amazed how some manufacture's could make such large machines for a reasonable price and other were just gouging the marketplace. Years ago I got a ride in Big Bud and can say the machine is bullet proof. The smoothness is really obvious for the size as the machine sings. Look forward to see way more videos that you made Sir. Peace to you and have your self a Happy New Year and peace be with you too. VF
I really love the spirit of ‘76 a lot. I love the Uncle Sam hat-like American flag 🇺🇸 detail and it really stands out to me with beauty. Very pretty paint job!
In the 1970s a family in mid-Michigan had a MRS (Mississippi Road Service) 4wd tractor. Originally had a six cylinder Detroit, repowered with an 8v71 and a 10 spd. Road Ranger trans. But it was not articulated, both axles steered independently. Only MRS I’d ever seen in person. Great video, thanks so much.
Very cool. I have a friend that purchased an MRS this past summer. I hope to catch it running sometime. MRS almost built Internationals 4wds before IH went with Steiger.
Thank you for watching there are so many it’s hard to keep up with them all. I can guarantee that I’ve seen everyone because I film them and produce them. I have a bunch of machines that are film that still haven’t made it to video yet.
Great video. I've been a fan of BTP since you launched, and was around for the ORIGINAL days of the Toy Tractor Times and TTS forum (that had to be 2005 or so?). Congrats on all the success and hard work over the years.
I operated a Steiger in 1984/5 for a farmer in central Ohio. I don't recall which model though. It was a manual shift and had more power than any machine I had operated to that point - that included the Alice Chalmers HD 21 dozer and the AC 450 earth mover (18 yd. scraper). It was a beast - a bit scary to operate in smaller fields with wide equipment. Fun though. I grew up on a dairy farm near the 45th parallel in Michigan. The large tractor we had was a 1952 JD R. I think it was rated at 45HP. It pulled a four bottom (14" I think) plow in third gear (five speed manual). I spent many hours tilling with a 14' field cultivator followed in tandem by a 14' disk (four gangs). I was eight years old when I first began doing field work with it. I had to put both feet against the firewall to pull the clutch out when it was under heavy load. Crazy daze, those were. Double cornering an 80A field seemed to take forever. Thanks for the video. Far more interesting to watch than the political news these days.
I never realized that the engine in the big bud 747 was a 2 stoke disel 16V 92T untill i saw this and i just learned about the 2 stoke disels engine like 2 days ago. Man you learn stuff every day.
Always love your vids, thank you. My favourite tractor is the John Deere 4440 because I drove one on my dad's farm between the ages of 6 till I was about 16 years old. Great memories in that tractor.
i was a parts person with a agricultural dealer with a ford dealership so was familiar with the versatile rangethe biggest ford we sold was the fw60 8 wheel articulateded tractor. loved your vid!
Great informative video. I have always been fascinated with four wheel drive tractors and being a North Dakota native I have always had a fondness for Jackson tractors. I do have a couple of comments on the subject that I would like to add. There were actually 19 Jackson tractors built though it is unknown how many of each of the three models were produced as there are no company build records left. The other thing that I would like to add is the fact that Erval Jackson did not die in 1972. He actually died of cancer in January of 1987, fifteen years after he stopped building tractors. The reason that he ended the tractor production was due to the simple fact that there was far too much competition from other manufacturers and he could not compete profitably. After he stopped building tractors he manufactured self-propelled swathers and swather transports for a time and at the time of his death he actually had just built a factory for producing small aircraft. I have actually had the pleasure of visiting his widow and it is where I got all of my information.
Even though I worked at John Deere Waterloo for 35 years, my favorite in this video is the Big Bud. I'm lucky to have been able to see it up close when it was on display here in Independence, Iowa.
My uncle also worked there for many years. Big bud came to our county fair in Mn so I was able to see it as well. A very impressive machine.
I still have great memories of long endless hot summer days driving the Steiger Tiger
Thank you for listing the 747! It is overlooked by so many of these "large tractor" videos. It's awesome to sit in the cab!
Lucky you!
Allis Chalmers is my favourite tractor company.
Thanks for including the 4wd 220 .
I had no idea there was only 175 of them produced. Love your channel!!
The 4W 220 is a rare one. My favorite AC is the 8550 and D21.
