John Deere Built This Garden Tractor For The Navy! - 1970 Model 140

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 30. 07. 2024
  • Patrick Whalen shares the story on his unique John Deere Model 140 which was commissioned foer and used by the United States Navy. Copyright 2015
    Don't forget to watch us on RFD-TV!
    classictractorstv.com/watch
    Visit Our Website: classictractorstv.com/
    Join our email list: classictractorstv.com/join-ou...
    Follow us on Facebook: / classictractorfever
    Follow us on Instagram: / classic_tractor_fever_tv
    Follow us on Pinterest: / pins
    Brought to you in part by Aumann Vintage Power. Visit www.aumannvintagepower.com/ today to see upcoming tractors auctions and see auction prices! #classictractor #tractor #classictractorfever #classictractorstv #aumannvintagepower #aumannauctions #tractorauction #agriculture #farming #farmlife #farmmachinery #tractorvideo #theclassictractorlife #tractorrebuild #tractorrepair #enginerepair #enginerebuild #cultivating #fieldwork #tractors

Komentáře • 56

  • @tractorhyatt7044
    @tractorhyatt7044 Před 4 lety +14

    Now that’s pretty cool. Thank you JD 140 for your service to our country! Thanks for sharing, CTF! 🇺🇸🚜👍

  • @larryhutchens7593
    @larryhutchens7593 Před 4 lety +21

    I served on a carrier during Vietnam, released from active in 70 when this unit was built. Couple of problems w/ using this on a carrier 1) not heavy enough to move an aircraft around. Tugs on the carrier are extremely heavy & are made of 1/2 & 3/4" plate steel.2). Fuel would be a problem. They only have JP (jet propulsion) fuel & high octane aircraft fuel available (115-145 AV gas) for the piston driven aircraft. 69 & 70 the navy was using a combination tug, GPU (ground power unit, for electricity), & a huffer (compressed air to start engines). All 3 units were in one vehicle & they ran on JP-5 which is nearly identical to kerosene & will burn just fine in a diesel engine. The turbine engine used as a huffer ran on JP also. I doubt that the little John Deere could be used for much of anything on a carrier deck. Too light to tow anything on a slick & pitching flight deck. On an NAS (Naval Air Station) they could have used it for a number of things. We had tugs that used a slant 6 for power, trailers that could be towed by a tug, a flat bed van like thing (feature an old 60s era Dodge van w/ everything cut off but the dash & 1 seat for the driver. Had a slant 6 & auto trans that was locked in 1st gear so that it wouldn't go very fast. The trailers & the flat bed van were used to haul wheel chocks, drop tanks, rocket launchers, MERs (multiple ejector racks, for hauling bombs), and an assortment of other items used on the flight line. The little JD could do that just fine. Seriously doubt that it saw any duty on a carrier but could have happened.

  • @danw6014
    @danw6014 Před 4 lety +18

    I mow my lawn with my mighty 110 John Deere. 46 years old and still cutting.

    • @carterbowe9964
      @carterbowe9964 Před 4 lety +1

      Same

    • @SoybeanFarmer3300
      @SoybeanFarmer3300 Před 4 lety +2

      Dan W - still using my White Outdoor Products GT-1810 built 1987. running now on its 3rd motor but that old heavy frame is still good. yep, kept that older well built John Deere of yours on the job.

    • @AlejandroP1980s
      @AlejandroP1980s Před 3 lety

      @@SoybeanFarmer3300 the new john Deere sucks plastic and parts made in China

  • @sallybrown1459
    @sallybrown1459 Před 4 lety +4

    A friend of ours went to the ARMY after high school. Spent his 3yrs mowing yards and a golf course at a Military Retirement community.

  • @interman7715
    @interman7715 Před 4 lety +4

    I wish someone made solid little tractors like this now .

  • @chevyfan82
    @chevyfan82 Před 4 lety +11

    I was lucky enough a few years back to get one of John Deere's first lawn tractors the 110 series that came out in 1963 mine is number 37 off the line of 1001 made.

  • @ebenwaterman5858
    @ebenwaterman5858 Před 4 lety +5

    Wow! Another fine video of a lawn tractor driving around. Don't waste our time with any technical stuff.

  • @ikonseesmrno7300
    @ikonseesmrno7300 Před 4 lety +2

    Worked for the Navy & retired to Florida. Sounds like a good life to me! Great video!

