Printed From: Unofficial Allis
Category: Allis Chalmers
Forum Name: Farm Equipment
Forum Description: everything about Allis-Chalmers farm equipment
URL: https://www.allischalmers.com/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=181041 Printed Date: 30 Jan 2025 at 11:39am Software Version: Web Wiz Forums 11.10 - http://www.webwizforums.com
Topic: AC cotton picker on auctionPosted By: JohnColo
Subject: AC cotton picker on auction
Date Posted: 07 Jun 2021 at 11:38am
I hope this posts;
3 pieces of Interesting Iron selling this week
By
https://www.agriculture.com/author/ryan-roossinck" rel="nofollow - Ryan Roossinck
6/7/2021
Photo credit: TractorZoom
There’s a bunch of interesting iron crossing the block over the next
week. At the end of the day, I couldn’t pick just one, so we’ll look at
three of my favorites! Two orange ones in Kansas, and also a beautiful
red one in Iowa!
It’s pretty rare to find an Allis Chalmers 616
Cotton Picker! This one lives in Kansas until next Tuesday, when it goes
to a new owner!
If I had to guess, I’ll bet at least half of you had no idea that AC
made a cotton picker! (And full disclosure... I didn’t either until a
week or two ago when Mark Sullivan and I were talking about this
auction!)
During the ’60s, there were essentially four major players in the
cotton harvesting market: International Harvester, John Deere, John
Rust/Ben Pearson, and Allis Chalmers. Plenty of other farm equipment
companies had pickers and strippers, but those four were the big
players. The only one that had a unique design was IH; the rest licensed
designs and technology from John Rust/Ben Pearson (including AC).
John Rust developed the first mechanical cotton harvester in the 1930s.
When he started building them, life in the Delta changed forever. In
the mid-40s, Allis Chalmers licensed the designs and started building
them in Gadsden, Alabama.
What you see here is one of the later models. It’s a two-row picker,
and it essentially mounts on a D19 turned around backwards, with a D17
rear end. Very unique!
Evidently, these are fairly scarce. I talked to Josh VanTuyl, the
farmer who owns it, and he tells me that it’s a 1965 model. Allis only
built 30 that year, and this one is No. 25. He bought it from the
original owner in Arkansas, and he suspects that it never actually
picked very much cotton back in its working years. It had always been
barn-kept, and it’s as original as the day is long! All original paint
and everything! The toolbox even came with some NOS spindles and parts!
It sells at Josh & Rick VanTuyl’s sale on June 8 in Kansas, hosted by our friends at https://tractorzoom.com/auctioneers/sullivan-auctioneers/?utm_source=successfulfarming&utm_medium=interestingiron&utm_campaign=060321" rel="nofollow - Sullivan Auctioneers .
With five days left on the sale, bidding is at $1,200, but who knows
where it’ll go? It’s definitely a piece of Interesting Iron in my book!
Replies: Posted By: injpumpEd
Date Posted: 07 Jun 2021 at 12:26pm
Me being an AC Cotton Picker fan, would really like that thing, but even if I could buy it for 2000 trucking it would be as much. Would definitly make tractor shows here in N Illinois interesting! lol!
------------- 210 "too hot to farm" puller, part of the "insane pumpkin posse". Owner of Guenther Heritage Diesel, specializing in fuel injection systems on heritage era tractors. stock rebuilds to all out pullers!
Posted By: Gatz in NE
Date Posted: 07 Jun 2021 at 12:31pm
Posted By: JohnColo
Date Posted: 08 Jun 2021 at 1:39am
Guess you're out of luck Ed, the price is up to $8,500 with 8 hours to go!
There is that LH combine in Western Colo on Big Iron that is at one dollar with around 30 hours to go. Someone in KS has the $1 bid, I wonder if he also farms in Idaho...
Posted By: truckerfarmer
Date Posted: 08 Jun 2021 at 4:51am
I'm thinking this has Creston written all over it.
------------- Looking at the past to see the future. '53 WD, '53 WD45, WD snap coupler field cultivator, #53 plow,'53 HD5B dozer
Duct tape.... Can't fix stupidity. But will muffle the sound of it!
Posted By: CrestonM
Date Posted: 08 Jun 2021 at 12:50pm
I don’t know about that, I’ve always been a stripper guy instead of a picker guy, and after seeing the sale price, I’ll stick with my cheap strippers
Posted By: Les Kerf
Date Posted: 08 Jun 2021 at 8:13pm
The cotton picker sold for $16,750
Posted By: injpumpEd
Date Posted: 09 Jun 2021 at 8:12am
almost what they were new lol! I hope it goes to a good home. I have a feeling another one may be coming up for sale pretty soon.
------------- 210 "too hot to farm" puller, part of the "insane pumpkin posse". Owner of Guenther Heritage Diesel, specializing in fuel injection systems on heritage era tractors. stock rebuilds to all out pullers!