Jump to content

County Tractors at work and play


BC

Recommended Posts

Well a huge thank you to David, ( walterderwent ) for helping me find this E R F picture,I knew I had seen it somewhere and today I re-discovered it,it is in John Hull's fantastic book " The Best Job Ever " recalling the many years he worked for County,as stated earlier in this thread County did in fact used Ford Trans-continentals,but one day the driver,who was makeing his meal on a gas stove in the cab knocked over the said stove badly burning himself and ending up in Hospital,totalled the Fordy,so they ended up with the E R F,

CountysERF.jpg

Regards

Joe.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Well a huge thank you to David, ( walterderwent ) for helping me find this E R F picture,I knew I had seen it somewhere and today I re-discovered it,it is in John Hull's fantastic book " The Best Job Ever " recalling the many years he worked for County,as stated earlier in this thread County did in fact used Ford Trans-continentals,but one day the driver,who was makeing his meal on a gas stove in the cab knocked over the said stove badly burning himself and ending up in Hospital,totalled the Fordy,so they ended up with the E R F,

Regards

Joe.

Great to discover the story behind the County E.R.F, despite the circumstances surrounding it Joe, really must invest in John Hull's book. :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 8 months later...

Thanks for the clarification John. Its been a while since that photo was taken and I could not see a County name on the tractor.

From my rusty old memory; the axle fitted to the tractor in the picture is a Schindler aftermarket conversion. This tractor is actually an 8200. When I was at S.T.'s we converted this one for one of our customers. I think Nigel Ford also had one on a Ford 76-?

The 8200 used the Ford 8000, TW 10 engine, whereas the 8100 used the Ford industrial / truck engine.

8200withSchindlerAxle.jpg

Edited by britainswomble
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...
  • 2 weeks later...

Richard has your Bomford dozer blade got a serial/model number plate on it? Also does it have any decals/markings to the back of the blade? Reason for asking is I removed one from my 1124 and there appeared to be some decals/markings to the back of the blade but now virtually all gone, there is no serial/model number plate affixed anywhere or any obvious attachment point. At some point its going back on and I would like to re-decal/mark it. 

On the plus side it does have a golf ball jammed in the frame work!

IMG_20111023_9999_25_zps7a5bb8aa.jpg

 

Did anyone else go to the Conversions Day on 30th September?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Richard has your Bomford dozer blade got a serial/model number plate on it? Also does it have any decals/markings to the back of the blade? Reason for asking is I removed one from my 1124 and there appeared to be some decals/markings to the back of the blade but now virtually all gone, there is no serial/model number plate affixed anywhere or any obvious attachment point. At some point its going back on and I would like to re-decal/mark it. 

On the plus side it does have a golf ball jammed in the frame work!

IMG_20111023_9999_25_zps7a5bb8aa.jpg

 

Did anyone else go to the Conversions Day on 30th September?

Hi Paul,

 

I've never noticed any signs of a serial no. plate or stamps on it, tbh.........and the back of the blade is a bit rusty and no signs of any decals.

I had thought of sand-blasting and respraying the blade assy, it sits outdoors all the time (not fixed to the tractor) and is collecting a bit of corrosion.

 

Its surprising just how heavy them things are, many many moons ago I went off to level off a bit of ground around where a tall tree had blown over - it was a bit sidling there, its true, anyway with the nose downhill at anything other than verticle and we were all of a sudden on 3 legs  :of  and having to drop the blade down to return the tyre to terra-firma.

 

In the end really the set up is really only useful for lighter work such as pushing over heaps of soil, visibility of the blade edge is impossible so you can't see how deep you are.......then if the load is too great we get 4 pits from the tyres and you have to back-blade to fill them in  ;D

 

 

1004blade1.jpg

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Walter, Anfield, Hicksy and Olly,

Hope I am not “shang-hai’ing†this thread too much……and forgive me if you have seen some of these in other topics….

Anyway here’s a couple more pics of the Countys since I have had them

 

The 1004 arrived in Autumn ’97 off a small beef farm in the neighbourhood

 

Just as it arrived.........

 

1004December96.jpg

 

 

pair of s/h wings and a different pre-cleaner

 

Dec961004.jpg

 

A bit of painting one winter……

cABoff.jpg

 

10041.jpg

Edited by RichardJW1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

This is my 1174 when it was about 2 years old before it went to one of its previous owners……it was taken at D Gittins yard (County dealer in them days) they had swapped the 13.6x38 wheels for 16.9x34s.

It wasn’t until 2004 when I got hold of it……

11741982.jpg

 

1174baling2.jpg

 

latehay2.jpg

 

balingfriday3.jpg

 

balingfriday.jpg

Edited by RichardJW1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.