2021 RECORD! 150 CASE Road Locomotive pulling 44 bottom John Deere plow

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  • čas přidán 10. 09. 2021
  • Watch the 150 Case pull 44 bottom John Deere plows at the James Valley Threshing Show in Andover, South Dakota! This is a new record for this engine with 36 bottoms being plowed in 2020. We are so excited to share some footage!
    Learn more about the 150 Case at www.150Case.com

Komentáře • 5K

  • @nathanskroch3605
    @nathanskroch3605 Před 3 měsíci +96

    The fact that this is called a “road locomotive” and not a “tractor” says enough by itself lol. What a beast.

  • @silver7788
    @silver7788 Před 2 lety +861

    Meanwhile John Deere: we can't allow random farmers do any repairs of our products they are not smart enough to do that

    • @aidenp265
      @aidenp265 Před rokem +50

      Yeah that’s because John deere needed to make their tractors crappier, had they stuck to their original best-sellers, like the B, D, L, and many others, farmers could fix anything on them.

    • @NunyaFB443
      @NunyaFB443 Před rokem

      They europeanised their brand. Make everything with planned obsolescence so the dealers can make money on repairs.

    • @megaaggron9778
      @megaaggron9778 Před rokem +36

      If they can fix it then let em’ fix it. If they can’t they’ll bring it to your dealership. You ain’t Ferrari, deere.

    • @user-lf4yg6wb7m
      @user-lf4yg6wb7m Před 11 měsíci +5

      А современные трактора 26 плугов могут тащить так не пренужденно?

    • @azeemaminiqbal
      @azeemaminiqbal Před 11 měsíci

      Isn't joke

  • @WTmac1993
    @WTmac1993 Před 9 měsíci +193

    The 150 Case will forever assert its dominance over every other agricultural machine ever produced, and it does so in a perfectly dirty but also beautifully elegant way. This machine puts a whole new spin on the phrase "They sure dont make em like they used to"

    • @frostedbutts4340
      @frostedbutts4340 Před 7 měsíci +9

      This bad boy was built in 2018.. so sometimes they do!

    • @jondor654
      @jondor654 Před 5 měsíci +1

      What a super project. Could it be an instance of back to the features.

    • @Fantastika
      @Fantastika Před 3 měsíci +4

      they make them better. Theres a reason noone uses steam engines for anything

    • @rampage3337
      @rampage3337 Před 3 měsíci +1

      they ain't ploughing that deep and the power ain't really that impressive here. the impressive part is just traction but even that ain't that impresive due to the good ground and the heavy weight of the machine

    • @danroberts9050
      @danroberts9050 Před 2 měsíci +3

      Yeah, I just drove my Mahindra into the pond.

  • @chadcleary7821
    @chadcleary7821 Před rokem +220

    The average person cannot possibly appreciate the brute strength on display. That steam beast could pull the gates of hell off its hinges without a stutter!

    • @goferlp7011
      @goferlp7011 Před 8 měsíci +12

      It's 11k Nm.
      That is insane It's the power of 4 semi trucks.
      Like 4 Scania V8 540.

    • @user-hs8qj2fi9y
      @user-hs8qj2fi9y Před 3 měsíci +1

      What is piston diameter and stroke plus steam pressure please?

    • @All4mula
      @All4mula Před 3 měsíci +3

      I must be above average

  • @hurricane8597
    @hurricane8597 Před rokem +448

    I have no idea why but I absolutely love the sound that a steam engine makes! There is something magical about seeing this iron monster just mosey along effortlessly.

    • @petebraven1522
      @petebraven1522 Před rokem +7

      I think this must have been where the term 'grunt' first applied to any machine.

    • @JazzKazoo0930
      @JazzKazoo0930 Před rokem +13

      It moves slow, but it'll never, ever slow down

    • @timwerner7771
      @timwerner7771 Před 8 měsíci +1

      To me it sounds like a very large animal panting

    • @voodoobooty4645
      @voodoobooty4645 Před 7 měsíci +3

      Like a 50 ft plow wasnt there! Truely a marvel of machics! Im smitten!

  • @tioswift3676
    @tioswift3676 Před 2 lety +1870

    I’m not a tractor guy, but the sheer size and power of this engine along with the old-time engineering put into it, it’s hard not to love it!

    • @randomuser4201
      @randomuser4201 Před 2 lety +19

      Its probably tame in its power compared to modern standards

    • @KeyserSozex
      @KeyserSozex Před 2 lety +17

      If you admire this engineering wait until you taste the engineering that's been put in the food! It's a shame how much waste... I mean food that comes from that marvelous machine. Never would have thought that I'd see the time when the "breadbasket" of world accepts a corporate mandate forcing Farmers to sow bad seed!
      #WakeupAmerica. 😴

    • @akulkis
      @akulkis Před 2 lety +22

      Steam Power is way underrated

    • @akulkis
      @akulkis Před 2 lety +16

      @@randomuser4201
      A 2 cylinder steam engine is much more powerful than a 4-stroke engine with the same displacement. Typically equivalent to an 8-cylinder 4-stroke, and with far, far better torque at low speeds all the way down to 0 RPM, whereas 4-stroke engines can barely operate below 1000 rpm without stalling dead, whereupon the 4-stroker immediately produces zero torque, whereas the steam engine can continue to produce torque all the way down to 0 RPM or even being forced into reverse.

    • @akulkis
      @akulkis Před 2 lety +7

      @Scott Crawford
      Modern water tube boilers don't have those safety and catastrophic failure or issues (which are inherent in the "fire tube" boiler design).

  • @upat3am35
    @upat3am35 Před rokem +11

    I bet you this fellow has never seen a gym in his life! Straight farmer built 💯

  • @joshpeach4053
    @joshpeach4053 Před rokem +90

    The sound of the exhaust at 10:18 while the camera is traveling back up the plow is a sound I can listen to repeatedly! There is no better sound than a steam tractor locomotive under a heavy load at work! Thank you Cory for the work to bring one of these alive. If you make it back to Kansas I’ll be there to see this

  • @bruceraykiewicz6274
    @bruceraykiewicz6274 Před 2 lety +734

    As an old 'live steamer' I want to thank everyone that made this event happen. To hear that baby talking as she pulled all those plows, brought tears to my old eyes. Thank you one and all.

    • @jessewoody5772
      @jessewoody5772 Před 2 lety +16

      Bruce, AMERICAN PRIDE RIGHT THERE !
      🇺🇸

    • @audunms4780
      @audunms4780 Před 2 lety +16

      @@jessewoody5772 Workmans pride!