Allis Chalmers 👍
Congrats on 2,000. All those who grew up farming and now live in town appreciate the nostalgia you bring us. Can't wait for the next 2,000
Thank you very much for watching I really like tracking down these rare classic ones. I’m looking forward to filming many more videos.
One of the best tractor channels on earth.
THE best Tractor channel on The Tubes
@@johnfetter3252 Probably true. Don't know them all but this is a killer channel. My grandfather would have loved it. RIP.
Thank you very much. That is a very good compliment and I appreciate it.
The 4wd Knudson sidehill tractor seems to have been unceremoniously overlooked.
It is not over looked. I have not found one to film. These are a list of the machines I have filmed so far. I hope to find a Knudson
6-71 is 6 cylinders at 71cid each. Not 671cid. Love the video. Thank you for bringing us so many unique tractors to watch and listen to! You do us all a service, sir!
I messed up on the 8020. I miss read my notes. Thank you for watching.
Somehow I managed to not know about Rome tractors until this video. Congratulations on 2000 videos! Your material never gets old. :)
Thank you for watching. The ROME is a beast of a tractor. Solid classic iron.
2xK,, For me, it was the Jackson I had never heard of,,, and not being terribly far away from me in western Minnesota. .
All of them loved hearing about the Ford Versitile link. That big bud is amazing.
That Ford 1156 is a sweet ride. Would have loved taking it to school on take your tractor to school day!
I would take my birth year 1986 challenger to high school in the early 2000’s or take it to my grocery store where I work!!! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳😳🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔😬😬😬😬😬😬😬😬😬😬😬😬😬😬😬
Ya it's gotta kta Cummins in it that's capable of 1200 hp all day long with the rite injectors and a different button in the ptpump
Congrats on 2K, its been great to ride along with your growth. To your question STIEGER's will always be #1 with me.
😁👍👍👍
The,
My favorite tractor is the Big Bud 747. This tractor just RULES PERIOD !!!!
It’s a monster 😁👍
@@bigtractorpower Fella it is a beautiful work of art.
@@bigtractorpower I just love monster tractors, pure and simple !!!
Steiger tractors are always awesome. Big Bud..... What more to say? But my favorite was the International 7288. I loved the beautiful style of it and all the final Internationals produced before the merger.
The old Fords are some of my favorites.
Love the channel.
Very cool Jason! Thank you for 2,000 videos. Looking forward to many more years of farming videos. It's ALWAYS a good day when BTP uploads a video👍👍
Thank you for watching and commenting on so many of the videos onto the 3,000th video now 😁👍
Had a friend who had 4 steigers. He bought my grandparents estate ground in 1980 560 acres more or less he put down at least 4 and maybe 5 16inch irrigation wells. And used the Steigers to pull 16 to 18 foot wide Kilifers to mud level the farm for rice and bean production in the winter of '80 '81...that was a sight to see....
congratulations, what a milestone for you, you have such an awesome mix of older and newer equipment, thanks for sharing with us!!!!!!
I like them all it’s always exciting to see the new machines and very exciting to find the rare classics
This is why I subscribe to this channel! Jason you made my day! I have always had a thing for the Steiger Tiger. Thank You BTP!
Thank you for watching. The Tiger Steiger is a stand out.
Congrats on everything. I think the Ford is my favourite out of these. TY for sharing.
The 1156 is a stand out.
@@bigtractorpower
other rare tractors are the fendt 626ls and 622ls
Fendt they produced not even 80 peices of both and where the some of the strongest 4wd standard tractors
The Big Bud 747 will always be the ultimate beast of a tractor that can never be matched again!
It is a true monster.
Awesome video as always. I love all big tractor videos. My favorite of these is definitely the 1156 Ford. I've always loved Ford tractors. Wish they still made them. But also still have to love BIG BUD period.
The 1156 is a stand out. 😁👍
Our neighbor has two tiger III. One has been sitting on the rims for 10 years now but the other is used every year for spring field work. It's pretty cool to watch it work among all the modern tractors while easily "pulling it's weight".
You should also include the Big Boy tractor produced by Versatile and on display at the Austin museum in Manitoba. The 6 71 Detroit engine you mentioned is not 671 cubic inches but has 6- 71 cubic inch cylinders.
