|
Allis
Chalmers ED40
Clive Monk
At last I can say I have
virtually completed the restoration of my Allis ED40. I had
wanted a little diesel tractor for road runs, etc. as my
Farmall M didn’t like running at tick-over speed in top gear
and made some runs awkward and frustrating. So, when I was
offered the Allis, I was ready to take it on but it was in a
pretty sorry state.
The wings were hanging in shreds although the rest of the
tin wasn’t bashed about; the steering was all loose; the
brakes didn’t work, and what wasn’t red rust was Fordson
blue. I think some previous owner had wanted a Dexta – but
it did run – just!
Since then a slow and painful
restoration has taken place in my shed. The wings were
impossible to replace with new or secondhand and had to be
knitted back together with
patches and ribs by Neil, a work
of art if ever I saw one. The steering bearings were also
impossible to find so Pete and Geoff machined the casing to
accept a different size and now it's working fine. Hours
were spent scraping off the rust and blue paint. The brakes
were freed off although I couldn’t get the shoes out to
replace the liners. Perhaps someone knows how? I
couldn’t get the pivot pin out of the front axle either.
The front grill was remade by Steve, from an old ironing
board – again, a work of art.
A long list of replacement
parts began to accrue, i.e. new front wheel bearings, tyres,
heater plugs, lights, oil and filters, tacho cable, silencer
and battery plus several litres of primer, undercoat and
gloss: the fuel pipes were remade and bent to fit.
Gradually the painted parts
began to be re-assembled and some things made me scratch my
head, after all it was 3 years ago when I pulled it to
pieces. It’s not just where they go but in which order.
Several times I had to take parts off to put bits on that I
thought I could do later…but couldn’t.
I was getting to the point
about 6 months ago when I was thinking about tax and
insurance: obtaining insurance by using the serial number
was very easy. I also joined the Allis Chalmers club about
this time for £10 pa. Getting the tractor registered and
taxed however was an entirely different matter. With no
paperwork and absolutely no idea of its previous
registration number if it ever had one, I had to start from
scratch. To cut a long story short, after much V form
filling, a letter from the Chairman of the Allis club to
convince them of the year of manufacture and a fee of £55 I
now have an age-related number, the registration documents
and tax disc and a set of aluminium number plates from Elstow Radiators for £30.
Now, will it start? Yes and
no. It did eventually with a well charged battery and blow
lamp aimed at the air inlet. The first run discovered wonky
steering, no brakes, fuel leaks and a massive oil leak! The
tractor had to come in half to replace the rear oil seal on
the crank shaft: my good friend Neil came to the rescue.
Most problems were now sorted so I took it to the Haynes
Rally.
Taking most of the charge out
of the battery it started at Neil’s place, only to stop in
Dawes Garage in Shillington where it refused to start
again. I jump started it from some kind local with leads
and a pickup truck and then made it to Haynes where it
remained as a static exhibit until I put it on Pete’s
dynamometer where it roared its’ heart out until the paint
on the bonnet started to blister (supposed to do it good?), I
shut it down to tick over and let it cool off. The tractor ran
quite well on the way home via Offley and knocked along at
over 20mph.
Next job was to put the
transfers on. A job you can’t afford to muck up at £90 per
set, so I was particularly careful and the tractor looks
more finished for it.
With some rushed temporary
repairs to the fuel return pipes, (thanks Steve), I used the
tractor on the Christmas 2009 Road Run and it ran well. I
think I can now say ‘job done’ – what’s next? |