    • @kennethmelnychuk9737
      @kennethmelnychuk9737 Před 2 lety +3

      You must have been a kid when you were running those machines

    • @longrider42
      @longrider42 Před 2 lety +5

      Yep, she's in fine voice! I learned about steam engines and tractors from my Uncle. I wish he was still alive to see this. Well maybe you can ;)

    • @repentoryouwilllikewiseper8741
      @repentoryouwilllikewiseper8741 Před 2 lety +6

      Repent to Jesus Christ
      “Gracious words are a honeycomb, sweet to the soul and healing to the bones.”
      ‭‭Proverbs‬ ‭16:24‬ ‭NIV‬‬
      F

  • @leokimvideo
    @leokimvideo Před 2 lety +2755

    Thats not the Road Locomotive moving, thats the earth spinning underneath.

    • @arielkozak
      @arielkozak Před 2 lety +15

      Both

    • @user-kr8mi1po8d
      @user-kr8mi1po8d Před 2 lety +14

      The earth is not spinning at all

    • @IgorMokrushin
      @IgorMokrushin Před 2 lety +37

      @@user-kr8mi1po8d Earth is flat

    • @user-kr8mi1po8d
      @user-kr8mi1po8d Před 2 lety +2

      @@IgorMokrushin maybe

    • @rwelebny1
      @rwelebny1 Před 2 lety +157

      @@IgorMokrushin If the Earth was really flat, cats would have knocked everything off of it by now.

  • @dustbowlhammer7119
    @dustbowlhammer7119 Před 9 měsíci +19

    A part of America that I love, you have community, and heavy equipment. Tradition and history all in one place. Reminiscent of those days long ago, just beautiful! It's not hard to imagine this scene looking the same in early 1900s.

  • @petebraven1522
    @petebraven1522 Před rokem +56

    I've seen a few steam traction engines, but this is insane! Makes a sort of music of its own and makes newer machines sound puny, a sort of effortless grunt, I absolutely love it! 👍😍😁

  • @cunard61
    @cunard61 Před rokem +273

    I used to go to the Steam Show in Barlow Ohio as a kid back in the 70's. There were nearly a dozen different models of the Case Traction steam engines there. It was amazing to see these survivors from a by-gone era still doing the jobs they did nearly 100 years before. I remember a hay baler that was operated at the show and it produced the heaviest bales of hay or straw I've ever seen, they weighed well over 100 pounds. The steam press on the baler applied so much pressure, it actually compacted the hay into a bale that was so dense you could hardly move it. Such truly amazing machines with really intricate gearing that produced incredible amounts of torque. They got the job done. Great to see you're keeping this rare piece of America's past alive.

    • @davidwoermansr
      @davidwoermansr Před rokem +3

      Mc Louth KS show is a big show they have steam engines of all sizes switch off dutys on saw mills thrashers balers everything we use to go every year as I was growing up we'd haul a family friend's 2 Rumley oil pull tractors up while they hauled their show and stock pulling tractors they had a nice collection of Minneapolis Moline tractors and depending on the ones they tools they could get their 7 pulling tractors on 1 semi and 5 to 7 show tractors on the other depending on if they took a big boy or not 4 generations pulled back when they'd let dad walk beside the tractor or ride on the fender while a 10 year old could pull the sled they had a 50 ft by 20 full of antique tractors mostly M,M,s a few Farmall and Deere and an 80 by 20 of projects with a fence row of parts tractors almost a quarter mile in the back and some set along the highway right of way for yard art and they still save as many as they can I always tell my buddy the family concrete and demolition buissnes is their hobby and tractors are their job he says sounds about right he has no idea how many tractors they own but at 1 point they had almost 40 restored and for sale

    • @davidwoermansr
      @davidwoermansr Před rokem +2

      @Scott Crawford a little town called McLouth just west of KC not far from the agricultural museum I can't remember for sure I think thats in Bonner Springs it's been awhile since I've been to the museum they called it the agricultural hall of fame it's a neat place to spend a day walking around seeing the progression of farming I didn't know there was almost 100 different styles of barbwire since it's invention till what's used now till my first time there and it's either the first or second weekend of August I believe if you Google the town it's the main attraction for a small town they have acreage probably bigger than the town itself for the show and a farmer let's them use his wheat field for parking I think that's where they get the wheat to thrash all weekend it's been 5 years since I was last able to go I told my Dr I was putting of this year's surgery till after the show soon they'll run out of vertebra to hook together with their scrap iron pile maybe the blacksmith can fix me up at the show

    • @davidwoermansr
      @davidwoermansr Před rokem +2

      @Schiefe Ebene get the blueprints and most of it's a little blacksmith work and plumbing or you could cheat and weld instead of rivet it together gears pistons and a flywheel and a KS farmer and his son who was running it for the video built it while he was growing up so he knows every inch of it now I'm sure his kids will too growing up helping with maintenance and repairs on it I can't remember the cost I was in my teens when I got the grand tour and they gave the hrs it took over the years and cost but most things were salvaged from other steam engines but it wasn't crazy expensive according to my dad

    • @davidwoermansr
      @davidwoermansr Před rokem +1

      @Scott Crawford I'm glad my kids all got into getting their hands dirty we've never taken on a steam engine but we've restored plenty of old farm equipment and have a couple tractors each we still all do our gardens with we all have very large gardens mine's the smallest now at roughly 5 acres I use a Farmall M and Ford 8N we all do snow removal too with our old loader tractors and rear mounted blades then we got an old little bobcat that the bucket is a little narrower than a sidewalk I believe 2 ft wide we built a sidewalk V-plow for it quick work of a sidewalk and not much to shovel those old tractors sure make you appreciate the comforts we have in our tractors now days

    • @davidwoermansr
      @davidwoermansr Před rokem +3

      @Schiefe Ebene farmers that don't raise livestock have free time in winter unless they broke alot of equipment during the year if it wasn't for me having 7 kids in and out of the shop we wouldn't because my welding shop is pretty busy fixing the neighbors around us stuff as well as our own and that's when all the racecar engines come in the mechanic shop my dad still gets out on nice days and thinkers around on the antique tractors my brother and sister come over every weekend to help and we have 1 full time guy doing fabrication and welding and a high school kid part time a few hrs after school I hope he wants to go full time after graduating next year if he doesn't go to tech school or college 16 he's a good welder and seems to enjoy it I like having him around and poor kid needs to have some guys around more single mom and 3 sisters I have to keep reminding him in the shop he doesn't have to put the seat down he gets a kick out of it when we tell him that