He didnt get a video of that. This is a compilation of his videos
My favorite was the big bud and the earthquake rite tractor by Curtis! Dave and Jack Curtis are my great uncles
Congratulations on 2000 videos🎉👍 I watch your videos for several years now, and all I can say is that every video you share with us is just awesome! It is amazing to see how big your channel got😉 I'm looking forward to see another 2000 videos😁👍
Thank you jason!😀
Thank you. Many more videos on the way.
The ingenuity of people you've never heard of is astounding. Thanks for the vid.
Thank you for watching.
Love the videos. There were less than 100 8010's built and all but 1 was updated to 8020 specs. They used a 426 ci detroit diesel 6-71 engine. Not a 671 ci engine. The only remaining original 8010 is in the keller collection.
Good catch on the Jimmy ci. I started to comment, but figured somebody already had!
Warmest congratulations and thanks for all your time zu share with us tractor maniacs!
Thank you.
That first versatile/ford was sweet
Congratulations On 2k Jason That's a Milestone, Thanks For All Your Time And Effort Recording, Editing And Uploading For All Us To Enjoy, Big Bud 747 Is My Favorite.
Thank you for watching it’s a lot of fun tracking down these rare tractors and filming all the machinery that I’ve been able to see over the past 11 years.
I'd have to say my favorite in this video would be the 747 bud.
😁👍👍👍. It was awesome to film the 747 last fall.
What a Mile stone. It's because of this channel that the best and good old days of farming is kept alive by featuring some of the best and rarest equipment doing what it dose best. Love it and can't wait to see more.
I enjoy finding these classics to help relive the good old days. Per serving the sights and sounds of these machines in the field is fun.
@@bigtractorpower For sure keeping doing it 👍
That Ford was a good looking rig
👍👍
Agreed
Best tractor of the bunch
Only if you consider a Versatile to be a Ford.
Love those Rome tractors. Excellent work. Not seen one in 20 years
The ROME is a true iron monster.
BTP, congratulations on 300K Subscibers and your 2000th video, I have always enjoyed your content, history, specs and price of the equipment. Thank you for sharing all of this with us. I have to go with the Big Bud myself.
Thank you for watching. The 747 is a very impressive tractor.
Big Bud, without a doubt, is my favorite tractor.The enormous size and power is without question the most powerful tractor ever constructed. The tires alone are extremely expensive and new. John Deere's and Case IH tractors are large, but fall short by comparison too the Big Bud 747. Really the video doesn't do this tractor any justice. In person, a person is awed by its shear size and the implements it pulls are equal to this tractor. Montana is a huge state. Many fields are just too big for smaller tractors. Thus, a much larger tractor is employed for work.
Note; Even the scaled model 1/16 is huge.
I enjoyed the video allot. Thank you.
Pete
Great video. Detroit Diesel engines displacement designations were kind of different. A 6-71 engine means it’s a 6 cylinder and each cylinder is 71 cu inches for a displacement of 426 cu inches not 671 cu inches.
Thank you very much somehow I messed up in my notes I didn’t look at something right when I narrated that. This video took over a week to put together with all the details and I just missed that one and I wish I had not.
Also, there were 100 8010s produced. 99 of them were updated and re-badged as 8020.
Man your channel is one of my favorites on TH-cam! Congratulations to the 2000th video! Honestly I didn’t think many people would be interested in watching tractors on TH-cam, but then again many people say the same about those who like cars or watching people farm.
I really appreciate all the Tractor fans that tune into the channel and I never thought that there were as many out there as there are.
Congratulations on the success of your channel, i have always had a passion for big tractors after visiting the Cheshire show (Uk) in the early 80's
The biggest tractor's in our area were a ford county used for drainage & a ford 9600 , big bud has to be the daddy in my book 👍 thankyou for all the interesting content
Very cool. I like County tractors. The Ford 9000 is one of my all time favorite tractors
A steiger tiger with a big ol 3408 cat sounds like a monster, people think v8s are junk but the 3408 is arguably the best large V8 diesel engine built and put in so many different uses.
As an owner of two V8 tractors if you treat them well they should do a good job but there’s always a risk in them. This tiger is a very cool tractor.
