I sure was glad to see the six Gleaners at the end of this movie. I remember the day when Allis Chalmers took these movies. I was number 4, 18yrs old and only Canadian on the crew. Three of the six combines were owned by Bob and Katy Davis, of Carman, Oklahoma. The other three combines were owned by Don Zahorski. The picture was taken on July 24 1964 on Fred Brugger’s farm in Lusk, Wyoming. Allis Chalmers was always #1 in my books. Thanks for the memories!
@mharrye Жыл бұрын
Gene Allen and Jerry Boone at 5:30, two of my first leaders when I began my engineering career at Allis-Chalmers. Shop area and the workers in it - fond memories of my first 22 years in engineering.
@daviddaniken72485 жыл бұрын
Like the movie said at the end, there are still plenty of these machines running 50 years later and getting the job done. Great video! Thank you for posting.
@lancelot1953 Жыл бұрын
Hi J and L Videos, thank you for sharing with us this part of our past which made America/Canada the leader in world harvesting/harvester production. Thank you for reminding us of the ingenuity and work that went into these impressive machines to help with the labor-intensive life of farmers. Happy New Year and may God bless America, Ciao, L (Morningside & Star Shine Farms, Inc)
@meinradsigner2035 жыл бұрын
I was an exchange student from Switzerland working for a grain farmer near Winnipeg in 1978. This farmer had a Gleaner L2 combine, as well as a D21 Allis and a 7580 Allis fourwheeldrive tractor. It's only 41 years ago. MS
@steigerpower5 жыл бұрын
How many factory employee's were so proud of their manufacturing jobs in this era.
@danielheckmann48985 жыл бұрын
These equipment is an good example for simple and ruggit technology. Easy maintanace Easy to repair Good dependabilaty Thanks for upload 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻😊😊😊 Best wishes 😎😎😎
@stanleybaker34005 жыл бұрын
It is amazing how much farming has changed through the years from man hoarse to mecinize machines to computer operating units☺
@duckslayer925 жыл бұрын
I have a gleaner E, just got a Oliver 7600 so it's second string now but was my main machine on 10 acres for 7 years. Loved it just doesn't have the capacity I need for 60bu beans. But they were right 50 years later there she sits!!
@SteveHolsten5 жыл бұрын
When I came along in 1960; I remember my Grandpa having an "F" Gleaner. I loved riding with him on it & playing on it.
@bdnmb68223 жыл бұрын
Allis had some great promo videos. Started out like an old western. Wouldn’t a been surprised if John Wayne had a rode in.
@nikerailfanningttm90463 жыл бұрын
GLEANER: "ALL THE WAY FOR USA"
@J-14105 жыл бұрын
They weren't that far off with their "future machine"
@BenWinborn2 жыл бұрын
Man let me tell y’all what I found if y’all got Facebook you would wanna see what I found I found an original 1968 gleaner combine and bought it it was parked in a barn
@JandLVideos2 жыл бұрын
Sweet! Love to see that!
@BenWinborn2 жыл бұрын
Add me on Facebook my name is the same on Facebook I’ll send y’all some pics of it and some videos once I take delivery
@keithmartin78315 жыл бұрын
Z Not trying to be too critical but unless this was an Allis Chalmers promo. You spent too much time in the factory with tolerances etc just like they do. If it's an Allis promo they should've made the factory part shorter lol
@SilverGleaner4 жыл бұрын
it is of course an Allis Chalmers promotional video.
@lukestrawwalker3 жыл бұрын
Back in those days, people cared about what was "under the hood" and they demanded quality. SO showing how they were built, the machinery and techniques used, was very impressive to that generation. Nowadays most people don't know how it works and don't care. Course we have a throwaway society too; back then people DEMANDED stuff they were spending their hard-earned money on to be built to last... if it wasn't they'd buy something else. "Cheap junk" came from Japan and was fine for a 25 cent pocketknife, but for high dollar purchases, most folks demanded QUALITY. A few years back, I was at the county fair in Indiana and they had a new Ford CUV thing (like a station wagon but not, can't recall what it was called) and I looked it over and was talking to the salesman to find out more about it. He told me all about the stupid wifi hotspot and all the "accessibility" and stuff and how it could connect to "all your devices" and all this Gen Z and Millennial rubbish, and I kept asking questions about what kind of engine and transmission it had, stuff like that. He kept talking past me about all the electronic gibberish. I kept asking about the performance and engine and transmission and mileage and stuff like that. After going around the mulberry bush a time or two like that, I kept asking him straight out about the mechanicals, and he couldn't answer-- the salesman didn't even know! All Ford had trained them on was all this electronic rubbish. I told him outright, "I buy a vehicle to get from point A to B, not to be a mobile entertainment center..." He just stared at me like I beamed down from Mars... Go figure! Different time, different priorities... Later! OL J R :)