  • @danw1955
    @danw1955 Před 2 lety +719

    The amount of power being produced by this *SINGLE CYLINDER* steam engine is phenomenal!! This is the result of 180 lbs. of steam pressure acting on a double-sided 14 inch piston with a 14 inch stroke. 2 speeds forward... slow and slower! (actually about 5.7 mph. in high gear, and 2.6 mph. in low) That said, with the amount of gearing, it produces over 8000 ft. lbs. of torque at the wheels! This is the equivalent output of 8 - 2021 Dodge/Cummins turbo diesels running at full power @ 1800 rpm.!! This tractor does this at 200 rpm. at crank speed and probably with quite a bit less noise.😁👍

    • @Pattyboytheking
      @Pattyboytheking Před 2 lety +37

      Thanks for the information!! Much appreciated.!!!

    • @asbestosfiber
      @asbestosfiber Před 2 lety +9

      compare that to some of the early fuel tractors at 50 or less Hp.

    • @EETechs
      @EETechs Před 2 lety +30

      The 2021 Cummins has way more power. This case is only 150 HP and of course with hydraulic drive or low gearing, the 2021 Cummins wins against the steam engine in this Case tractor for pulling too. Gearing and hydraulics can change torque in the formula, power = torque*RPM. SO many people seem to forget that.

    • @Richard-et3cl
      @Richard-et3cl Před 2 lety +62

      @@EETechs nah, old is gold keep that modern garbage away from me.

    • @EETechs
      @EETechs Před 2 lety +22

      @@Richard-et3cl Blame that on the government mandating that all diesels require that DEF fluid crap and all the electronics that goes with it. Nothing I can do about that. That's politicians being idiots. :(

  • @rogerhk5531
    @rogerhk5531 Před rokem +76

    Watched this with tears in my eyes. Brought back childhood memories of horses and steam engines in the area during the early years of growing up on the farm. Only steam engine that operated on our farm was on the threshing machine when it was our turn at harvest. Horses pulled the binder, bundle wagons and grain wagons. Thanks for the memory.

    • @myview1875
      @myview1875 Před rokem +8

      It will all come full circle when the world falls apart. 😀.

    • @austinkesler4493
      @austinkesler4493 Před rokem +2

      How old are you if you don’t mind me asking?

    • @vanadiumV
      @vanadiumV Před rokem +1

      me too
      im 40 yo

    • @rogerhk5531
      @rogerhk5531 Před rokem +6

      Just about to hit 80.

    • @Croiseeman
      @Croiseeman Před 9 měsíci +1

      Growing up in Trinidad we had steam rollers. That rolled the asphalt on the roads.

  • @timcecil4579
    @timcecil4579 Před rokem +16

    Growing up with John Deere tractors and the distinctive sound made by them in the day it really makes you appreciate steam and the power that puts out. The torque is off the charts and that sound can be felt as it spins the earth.

  • @29brendus
    @29brendus Před 2 lety +207

    After traveling the world, I don't think I've ever seen anything quite like this. Could plow the whole of Ireland in an afternoon, and heat a few houses as well! Magnificent.

    • @robt3407
      @robt3407 Před 2 lety +19

      And give Greta Thurnberg a well earned fainting spell.

    • @audunms4780
      @audunms4780 Před 2 lety +8

      @@robt3407 shut up, she dont have nothin do do with this.

    • @bobbybass8505
      @bobbybass8505 Před 2 lety +18

      @@audunms4780 triggered

    • @audunms4780
      @audunms4780 Před 2 lety +6

      @@bobbybass8505 HA HA HA ha hA Ha hha, dud 2016 called and want you impaled on a spike ivan style. You are injecting politics into a video honoring the labor of american workers of the curent and previous century. But If im gonna get political. THAT TRACTOR IS NOTHING NOTHING! SOON WE WILL HAWE TRACTORS POVERD BY THE INFERNAL FURNACE OF THE BLODY SUN! YOUR COAL POWERED TRACTOR IS NOTHING NOTHING, WHENCE THE STARLIGHT OF OUR CLOSEST DARLING DANCES UPON THE FIELD, OUR INDUSTRIAL MIGHT WILL ARIZE OUR TRACTORS TURNING THE SOIL POWERED BY PANES OF GLASSSS AND SILICON THE ELECTRIC ERA HAS ARIVED AND ITS GOD IS SHINING EVERMORE! NUKLEAR POWER IS MEARLY A MOCCERY OF THE NATURAL ATOM BOMB THAT IS OUR SON: THE SUN THE SUN THE LONGSHINING SUN THESUN SINGS THE SUN THE SUN THE SUN!!!!

    • @bobbybass8505
      @bobbybass8505 Před 2 lety +13

      @@audunms4780 you need a psych Visit

  • @bradjohnson9671
    @bradjohnson9671 Před 2 lety +225

    Man oh man, what a BEAST. I never thought I'd ever hear a big engine like that on full chat. Definitely talking to the crowd. What a fantastic tribute to years gone by.

    • @DG-kr8pt
      @DG-kr8pt Před 2 lety +1

      the tractors not bad either

    • @alsaunders7805
      @alsaunders7805 Před 2 lety +1

      Do they make a diesel that can do that much work? 🤔🍻

    • @myparceltape1169
      @myparceltape1169 Před 2 lety

      Far bigger than any I have seen working.

    • @Geezerelli
      @Geezerelli Před rokem

      That black soil looks Ukrainian.

  • @WastedElephant
    @WastedElephant Před 7 měsíci +11

    Look how flat and smooth that field is. No lumps or nothin. They been workin that field skillfully for decades

  • @HouseholdDog
    @HouseholdDog Před 20 dny +1

    Just got this on reccomended.
    She's an absolute beauty.
    Amazed at the power.
    Thanks to everyone who keeps this thing running.

  • @kfiscal01
    @kfiscal01 Před 2 lety +166

    Originally built in 1905, turn of the century. Could not imagine such a beast rolling over a rise in a field for the first time. It, and others changed the landscape forever. Could totally see this in a grand scale movie.

    • @jamesb7651
      @jamesb7651 Před rokem +4

      The horses would scatter !!