@@bigtractorpower yah their always is but a 3408 is a proven reliable motor that shouldn't have no issues even putting out 600 plus horse
My Favorite is definitely the Versatile Ford 1156, few engines compare to the torque coming from that Monster Cummins, for me none compare.
You’ll probably call bs on this, but I can back it up. Yeah v8 diesels aren’t torque monsters but the 3408 cat will typically match a K model cummins torque output at the same RPMs
Just never seen a good V8 Diesel, Cat or not.
@@nellsonstout7001 Doubtful seeing how the Steiger Tiger could have either the Cat 3408 or a Cummins KTA1150. The Cummins was the favorite
@@gordonvanpatten6637 Scania V8.
As a kid my dad owned an 1156 with triples. It was purchased brand new. Makes me smile to see it here
😁👍👍👍👍
The Wagner tractors that were branded JD were just Deere skirting a lawsuit that centred around the Dropbox being copied, Deere just agreed to have Wagner make tractors as it was cheaper to buy them out than go to court. I had 3 of the WA 14 tractors in green, they were stickered as WA14 but they were 17 axles and had the 290 up Cummins engines. Great machines that were virtually indestructible and easily rebuilt. Rite tractors in Great Falls Montana aquired the patent on the drop box when it lapsed after JD dropped Wagner. Dave Curtis built a great tractor that was ahead of the curve, I owned 8 Rite tractors and know most all of them are still working.
Dave Curtis is my great uncle
imbeciles and morons say farmers r stupid
That is pretty interesting actually - don't often get so much detail on the background detail of such goings on. I thought John Deere had a non compete clause in their contract with Wagner, which was pretty much why they went out of business. Wasn't aware of the Drop Box issue
John Deere is well noted for copying patents. Have been doing it for long time.
@@joescheller6680 they certainly copied MFs combine layout when they introduced their large combine range. Offset cab, engine to right of cab, grain tank behind both items. I think the range was the 'Titan' combine range ?
To be fair though, there are only comparatively few ways to configure a combine - it's not like MF patented their layout - more than likely not a dosble thing in any case.
These days, pretty much every combine manufacturer follows the same layout - mid mounted cab, grain tank mounted high up and behind cab, with engine installation behind that.
They are so visually satisfying to look at like that’s what horsepower looks like
Hey big tractor guy,love ur show its awesome, but might I suggest a minor change to the 8020 John Deere,the GM motor was called the 671,but that 2 stroke Detroit actually displaced 426 cu inch and was a Fantastic motor, thanks guys ,great show
The 6-71 designation tells us it’s a inline motor,6 cylinders and 71cu per cylinder. If it was a V6 the designation would be 6v-71.
2stroke Jimmy’s we’re about the coolest way to convert diesel fuel in to noise lol
@@lolatingey3608 this past April marks my 32 year milking cows and 17 as a herdsman. A lot of those years has also been a lot of ass in the seat time doing fieldwork too and I grew up on a farm,we used to bleed Oliver green and Clover white.
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@@SkipShooter Yes the 6v71 was a 70.9 cubic inch per cylinder (rounded to 71) and the v ment it was a v series design and the 6 meant it had 6 cylinders. if it had a N after it meant it was 4 valves per cylinder and a single T meant it was Turbo charged in the last years of the 2 strokes they had the TT series as well
but it didnt mean Twin turboed... it meant torque taylored. and due to the growing emission issues these torque taylored made less power and were more emission friendly.
One of my favorite channels on TH-cam!!! Keep up the great work!! Makes my day better every time I see that you posted another video!!!
Thank you for watching. Many more videos on the way.
Thanks for your great work! I realy enjoy watching your informative videos ✊👍
Thank you for watching.
The old 8850 John Deere is one of my favorite four-wheel drive tractors of all time. I put 4,500 hours on it, and then we rebuilt the motor and started over again. An unfortunate family incident allowed the tractor to be sold, and I regret that. However, I just purchased a Steiger tiger, rated at 525 horsepower. It is restored, and looks like the one on the Renner farms video. I love it.
