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Trying to identify a loader
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Posted by Zonie on November 25, 2001 at 18:56:01 from (205.188.193.166):
I'm tyring to identify a trip bucket loader that I'm looking at for possable purchase. The loader may have been painted red at one time but it's really hard to tell for sure. It has a chain drive hydraulic pump inside a rectangular hydraulic tank. The chain drive runs off the pto. The system uses 90 wt gear oil as per the only tag I could find on anything. The trip bucket is very heavy duty, much heavy dutier than most trip buckets I've seen. It has 1"x1" solid steel ribs about every 6" or so around the out side curve of the bucket. The loader arms are straight (will fit a narrow front end only)and are 2 pieces of 2"x3" angle iron welded together. They appear to mount to the rear end housing in some manner. The hydraulic cylinders are one way only and very heavy duty. 3" with about 2" piston shaft. The cylinders mount to plates that look as tho they shold mount to the side of the clutch housing, I think, with a 2" solid steel shaft that goes under the belly. This loader came off of a 1940's(?) cockshutt tractor that came from North Dakota. I'm sorry about the long discription, I took my digital camera with and it just refused to take any pictures! It worked fine after I got home! The farmer wanted $150 for it and it looks complete except for the mounts that go to the rear end.
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History of the Cockshutt Tractor - by Danny Bowes (Dsl). The son of a very successful Toronto and Brantford, Ontario merchant, and himself quite an entreprenuer, James G. Cockshutt opened a business called the Brantford Plow Works in 1877. In 1882, the business was incorporated to become the Cockshutt Plow Company. Along with quality built equipment, expedious demand and expansion made Cockshutt Plow Works the leader in the tillage tools sector of the farm equipment industry by the 1920's.
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