    • @outinthesticks1035
      @outinthesticks1035 Před rokem +8

      In my area mostly they were used to power threshing machines ( not sure if there was ever a thresher built big enough for this tractor ) but I remember him talking about seeing the threshing crew moving down the road, tractor first , pulling the threshing machine , coal tender next , half dozen bunk houses hooked behind , cook shack last . All hooked together, followed by all the teams with stook wagons , and the spare horses in back . Must have been a heck of a sight for a kid

    • @lanesaarloos281
      @lanesaarloos281 Před rokem

      It's made of so many little bits and pieces..1905 technology at its best.
      Now there're making Starship rockets the goal being Mars.

  • @eliaspeter7689
    @eliaspeter7689 Před 2 lety +615

    It must have been so weird to live in the era when these were first invented, it was such a huge change from animals to machines, must have been very peculiar.

    • @kebertxela941
      @kebertxela941 Před 2 lety +70

      There is an interview on here with an old Irish farmer from the 1850s and he says mechanization was the biggest change in his whole life.

    • @350mack
      @350mack Před 2 lety +8

      @@kebertxela941 not for the better either

    • @Ritalie
      @Ritalie Před 2 lety +26

      Imagine the shift when the entire electrical grid is disassembled, and we look back and wonder why people had 13,000 volt wires running right next to their home. We are living in the most barbaric times. I suppose people don't appreciate the modern inventions when they arrive. It's not until you look back on things 50 years later and wonder how you ever lived without it.

    • @TheHamburgler123
      @TheHamburgler123 Před 2 lety +64

      @@350mack I mean it is for the billions of people that have been able to live because of bounty provided by industrial agriculture...

    • @etch3130
      @etch3130 Před 2 lety +33

      @@350mack Yep. Leaving the oceans was where we went wrong.

  • @cypherpunk6417
    @cypherpunk6417 Před 6 měsíci +2

    I watched this with an involuntary smile on my face the whole time, even sort of bobbing my head to the beat of the steam. I used to live in Pittsburgh, PA as a child and my parents brought me to steam engine shows. Such wonderful times and memories. Now that I'm older and I understand what these are and what they mean, it's even more special.

  • @Humidor-zl3oe
    @Humidor-zl3oe Před 10 měsíci

    Watching that engine and all those people working together made me cry! I can't explain why? Seeing something old giving all for us all, is a special moment I will not forget. Well operated young man, you got the caress she responded accordingly!

  • @surreal_g420
    @surreal_g420 Před 2 lety +302

    I can't appreciate the engineering enough on these things. Truly world changing

    • @thehardman9379
      @thehardman9379 Před 2 lety +5

      So world changing they didnt even make 10 😂😂

    • @jcksnghst
      @jcksnghst Před 2 lety

      @@thehardman9379 well said.

    • @tobichallanger9626
      @tobichallanger9626 Před 2 lety +8

      @@thehardman9379 Of this type yes, but engines like this where pretty pretty common up until the maybe the 1920s.

    • @trey6563
      @trey6563 Před rokem +1

      @@thehardman9379 ever hear of a prototype?

    • @thehardman9379
      @thehardman9379 Před rokem +2

      @@trey6563 ever heard of candy?
      Candeez nutz hit ya in the mouth.

  • @jamesbarisitz4794
    @jamesbarisitz4794 Před rokem +16

    Coal was cheap. Water was free. Machines were changing the agriculture and the world. Awe inspiring engineering and fabrication. Thanks!

    • @jamesb7651
      @jamesb7651 Před rokem

      and, all of that carbon (smoke) filters into the soil, replacing its composition, and sustaining the planet Plus, the Plowed field grows corn/wheat/barley. etc to feed the masses. How about that for eco-friendly.

  • @bluehouse2112
    @bluehouse2112 Před rokem +6

    A brilliant video - love the continuous filming which adds so much to the constant chugg of the beautiful Case steam engine. And what a monster plow with all those good folk bearing witness to this great spectacle. Just love it!

    • @rajisg
      @rajisg Před rokem

      Yeah, have to admit this looks really nice. In my country we don't have such expansive flat (grass?) filled land, so it is pretty incredible to see that too!

  • @viacheslavrodin4370
    @viacheslavrodin4370 Před 7 měsíci +5

    Amazing steam engines! Back in 1989, fate brought me to a Siberian village remote from civilization. A very beautiful village, wooden log houses on a high ground floor made of wild stone. The entire yard is covered with a huge roof under which hay for the cows is stored. Amazingly beautiful carved frames around the windows! There, for the first time, I saw steam engines at a sawmill. In general, this village survived solely due to the forest. There is a local narrow-gauge railway around the village, which was used exclusively by steam locomotives. And on the edge of the village there were workshops in which lumber was dried and stored. Well, the heart of it all was a huge steam engine, powered by wood chips and pine branches. Driven by a long wide belt.... Nearby are pieces of rosin, which were lightly covered with the belt for better adhesion. I remembered this place for the rest of my life as a monument to a bygone era.

  • @allegrad7132
    @allegrad7132 Před 2 lety +262

    Amazing piece of machinery, even more amazing to see it in action. Insane levels of torque being put out by the steam engine.

    • @Robert-hr6sh
      @Robert-hr6sh Před 2 lety +9

      Full steam ahead! 👍

    • @johannesdatblue4164
      @johannesdatblue4164 Před rokem +5

      it was the sentinel (steam wagon). it had 70 hp at 250 rpm! thats about 2000nm of torque or about 1500ft-lb
      google it there isnt much about the car, but its interesting, btw its a 10,5l 2 cylinder lol

  • @patriciapiper6294
    @patriciapiper6294 Před rokem +50

    That CASE just chugging happily across the field.Knowing that you expertly put it back together! Pure heaven to hear. What a massive job!!!! Pulling all those many plows!!! I have tears.

    • @smrtrthnu1571
      @smrtrthnu1571 Před 7 měsíci +1

      He didn't put it back together. They actually used the original blueprints and built it brand new.

  • @thewarroom6118
    @thewarroom6118 Před rokem +4

    That’s actually pretty cool. Seeing the power of an older machine still kicking butt!

  • @rajisg
    @rajisg Před rokem +2

    The mechanical engineering in this is still exquisite! 💛 I guess back when people did engineering out of a major passion for it instead of because they wanted a certain career, those older folk truly progressed and pushed the field for all of humanity :)

  • @theoneed2051
    @theoneed2051 Před 2 lety +49

    I am not a farmer, and mostly a city boy as they would say, but I can't help appreciating the engineering to put this together and bring this machinery back to life.