  • @PABackyardRevivals
    @PABackyardRevivals Před 3 lety +2

    Imagine just taking a diving trip and finding a 140 in the ocean

  • @earthbreaker
    @earthbreaker Před 3 lety +4

    When my father was in the navy in those days.. They would have a wheel horse, a deere, or any tractor that had hydraulics.. They had pintle hitches on all of them, so they could be locked in place in the belly of the ship so it would not slide around in rough seas, some having duals so they can't roll over. The hydraulics of these tractors were the main purpose they were on board a navy carrier.. If the deck elevator system went down or was bombed.. They could connect the garden tractor and hydraulic oil caddy tank to a secondary system and still raise and lower planes on the elevator. My dad also said they could sometimes have up to 4-5 of these little tractors on board as backups. End of war, many were shoved off the deck and no longer needed. Sometimes on a ship you could have a deere, a case, and several other brands onboard... Whatever was available.

  • @RoadRunnergarage8570
    @RoadRunnergarage8570 Před 4 lety +1

    I bet this is a very rare and scarce JD Lawn And Garden piece...

  • @leejohn8993
    @leejohn8993 Před 4 lety +6

    I also was on a carrier for 4 years and I can see no way that would work.

  • @jefftanksley8823
    @jefftanksley8823 Před 2 lety

    That's really nice tractor

  • @TravelAgentCale
    @TravelAgentCale Před 4 lety +1

    She sure is a beauty!

  • @NatureRecycleFlorida
    @NatureRecycleFlorida Před 4 lety +1

    cool

  • @stefanocarletti1201
    @stefanocarletti1201 Před 4 lety +1

    Bello 👍

  • @bextar6365
    @bextar6365 Před 4 lety +6

    Doubt if the original seat looked like that modern JD yellow seat ?

    • @MichaelTJD60
      @MichaelTJD60 Před 4 lety +2

      That early-style cushion is correct for a 140, I doubt Deere would have produced a unique seat for Navy tractors.

  • @KubotaManDan
    @KubotaManDan Před 4 lety

    nice

  • @johnpyle8027
    @johnpyle8027 Před 4 lety +1

    I bought a John Deere 430 with the 3 cylinder Yanmar Diesel about a year ago. I started restoring it right away and finding parts was a challenge, But I am at the end. It was missing the rear PTO and 3 point hitch. It is sitting on jack stands waiting for the wheels to get back from powder coat and new tires and then its done. I have the fever now, not sure what I started...

    • @liam3044
      @liam3044 Před 3 lety

      I caught mine with my John deer gn. It's not running yet but only 1500 we're made so it's worth it.

  • @Alex-uy7pc
    @Alex-uy7pc Před 4 lety

    Years ago I watched the WW2 in color series, i saw a very interesting half front end loader(engine half) and front made of tubular steel vehicle designed to lift planes on a aircraft carrier. If there's any chance of catching a glimpse of one of these its on those archival films.
    But, I don't believe I've ever seen then bottom deck on an old WW2 carrier in any of the clips that have been published, and I'm thinking that's where they'd be

  • @davewilson6451
    @davewilson6451 Před 4 lety

    Dual wheels should make it pretty stable moving on a hill. Nice looking unit.

  • @CarlJohnson-ry3gc
    @CarlJohnson-ry3gc Před 4 lety +5

    I have a JD 420 with a navy tag. I think 126 were made.

  • @evanstauffer4470
    @evanstauffer4470 Před 8 dny

    I retired as a civilian after 35 years working for the Naval Facilities Engineering Command. I have minimal knowledge of carrier ops, but as a professional engineer their use on a carrier to tow aircraft makes no sense whatsoever - they only have rear wheel brakes and not nearly enough weight to control a combat aircraft on a pitching carrier deck. I have seen them used at Navy and Marine Corps Reserve centers for lawn mowing and snow removal, however.

  • @mad-mason0319
    @mad-mason0319 Před 2 lety +1

    retired?? its just getting started. he did a full perfect resto on it. it should be good for 3 more generations at least. if taken car of. which it most likely will be considering how rare it is.

  • @bobbiespriggs3126
    @bobbiespriggs3126 Před 2 lety +1

    Can you tell me when I live in Oklahoma

  • @1teddy1979
    @1teddy1979 Před 4 lety +5

    So it was an airplane tug onboard an aircraft carrier?

    • @higuy4881
      @higuy4881 Před 4 lety +3

      Most likely, that or moving missiles and other supplies for airplanes to get to quick maintenance for them

  • @jbj27406
    @jbj27406 Před 4 lety +5

    With that pintle hitch and dual rear wheels, it probably was a tug of SOME type. Good looker.