Gary Vignal 4500 hours ? That's sure not a lot to have to do a rebuild,,,,,,,,
@@bustersmith5569 the 8850 was only supposed to last about 44 to 4500 hours. John Deere told us this when we bought it. It was a short life motor, and very expensive to rebuild. But that's all they would last, that's one of the main reasons there's not more of them still around today with original motors in them. If they could ,they went to Kenzie repower, and an 855 Cummins.
The 8850 and the Tiger III are cool tractors. John Deere built just over 1,700 8850s. I own a 1982 8850 and a 1974 Turbo Tiger I.
Any and ALL International Harvester 2 + 2 rank at the tops in my book! Excellent video here, thank you.
😁👍👍
IH 2+2 row-crop It was innovative to say the least, and although it had some shortfalls, every equipment line had an issue somewhere in its lineup.
Didn't 2+2s bankrupt IH? They were a novel concept that just didn't sell, after alot of $ had been spent in development. I knew of a few who had them, and they didn't keep them long. The ide made sense, but didn't sell.
All awesome !!! This is the best of online production. Nothing comes close. Born with the last name Steiger, very obvious which are my favorites. But truth is every tractor featured here are great. Thanks for all the great videos and narratives.
whenever woods and copeland moved from texas my great uncle bought the building where they assembled the woods and copeland tractors in wharton texas, it has been his machine shop for the last nearly 50 years and he has a woods and copeland that he bought that was built there.
Thank you for sharing. Very interesting.
Congrats to 2K. Big thank for your videos.
Congrats on 2k vids!
300,000k subs! Truly amazing.
Thank you.
I don't know why but i love this kind of stuff, i was never a farmer but my dad was, so maybe that's why, and i do remember being around these machines and many other kinds of tractors and cotton pickers and even dozer's my dad used to operate, he did a lot of plowing on dozers and i remember going out to the multiple acre fields he would be plowing bringing him his lunch and i remember the huge ploom of dust that was raisinup in the sky as he was way off in the distance, my dad loved farming and did it most of his life, i guess that's why i can watch hours of just plowing, sounds crazy but it seems to relax me. R.I.P. Pop i miss you, one of the hardest working men ive ever known.
I’ve always heard Deere made 100 8010s then there was a transmission recall and 99 went back, got their transmission fixed and rebranded as 8020, one 8010 didn’t go back
That is true. John Deere had transmission problems with the 8010 and I think the 2010.
Serial number one is still an 8010 and is in a collection. The 8020 was offered for four years so I do not think they were all built in 1960 and stocked. I will have to find out how long they were manufacture.
The 6-71 Detroit is not 671 cubic inches. The 6 is for 6 cylinders the 71 is the cubic inches per cylinder. Keep the good videos coming!!!!
@@lolatingey3608 Don't farm anymore(I worked on my parents beef farm until I was 26), just a tractor buff.
I worked on a farm near Cardston southern Alberta back '98 that had 2 1156 Versatiles. Was there custom harvesting, great scenery!
It’s hard to decide what’s my favorite brand or model, they all look beautiful
if you can’t choose just take them all
😁👍👍
a few 8010 were made all recalled but one wasn't turned in for updates
Congratulations Jason,
You put out out quality informative videos. .You sir have reached quite a milestone!
That's a tough question. The Ford is a good looking tractor but all were amazing power houses for there day. My least favorite would have to be the ant eater styled IH
Thank you very much for watching there’s a lot of great classic iron out there to film. There are still several other rare tractors on my wish list but I hope to track down.
I was a mech.at a red dealer. Very proud to have worked on the bicentennial case tractor, big tractors, newest to the oldest, best job ever, Toners were the best people to work for, we worked for the customer, they welcome in our shop anytime we were open, our customers were our bosses and part of the co. Almost. The Toners were most decent employers you could want to work for.PERIOD...1 cust. Had a steiger, fun stuff, 3 steigers.
The Detroit diesel for the 8020 is a 426 ci 6-71. 71 ci per cylinder.
I caught that too.
This was awesome. Thanks for sharing.
For some European brands of the era, 200 units of heavy tractors actually would be quite a lot, e.g. Schlüter.
Schlüters are really neat looking tractors. I've watched a few videos on them
Weren’t Schülters the first tractor with equal sized wheels?