    • @wizardbeard69
      @wizardbeard69 Před 2 lety +7

      hey man...there is just simply some kind of unseen connection between man and machines...doesn't really matter where you are from

    • @davidwoermansr
      @davidwoermansr Před rokem +2

      I'm a farmer and go to shows where we use steam engines antique tractors and equipment and probably meet more "city folk" than farmers we love explaining what the machines are and do and give demonstrations and even a ride most farmers love to explain the progress from ox and horse farming to modern farming because so many people are afraid of today's methods but don't know the science behind it especially when you say GMO and roundup everyone freaks out

  • @cosmicwarrior62
    @cosmicwarrior62 Před rokem +8

    I have realized how country I truly am. Watching this old steamer gave me a deep feeling of nostalgia. I love old farm equipment and country way of life. Keep up the good works and enjoy every moment.

  • @vaughnmcmillan8400
    @vaughnmcmillan8400 Před 7 měsíci +1

    This has got to be one of the most impressive vids I've seen on CZcams! When the big boy was introducing the plow and it's harness system, I didn't think the tractor would be able to do it, but it DID! How I wish my Dad could've seen this! A 44 bottom plow! Unbelivigable! 😮

  • @lloydpang4431
    @lloydpang4431 Před rokem +3

    Kory is a great , positive , handsome person its impossible to stop loving him
    keep it up Kory and his team

  • @alishanmao
    @alishanmao Před 2 lety +143

    always a pleasure to watch old tech still alive and kicking and doing such challenges with success.

    • @nagulanm3502
      @nagulanm3502 Před 2 lety +5

      ye, it does 1 week of global warming in 1 hour

    • @johnnyappleseed738
      @johnnyappleseed738 Před 2 lety +1

      @@nagulanm3502 what a unintelligent comment! A dozen cows or horses will out carbon this old girl in a few weeks...maybe go shoot a few more of them!2

    • @imchris5000
      @imchris5000 Před 2 lety +8

      @@nagulanm3502 heavy carbon and sulfur is good for the soil now that sulfur is out of the diesel fuel farmers spend big bucks to spread it on their fields in the form of fertilizer

    • @nagulanm3502
      @nagulanm3502 Před 2 lety +4

      @@johnnyappleseed738 since when did cows and horses start to shoot smoke outta their ass?

    • @williamhaynes7089
      @williamhaynes7089 Před 2 lety +6

      @@nagulanm3502 - so does all the speeches from our president and congress... but at least this is entertaining

  • @airman6822
    @airman6822 Před 2 lety +281

    Not sure how many times I have watched this but it gives me chills each time. Considering where our country is at right now, I think we need a little more of this today. A reminder of who we are and where we came from.

    • @wwolfdogs
      @wwolfdogs Před 2 lety +28

      If anyone can save this country from itself it is the innovative, hard working folks like these.

    • @keithchill1626
      @keithchill1626 Před 2 lety +2

      He got Si as his profile pic 🤣

    • @asbestosfiber
      @asbestosfiber Před 2 lety +6

      It's true. you look at videos of people in the third world taking a bunch of junk and rigging it up into useable stuff, or making their own parts by hand for old equipment from the 1950's

    • @general5104
      @general5104 Před 2 lety +10

      We can atribute what we AREN'T to Nixson and Johnson and that era, when they usured in the "Open Trade Agreement" and the government forced our companies to share TRADE SECRETS with foreign countries and Forced our companies to open companies in other countries !!! The LABOR rate, is much lower in other countries and the items could be made cheaper there. Our country LOST our importance in trade and most of our manufacturing plants are CLOSED !!! Little towns, that were based around those plants, are still like ghost towns now, where they WERE bustling, back in the day ! The jobless America is directly due to that mistake. Shortly after that, the government forced the Metric system on us! Most stuff we used was QUALITY MADE, with good steel and had MADE IN THE USA stamped into it. Now, most if our stuff is made where quality is substandard and quantity is peak !

    • @nadarith1044
      @nadarith1044 Před 2 lety +25

      ​@@general5104 The random usage of CAPS LOCK and the overreliance on exclamation points!! denotes you as a quack

  • @Bauks
    @Bauks Před rokem +4

    The amount of overalls in this video is off the charts!

  • @travisdean8794
    @travisdean8794 Před rokem +3

    I grew up on a Case 930. Best damn tractor made in my mind. Made me a Case fan for life.

  • @brettthornsberry7169
    @brettthornsberry7169 Před 2 lety +91

    The engineering that went into that is just incomprehensible. I would love to feel the earth shake when that beast rolled by.

    • @danmar007
      @danmar007 Před 2 lety

      Judging by its speed, you would feel for a while. :-)

    • @Unknown18899
      @Unknown18899 Před 2 lety

      Oh

    • @imjustaguy8232
      @imjustaguy8232 Před rokem

      @Scott Crawford he'd just take it through the woods cutting down trees? That's nuts

  • @cycleSCUBA
    @cycleSCUBA Před 2 lety +151

    50 feet of ploughing! The raw power of that engine is phenomenal.
    Great to see. 👍

    • @davidwoermansr
      @davidwoermansr Před rokem +15

      Would've been great to feel the earth shake and smell the combination of the tractor and fresh earth it's less than 2 hrs from my farm and that day I was in the hospital after a spinal surgery begging my Dr to start teaching me to walk again because I needed to be home with my kids and taking care of my farm and critters

    • @BigAmp
      @BigAmp Před 9 měsíci

      @@davidwoermansr I hope the surgery went well. Done properly its a life changer.

    • @davidwoermansr
      @davidwoermansr Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@BigAmp well I've had 16 more surgeries I can bend at the waist nod and shake my head everything else is pretty much solid but I'm still hobbling around some days I need a cane it's almost to the point of a walker in the winter the arthritis is so bad but I'm still working and farming 1 of these days I'll have to start using meds for pain but the longer I can go without killing my innards the better

    • @BigAmp
      @BigAmp Před 9 měsíci

      @@davidwoermansr You're a fighter and have a positive outlook and thats how you need to be no matter what. Its all about what you can do, not what you can't. Avoiding conventional pain meds is good because they sure do f**k with your internals and with your brain as well. Hope you get relief one day soon. Backs are strange things. It depends on what the problem(s) are but sometimes they can come right all by themselves though surgical intervention should never be discounted either, provided you trust the surgeon. If you do need pain relief I would suggest trying natural things first (like medicinal marijuana or derivatives there off). All strength to you.