    • @ryanroberts1104
      @ryanroberts1104 Před 4 lety +2

      It's not a tug. They had tugs for that, and that would be significantly over any JD tow rating. If this thing was pulling around anything cool like a fighter jet, this guy would be trying to brag about it! Boy our military would be sad if we could build multi million dollar jets but had to tow them with a sub thousand dollar "garden tractor". Even the USSR wasn't that pathetic.

    • @corbinmurphy4708
      @corbinmurphy4708 Před 4 lety +1

      jbj27406 actually it was indeed used as a tug.

    • @ryanroberts1104
      @ryanroberts1104 Před 4 lety +3

      @@corbinmurphy4708 You have no evidence what so ever to support that. Just because it has a pintle hitch does not mean it was ever a tug. The Americans invented fighter jets, and aircraft carriers, do you think they just said "let's pull all this multi million dollar stuff around with a lawnmower!". NO. They had purpose built tugs for this. Devices called "tugs", not "lawn tractors". It would be incredibly stupid to try and haul around a big plane with that, it is too light and could never provide sufficient braking. This is why a real tug is many thousands of pounds.
      This owner obviously thinks he is an expert in this tractor even though he knows very little...if they were using this device to move around something cool like jets you can bet he would have been bragging about it!

    • @SchnelleKat
      @SchnelleKat Před 4 lety +3

      @@ryanroberts1104 Nobody cares about your "Expert" opinions.

    • @ryanroberts1104
      @ryanroberts1104 Před 4 lety +2

      @@SchnelleKat My opinion is every bit as important, and a lot more correct than a lot of morons posting here. Nobody cares what you think, you aren't even a part of this discussion. If anybody can provide even the most remote evidence of these being used as a tug I would LOVE to see it. They were not. "It has a pintle hitch and it was on an aircraft carrier, so it must be a tug" is a stupid conclusion to make. Obviously many here don't understand what a tug needs to be capable of doing - things that a light weight garden tractor cannot possibly do.

  • @adrianvaldez1951
    @adrianvaldez1951 Před 2 lety

    Im one of them

  • @leejohn8993
    @leejohn8993 Před 4 lety

    I could see it used to pull a 3gang reel mower at Jack's navel base.

  • @trulysurprised-bk7cy
    @trulysurprised-bk7cy Před 4 lety

    I bet they never saw service....

  • @bobbiespriggs3126
    @bobbiespriggs3126 Před 2 lety

    If you want you can sell it across the Atlantic Ocean but do you know what is sinks

  • @bobbiespriggs3126
    @bobbiespriggs3126 Před 2 lety

    Power kings better and sicker

  • @ryanroberts1104
    @ryanroberts1104 Před 4 lety +4

    What the hell would they have needed that for on an aircraft carrier?! It's obviously not a tug...and I'm pretty sure they don't grow grass on the boat. If they just wanted a mule to ride around on there are also better choices. This guy seems to think he's an expert but actually has no idea what this was used for...

    • @corbinmurphy4708
      @corbinmurphy4708 Před 4 lety +1

      Ryan Roberts they actually were used as tugs. The 140s actually had quiet a bit of pulling power and would have done just fine pulling smaller aircrafts. The 140 isn’t just a mower it’s a true tractor.

    • @ryanroberts1104
      @ryanroberts1104 Před 4 lety +2

      @@corbinmurphy4708 It's a "garden tractor". It simply does not weigh enough to move aircraft safely. Small tugs were usually smaller but still full farm sized tractors with multi cylinder engines and extra weights, like Ford 9n size. Otherwise they had specially built small and larger size tugs. Again they are meant to be very, very heavy with strong brakes. They have to be the brakes for the aircraft and they have to hold it if there is a gust of wind. A 140 can't do that with any military plane unless they keep little Cessnas on the aircraft carrier. It's simple weight and physics, the 140 is too small, and too cheap. They didn't buy "garden tractors" with an extra wheel bolted on when they could afford a fleet of custom built vehicles for the task...which the ship was equipped with.

  • @wesbrackmanthercenthusiast4695

    Back when jd made a good product I'm jealous my D 110 only lasted 100 hours doing work

    • @Ethan-ck6iz
      @Ethan-ck6iz Před 4 lety +2

      Probably couldn't buy a 140 from Lowes though... If you want a quality John Deere mower you got to buy an X300 at least

    • @wesbrackmanthercenthusiast4695
      @wesbrackmanthercenthusiast4695 Před 4 lety

      @@Ethan-ck6iz don't worry I got a 5400 for about a month now great decision