@@hairlesscat6458 I'm not sure about that. Massey Harris had a early 4wd in the 20s or 30s but wasn't a success
@@dougschmitii6165 The first tractor with equal wheels in Europe was the DUTRA D-4KB.
We farmed next to Woods and I built the with Jones Copland the 1st Woods-Copland tractor .
Jones drove while I ran the equipment on demonstration day when Caterpillar flew their executives in to view this 1st ever farm tractor built with Caterpillar parts....the front and rear differentials, transmission and engine.
Cat engineers said it had to much horsepower for the weight and that it would just spin the tires.
Great power in a smooth running tractor.
Woods and Copland sold tractors overseas as well as here in the USA.
Love how most of the steigers featured are all being run with the doors open eating dust. Best memory of them is the day they were traded off lol
Love your content especially 70s and 80s stuff. Brings me back to my childhood. I'm not in farming anymore but your vids are the next best thing. I can smell the air and diesel fuel
Thank grew up in the 70’s and 80’s as well. These videos are to recapture that awesome era in farm machines.
What about the Versatile “Big Roy”?
Well it wasn’t a production machine. (Surprisingly enough,) the big bud 747 was. No one ever ordered another though😂
I would gladly include the 1080 in this video unfortunately I have not had an opportunity to film it. Hopefully someday I will for this video I was sharing the tractors that are rare that I’ve been able to film so far.
Or A Knudson
@@lolatingey3608 yes. Im in ohio
@@douglaskauffman2692 surprised me too. First tractor I thought of when I clicked on this video, as they were built 30 some miles east of where I grew up and still live and remember seeing them every year at the Divide County Fair. Jerome built a state of the art tractor!
Hi Jason,
Congratulations to 2000 Videos on TH-cam. This Performance you can be very proud of. I guess its the mixture between great footage and well information within your clips that creats your success.
So cary on filming great Videos.
Best regards from southwest Germany 🎊🎉
5:30 A 7 liter Detroit would be 426 cid / or just called a 6-71
Was just gonna mention this. For those who don't know, a Detroit 6-71 is called such because it is 6 cylinders, inline configuration, 71 cubic inches displacement per cylinder. The naming convention stays the same but adds a V for V design engines, i.e. 12V-71 being a V12, with 71 cubic inches per cylinder. A 4-53T is a 4 cylinder inline, 53 cubes per cylinder, turbocharged. They came from 1-24 cylinders and are notable because they are 2 stroke diesels, vs. the normal 4 stroke.
The Bi-Centenial, something they probably wouldn't celebrate today.
We will see if there's a tri centennial in 2076
The 8020 had a 6- 71 Detroit witch was 425 cu. in. My. Favorite video would your of your 8850.
A farmer that lives a couple miles from me still uses a Steiger Turbo Tiger that he bought brand new back in the 70s.
Definitely a neat tractor.
Very cool. Those are I’m on my favorite Tractors.
7288 IH 👍👍👍👍👍👍
😁👍
Great video and congratulations on your 2000th video!!
Thank you for watching.
That 7288 is wild looking
Like the Big Buds. It's amazing how many big tractors were developed out of small shops.
👍👍
Congratulations on 2,000th video Jason - this was right up my street as I collect 1/32 4WD tractors and have quite a few of these, of course many aren't available so I'm going to have to try and make some - like a Doe, a Matbro Mastiff and a Northrop!
1/32 4wds are great to collect. I have almost every 1/32 Steiger made.
@@bigtractorpower Due to space and money constraints! I try to get one model from each manufacturer unless their models are significantly looking ie JD 8010 and 7020.
I found another 8850 John Deere for sale. It has a new rebuilt motor and looks great. We plan to totally restore it. One of the best looking tractors ever, and very powerful.
That was really cool. I enjoy seeing these old tractors out in the field.
Thank you for watching.
@@lolatingey3608 I enjoy all heavy equipment and farming. I don’t farm but love watching and learning here
I have to thank you for showing me these great machines. I am just amazed how some manufacture's could make such large machines for a reasonable price and other were just gouging the marketplace. Years ago I got a ride in Big Bud and can say the machine is bullet proof. The smoothness is really obvious for the size as the machine sings. Look forward to see way more videos that you made Sir. Peace to you and have your self a Happy New Year and peace be with you too. VF
I really love the spirit of ‘76 a lot. I love the Uncle Sam hat-like American flag 🇺🇸 detail and it really stands out to me with beauty. Very pretty paint job!