    • @davidwoermansr
      @davidwoermansr Před 9 měsíci

      @@BigAmp I fractured several vertebra and herniated and bulged several disc and compressed almost all the rest in a wreck in my early 20s I had a lady with a car full of kids run a stop sign in front of me hauling an overwidth overweight dozer so I piled the semi in a deep ditch full of tree stumps at 65 mph because if I was going to kill a kid I was going to die too I wouldn't be able to live knowing I didn't do everything I could to save a kid I grew up watching my grandma in a wheelchair since I was 5 someone tried passing the car coming at her and hit her head on she refused to be labeled disabled she was differently abled and I ran with that I also use alot of home remedies like she did the juice in wild lettuce has been used as a pain medication since the early 1900s probably earlier than that it's comparable to the relief you get from morphine without the high or side affects and it doesn't eat you away from the inside out or rot your teeth out (although I lost most of mine in the wreck) I have her book of old home remedies that became more common during the depression it's surprising how many plants most people consider weeds and spray to get rid of are beneficial and have medical value I've only gone in for surgery when I'd lose feeling and couldn't walk or control my bodily functions I wasn't ready to wear diapers we grew up looking for the positive in every situation my grandpa always said if you want to go looking for sympathy you can find it right where Webster put it in between shit and syphilis so just be happy you're alive and not deep in either of them trying to find sympathy if that's the only positive you can find those words will sure shut down a pity party fast and make a person reevaluate their thinking grandpa came from Germany with a number tattooed on his wrist he had no filter and no time to feel anything but joy

  • @billyvandervoet7080
    @billyvandervoet7080 Před 3 měsíci

    Absolutely Amazing Machine, I could watch this video for hours. I’m sure in person it’s even better. Thanks to everyone that has helped preserve these old Mega Machines.

  • @tylerhurcomb6555
    @tylerhurcomb6555 Před rokem +2

    Much respect to you guys for bringing her back to life beautiful job on her that's impressive great work everyone who helped bring her to life again she loves it out there

  • @ryanmorrison2489
    @ryanmorrison2489 Před 2 lety +218

    This tractor is so beautiful and I can't believe what work went into creating it! Great job for you guys keeping this rarity working and putting it to use!! Great work, Thanks for sharing!!

    • @repentoryouwilllikewiseper8741
      @repentoryouwilllikewiseper8741 Před 2 lety +3

      Repent to Jesus Christ
      “Gracious words are a honeycomb, sweet to the soul and healing to the bones.”
      ‭‭Proverbs‬ ‭16:24‬ ‭NIV‬‬
      H

    • @M-S_4321
      @M-S_4321 Před 2 lety +3

      Many of our ancestors would have called us mad, but I just watched a video on a 3.5 inch screen and could hear the power in that machine designed, fed and stoked by the same kind of people that created the reality to hear, view and record it from anywhere on our planet.
      I am joyful to be a part of those acting as stewards to our world.
      The nature of man is a wondrous chaos.

    • @steverandle4700
      @steverandle4700 Před 2 lety

      @@repentoryouwilllikewiseper8741 Your god is false

  • @234dilligaf
    @234dilligaf Před 2 lety +45

    I was raised among steam engine collectors. All who have long passed. I was way too young to understand them, but was fascinated by their massive size. Such a thrill when they were fired. Now in my blood. Love that American steel.

    • @cripplekid0902
      @cripplekid0902 Před 2 lety +1

      How much would one of these cost back in their day?

    • @blackholeentry3489
      @blackholeentry3489 Před 2 lety

      @@cripplekid0902 About three trainloads of Bituminous coal.

  • @onemantwohands5224
    @onemantwohands5224 Před rokem

    I enjoyed that so much !! Thank you very much for recreating such a behemoth project and then have it perform like that ...just wowwwww 🤟 driver is the heartbeat of rural America right there too keeping this alive and working his ass off every day too! Greetings from OZ we stand together 🙏

  • @ladylibrum7145
    @ladylibrum7145 Před 9 měsíci

    Fascinating and beautiful! I’ve never seen a machine like this that wasn’t on a train track.

  • @h54h52
    @h54h52 Před rokem +95

    Those old traction engines and steam trains are amazing. They are like living things, and I can understand how people can become attached to them in a way that you couldn't with electric or diesel.. Maybe because through the observable moving parts we see the similarities to our own biological bodies. Needing nourishment and maintenance. So beautiful!

    • @sector5514
      @sector5514 Před rokem +9

      I couldn't agree more

    • @badgerlife9541
      @badgerlife9541 Před rokem +4

      Well said. This is precisely what we all feel when watching these old engines.

  • @DavidDarrow
    @DavidDarrow Před 2 lety +12

    Never cease to be amazed at what can be accomplished with fire and water.

  • @Hunterhannon2023
    @Hunterhannon2023 Před 9 dny +1

    Thank you for remaking this beautiful Case

  • @smirkinatu5512
    @smirkinatu5512 Před 10 měsíci

    Thank you for recording and posting this educational video and view to the past. Sincerely, this is priceless.

  • @riccello
    @riccello Před rokem +15

    The smell of the air in that field must be amazing!

  • @JR-wk4dj
    @JR-wk4dj Před rokem +84

    Awsome! Awsome! Awsome! You can see and hear the raw power of this wonderful tractor. Built from scratch! These men and women are keeping history alive and well for all to see. Loved the video.

    • @davidwoermansr
      @davidwoermansr Před rokem +2

      This is one I wish had smellevision

    • @jannejohansson3383
      @jannejohansson3383 Před rokem +1

      That power sounds like some instrument (music).. not anything like ROAAARRR!!!
      It didn't surprise if it's hydraulic driven, but at the time, gears and belts (chains too) used. Does it have just some 2 or 3 speeds? I could imagine it have backwards 2 speed and 4 to front or then it's really some oil turbine torque converter, still I can't think that option for this. Convert heats when you have something like this. Electric drivedrain and it same time do much more would be best even simplest way to made, but again, no change it would be the case in here. Because it drives so clean, this is finest what I have see ever AND it could made real job efficiency. If you don't have right to repair your own machines, this would be impossible. Nice thing it's museum quality, could function still for real jobs and not going to run away because scared what they thinking to install back of it. Those metal wheels could maybe pack the soil less than rubber ones, so wide and equality take grip. Gummy tire "rolls" because air or water inside and it could press eart more, because side of tire tracks are (not sidewalls) are shorter (r) and then middle section press soil sometimes unpleasant.

