“One of them is a JD600 that was built in Waterloo
more than 40 years ago for the U.S. Navy’s Construction
Battalion — the Seabees. Only a limited number
were produced, and it was thought all had been
scrapped,” Cherry said.
“It was not known to exist,” Cherry said of the
machine, brought to the Expo from Norfolk, Virginia.
Bob Hynek of Talmage, Nebraska, had his industrial
yellow Model 2640, a 1979-era tractor that is one of
only 44 built for the U.S. Air Force.
“It, too, is the last of its kind known to exist,” Hynek
said.
Next to its gear levers, the tractor bears a brass identification
plate listing its government and military registration
numbers with the 194th Squadron.
“A friend of mine that deals in oddball tractors came
across it and gave me a call and asked me to take a look
at it, and I fell in love with it,” Hynek said.
He obtained it in good condition about two years ago.
“It was a very easy restore, but I’ve been working on it
ever since,” he said.
Hynek has brought other tractors to previous Waterloo
Expos. He can’t stay away from the event, he said. |
“Just to see all these beautiful tractors and this great
group of people,” he said. “They’re very genuine, very
neat people to get to know, and I’ve made some very
good friends coming to this show.”
He was asked about the obsession.
“It’s addictive,” he said. “It’s finding something that
isn’t perfect, something you can fix up and make brandnew
again. And when you get done, you can stand back
and say, ‘This is something that I’ve done’ or ‘there’s not
another one like this.”
Hynek, too, was busy with a can of polish and a nonabrasive
cloth, as he prepared his machine to show.
“I keep it in a very nice, new, dust-free shed,” he said.
“I still do have to dust it quite often. In the summertime,
I take it to local shows and parades. I often polish it.”
Charles Fricke of Papillion, Nebraska, brought his
1953 Model “70” to the show.
It’s his fifth Two-Cylinder Expo, he said. Every trip
back to Waterloo’s event is a learning experience.
He agreed, an obsession probably has taken hold of him.
“We probably spend more time repairing these things
than it’s really worth, but we enjoy it,” said Fricke, who,
with a buddy, brought nine tractors to the show. |
WATERLOO —Increasingly, enthusiasts who display
vintage tractors acknowledge a fundamental truth.
“You know a tractor is useless unless you put an
implement behind it,” Tom O’Connor said.
Which explains, at least in part, why the Two-Cylinder
Expo XXIII in Waterloo attracted much more than
classic John Deere power.
O’Connor traveled from Swartz Creek, Michigan,
with a John Deere “630” built in 1959 and set up in
McElroy Auditorium at the National Cattle Congress.
A beautiful bit of muscle, but what really stopped spectators
was his 40-foot, pull-type Model 42 Combine.
“It kind of backfired on us. I thought I would get a
combine attached to draw attention to the tractor. They
just walk right past it to look at the combine,” O’Connor
said.Exhibitors at such events in recent years began bringing
more plows, sickle mowers, and other implements. |
Those involved suggest the trend illustrates how collecting
— and collectors — have matured.
“All of them have tractors now, so they’re switching to
implements,” said Jack Vinopal of Mauston, Wisconsin.
He and his sons, John and Jeff, put a 1935 “B”, 1947
“M” and a 1958 “720” Diesel out for public inspection.
What many folks wanted to know more about, though,
was a M3A Two-Way Plow.
The device features two plowshares, but only one turns
dirt at any given moment. The implement’s genius is
allowing farmers to flip the plowshares at trail’s end and
to return in the opposite direction in the same furrow.
Modern collectors hunt for two-way plows.
“Today, if you could find one, if you could get away
paying $500 you’d be doing really, really well — and it
wouldn’t be in the best condition,” Vinopal said.
Dan DeRycke of Galva, Illinois, put a “50” built in
1955 on display. The tractor was one of Deere’s first |