I miss all of them, they were far better than anything we have today.
These were monsters in their day. Built to last.
Congratulations on 300k sub Jason. This channel has some amazing footage.
Thank you.
In the 1970s a family in mid-Michigan had a MRS (Mississippi Road Service) 4wd tractor. Originally had a six cylinder Detroit, repowered with an 8v71 and a 10 spd. Road Ranger trans. But it was not articulated, both axles steered independently. Only MRS I’d ever seen in person.
Great video, thanks so much.
Very cool. I have a friend that purchased an MRS this past summer. I hope to catch it running sometime. MRS almost built Internationals 4wds before IH went with Steiger.
Congratulations on 2000 videos my friend. A very good way to spend my evenings!
Thank you for watching I certainly agree 😁👍
@@bigtractorpower Are you aware of the Ford FW35?
Congrats Jason on 2K. I have not seen them all, saw maybe 1099! Keep up the good work
Thank you for watching there are so many it’s hard to keep up with them all. I can guarantee that I’ve seen everyone because I film them and produce them. I have a bunch of machines that are film that still haven’t made it to video yet.
Great video. I've been a fan of BTP since you launched, and was around for the ORIGINAL days of the Toy Tractor Times and TTS forum (that had to be 2005 or so?). Congrats on all the success and hard work over the years.
Thank you. Your are awesome. TTS goes way back to 2,000. Toy Talk is still going strong on TTT.
I operated a Steiger in 1984/5 for a farmer in central Ohio. I don't recall which model though. It was a manual shift and had more power than any machine I had operated to that point - that included the Alice Chalmers HD 21 dozer and the AC 450 earth mover (18 yd. scraper). It was a beast - a bit scary to operate in smaller fields with wide equipment. Fun though. I grew up on a dairy farm near the 45th parallel in Michigan. The large tractor we had was a 1952 JD R. I think it was rated at 45HP. It pulled a four bottom (14" I think) plow in third gear (five speed manual). I spent many hours tilling with a 14' field cultivator followed in tandem by a 14' disk (four gangs). I was eight years old when I first began doing field work with it. I had to put both feet against the firewall to pull the clutch out when it was under heavy load. Crazy daze, those were. Double cornering an 80A field seemed to take forever. Thanks for the video. Far more interesting to watch than the political news these days.
Very cool history. The HD21 and 450 are so rare today. That is neat you got to operate them. Big change in tractors from the R to to a Steiger. 👍👍
I love the older big articulated tractors like the Ford 1156 and the Steiger Tiger 450,
😁👍👍👍
I did the PDI and installed the duals a few new blue Ford or Ford New Holland 1156 Versatiles at the dealership back in the day. Awesome tractors!
Big bud is always a favorite but that Ford 😍 congrats on 2000 man keep up the hard work! 💪
@@lolatingey3608 of course! It's why I'm here! Who are you lol
I never realized that the engine in the big bud 747 was a 2 stoke disel 16V 92T untill i saw this and i just learned about the 2 stoke disels engine like 2 days ago. Man you learn stuff every day.
Yes, and all those old two stroke had a supercharger installed that was mandatory for a two stroke General Motors Detroit Diesel to run.
@@July.4.1776 I don't think they need superchargers just turbochargers are a blower to run.
Always love your vids, thank you. My favourite tractor is the John Deere 4440 because I drove one on my dad's farm between the ages of 6 till I was about 16 years old. Great memories in that tractor.
He is incorrect about the john deere 8010, only 1 survived the retag john deere did when they updated the 8010 transmission to the 8020's
Congratulations on 2k Great job Thanks for sharing 👍 👏
Thank you very much.
i was a parts person with a agricultural dealer with a ford dealership so was familiar with the versatile rangethe biggest ford we sold was the fw60 8 wheel articulateded tractor. loved your vid!
Congratulations all around Jason! Great channel.
Thank you.
The Big Bud has to be the most impressive tractor ever built. You can't help but be in awe. But my favorite is John Deere's 7520.