  • @marinoberre724
    @marinoberre724 Před rokem +1

    God bless you, Kory.
    This is magnificent.

  • @rogermoore7644
    @rogermoore7644 Před rokem +9

    I absolutely love the chuffing sound. I would love to run one those. Steam engine’s are so incredibly facinating to me.

  • @adrianmlridgewayarcmlramll1965

    I could listen to the beautiful sound of this phenomenal engine for weeks and never tire of her, what a superb piece of engineering, all without any digital equipment etc!!! Takes us back to our roots and serves as a reminder as to how hard our forebears worked to put food on the table, today all this is taken for granted. This is a piece of living, breathing history, well done you guys ans thanks for making me so happy!!! Adrian in Bermuda 😀😀😀

    • @nevillewran4083
      @nevillewran4083 Před 2 lety

      Exactly. They had hard lives and lived close top a hand-to-mouth existence. Very little food was wasted. Look at us today, Covid has slightly affected the supply chain and people bitch if their specific fave type of strawberries aren't plentiful.
      I love taking internet-raised kids to steam museums, it amazes them. Jan Leno described showing modern kids thru his car collection. He took the interior paneling off a car door and showed them the pre-electric rack & pinion device for raising & lowering the window. Said they were utterly rapt, playing with it for an hour.

  • @riamriam6758
    @riamriam6758 Před 2 lety +38

    Now that’s a Mean Red Machine. I love my greens, but this is something else. Hats off to you and your team. History lives on for another day. Well done!

  • @Johnnysboy3987
    @Johnnysboy3987 Před 10 dny +1

    We out here in 2024 and this is incredible imagine being a boy in the 1800s and watching this chug along.

  • @FORTMOUD
    @FORTMOUD Před rokem

    I love ingenuity and admire people that imagine and build this beautiful marble of tractor.

  • @jeffcharlton9660
    @jeffcharlton9660 Před 2 lety +11

    Seeing it operate in modern HD video quality is like being transported back in time 100 plus yrs. She's a beauty.

  • @nielsbnnelkke6010
    @nielsbnnelkke6010 Před 2 lety +15

    This is CRAZY. !!! 44 bottoms and 150 Hp, but thousands of footpounds of tourge....I´v been watching this several times and is impressed every time.....Steampower rules

  • @excaliburgaming8857
    @excaliburgaming8857 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Proud to be from SD watching this

  • @-Master_Of_Disaster
    @-Master_Of_Disaster Před 9 měsíci +1

    What a beautiful mighty machine.

  • @reclinerdriver1489
    @reclinerdriver1489 Před 2 lety +60

    I love seeing old equipment work and do the job that few machines even today cannot do .. Thanx for the video !! ;-}

    • @skyethegoose
      @skyethegoose Před 2 lety +3

      That’s the beauty of steam. All torque all day. The only thing that offers the torque curve of steam is an electric motor, which can be powered by a steam turbine ;)

  • @phoenix15477
    @phoenix15477 Před 2 lety +40

    She sounds BEAUTIFUL! Nothing but pure, raw TORQUE!

  • @bigcountrysgarage2.030
    @bigcountrysgarage2.030 Před rokem +3

    That steam tractor is a beast

  • @melchezi8818
    @melchezi8818 Před rokem

    The beauty is in the simplicity, you can look at it and see how everything works, love steam!

  • @perryandcoleswebsite
    @perryandcoleswebsite Před 2 lety +10

    I brings tears of joy to my eyes to see a beautiful piece of machinery be preserved.

  • @jaysonhochsprung21
    @jaysonhochsprung21 Před 2 lety +45

    Kory, I love watching you test the limits of old engineering combined with your improvements to make this possible.amazing history, old and new!

  • @nicholasbuonanno5938
    @nicholasbuonanno5938 Před rokem +2

    I love the equipment made back then The quality and craftsmanship and design Still holds up it’s very good quality and it last so long

  • @DonGregers
    @DonGregers Před 3 měsíci

    Amazing walktrough, and what a beast! Thanks for this!

  • @JensSchraeder
    @JensSchraeder Před 2 lety +29

    Such a simpler time. When everyone came out to help. People were humble and worked hard. I bet they were a lot happier than most people today as well. Love the sound of the tractor rolling coal.

    • @dkdanis1340
      @dkdanis1340 Před rokem +2

      Not really

    • @CharChar2121
      @CharChar2121 Před rokem +1

      Yeah, I bet they were real happy when the leading cause of death in women was childbirth, ear infections killed babies on the reg, and smallpox ravaged Humanity like a mad god. Sounds really fun.

    • @JohnDoeWasntTaken
      @JohnDoeWasntTaken Před 9 měsíci

      @@CharChar2121 They were still happy. You can list off modern issues that sound just as grim, the only difference is everyone has a much more "comfortable" life. The fact people back then were still happy and fulfilled despite those issues says a lot about the human spirit. They just accepted how things were and moved on, the same way we do today.

  • @udflyer98
    @udflyer98 Před 2 lety +89

    Some fantastic stack music hearing that Case bark under load! Pulling 44 bottoms with a single engine is incredible.

  • @quentinwhite1852
    @quentinwhite1852 Před rokem

    Love seeing these old tractors working

  • @davidbarrett1487
    @davidbarrett1487 Před rokem +1

    Fantastic, steam power and that plough is something else. Glad to see it running still. ❤️🇬🇧 BIG LAND OF USA🇺🇸needed that size & power.

  • @Danger-Dave
    @Danger-Dave Před 2 lety +63

    Amassing piece of machinery Kory!!! Brings back some good memory's for me as a kid growing up in London Ohio in the 60's and every 2-3 years the Miami Valley Steam Threshers Association would gather at the fairgrounds to put on a week long demonstration with every form of steam engine imaginable. I can almost smell the mighty Case 150 from here in Nashville, cheers for keeping this part of history alive!

  • @williamlarson3623
    @williamlarson3623 Před rokem +17

    Beautiful, awsome, ingenious, and well done. Imagine how many hours, how many prairie farmers with their single bit plows, drawn by one horse conveyances, this work truly represents. Thanks!

    • @jannejohansson3383
      @jannejohansson3383 Před rokem

      Oh man, I have been "horse" when we install rootet potatoes underground to hide and other man controls that two men blow how deep it took and pushed it same time.. soil was nice. Every year we installed new potatoes there. Ofc we took some 10 from 1 seed pot up when time was right, end of summer.. now growing joints is better business. ;;)

  • @garymanis6305
    @garymanis6305 Před rokem +1

    Amazing. Fantastic job recreating that beast.

  • @myvoiceyourstory9338
    @myvoiceyourstory9338 Před 3 měsíci

    Thank you to allll for this !!!
    Truly I’ll watch this many times
    So awesome to see and man I wish I could I smell that “ turnin n burnin “
    Woohooo
    She’s a good ol girl
    And GOD bless all and angels be with ya all

  • @cheyenneluckyseven
    @cheyenneluckyseven Před 2 lety +37

    My 6 year old loves it because it sounds like a train.
    I'm amazed the power this beast has

  • @SoulSoundMuisc
    @SoulSoundMuisc Před 2 lety +42

    There's just something majestic and primal about the indomitable power and engineering of a steam driven machine.
    This Case is a thing of beauty.

    • @jonnymoka
      @jonnymoka Před rokem

      They are pulling with this huge steam powered street locomotive 🚂 I
      Wish I train like
      That in my back
      Yard.

  • @gileslesmith
    @gileslesmith Před 9 měsíci

    man, this machine is what I really call impressive. The sound the smell (not in this video) all perfect!

  • @casedoumasr656
    @casedoumasr656 Před 9 měsíci +1

    This is amazing super duper.The manufacturers nowadays need to go back to some of this old technology this is true 🇺🇸 pulling POWER 🏆🇺🇸

  • @rjbjr
    @rjbjr Před 2 lety +68

    These were called Traction Engines by most back in my day, because of their multiuse ability. Hookup a threshing machine via a large belt and many other things like choppers, blowers, etc.

  • @conservativeprodigy2604
    @conservativeprodigy2604 Před 2 lety +8

    This is INCREDIBLE! That young man is what society needs more of.

  • @davidmorgan4284
    @davidmorgan4284 Před 23 dny

    Pretty sure I heard that a Jim Ryden designed the hitch. My great uncle was named Jim Ryden, from Hallock, Minnesota. He passed a few years ago, don't think it's the same Jim Ryden.
    Along with his brother David, they both invented all kinds of farm stuff. At 16 years old, Jim built his own swather and the Oliver tractor company actually produced a few.
    I really love this stuff, thank you for making this!

  • @kenbearsley8322
    @kenbearsley8322 Před 8 měsíci

    The sounds of that engine is absolute beautiful. The smell of it, the earth being plowed would be wonderful. Could listen and smell that all day and never get sick of it. When the camera operator stood on the back, it sounded like the engine was nicely ticking over at idle speed barely struggling, working.

  • @johnshields6852
    @johnshields6852 Před 2 lety +12

    I drove a rig for a living so I love powerful machines, watching that tractor pulling all those deers was amazing, I could smell the earth through your film, great job. Thank you.

  • @wscaff
    @wscaff Před 2 lety +7

    Just a fantastic video, every perspective, angle and view covered. My granddaddy was a steam locomotive engineer...........it is in the blood. Farming is one of the noblest occupations.

  • @Eisbaermusik
    @Eisbaermusik Před rokem

    Wooooowwww!!!! This Thing is a Monster and a beauty! I love it!!! You did a great job to rebuild this one! It`s History

  • @teleioswi2993
    @teleioswi2993 Před 3 měsíci +1

    What an insane amount of torque this metal beast is producing. Awesome.

  • @fluffymountainbunny
    @fluffymountainbunny Před 2 lety +8

    That’s so totally cool! What a beauty! Her sound as she chugs along makes me so happy!

  • @nicifilteau1447
    @nicifilteau1447 Před 2 lety +14

    I just learned about this amazing steam tractor, and am feeling pretty fascinated, and inspired by the whole project and have also just viewed the film on the construction of the CASE 150, the "beast"! Holy Mackerel! I love this! Big Kudos to you, Kory as well as to your mentors and co-workers. P.S. I grew up a "town girl" in Iowa, so was never involved in farming or anything, but I DO appreciate what has been done here. I am so glad a facebook friend forwarded this to me!!

    • @farmerhoskins1147
      @farmerhoskins1147 Před 2 lety +2

      It made me feel good to that dark soil turned up.Nothing like that.That big Case is a marvel even in 2022 ! Thanks for bringing her back to life!!

  • @swiftmatic
    @swiftmatic Před 10 měsíci

    That is SO cool. Pulled that 44 bottom smooth as butter ❤

  • @johnnyappleseed738
    @johnnyappleseed738 Před 2 lety +7

    amazing engineering from those days. The torque numbers are astounding!! Beautiful work on this beautiful piece of art.

  • @brianfisher9800
    @brianfisher9800 Před 2 lety +123

    Congratulations Kory! Must have felt amazing to do what no one has ever done! Hat's off to you and all who helped you create this masterpiece of history

  • @stephenbradbury460
    @stephenbradbury460 Před 4 měsíci

    Fantastic I haven't seen a start for 65 years thankyou fantastic tractor.

  • @AfroMyrdal
    @AfroMyrdal Před 2 lety +141

    Imagine being the baller that bought one back in the day, like "yeah I just feel like I need that 8000pft of torque, you know what I mean?" Hats of to Mr Anderson for making one, that's legit.

    • @asbestosfiber
      @asbestosfiber Před 2 lety +5

      Imagine the scene when it showed up at the Rail depot people probably came for miles to see it plow the first time.

    • @jonwingfieldhill6143
      @jonwingfieldhill6143 Před 2 lety +6

      In many cases traction engines of this size were bought in pairs by contracting outfits, I asked an elderly guy about it who ran traction engines and he said that usually they connected a cable between the two with the plough running the cable so that the engines never actually touched the field to avoid over compacting the soil,imagine being the only outfit in a multi state area running these beasts :)

    • @ataurrahman3805
      @ataurrahman3805 Před 2 lety

      Ll

    • @alokonyak3438
      @alokonyak3438 Před 2 lety

      @@asbestosfiber f2f ffcccccgv8gg

    • @mithunkodar3819
      @mithunkodar3819 Před 2 lety

      @@alokonyak3438 यललललझदझैऐऐऐओऐऐझो

  • @TBPollock
    @TBPollock Před 2 lety +19

    It's amusing to observe what thrills people; I'm seeing a lot of mature men's faces reflecting the joy of boy's hearts.