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I used to see those at the Ohio State Fair when I lived in Columbus. The coolest ones were the hit-and-miss engines-- they'd go BANG chunkachunkachuuunka chuuuunka chunnn ka... BANG and so on. They had a huge pulley wheel as the power take-off. I have no idea what they were used for, since they continually sped up and slowed down.
 
The National Threshers Association and the Wauseon Steam Engine Show have a yearly reunion here in NW Ohio at the Fulton County Fairgrounds north of Wauseon. They sure spew a lot of smoke.

National Threshers Association, Annual Steam Traction Engine Show

Didn't go this year due to monsoons. Here are some photos from a few years ago.
 

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Quite a few(relatively speaking) have been restored here in the midwest and are seen operating at shows, especially when a thresher is there also. As indicated previously, that was a major reason for their existence prior to the advent of the combine.

Regards,
Andy


rock doc posted before I finished -thanks for the pictures, rock doc
 
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When I was a kid the farmer down the road had one but it had steel wheels and belched voluminous clouds of black smoke. Only saw him use it to pull things like stumps. The contraption seemed huge to an 8 year old, and probably was. Certainly bigger then his regular tractor. That was 65 years ago.
 
The Amish neighbors kid in New Holland PA was an old-fashioned horsepower farmer, but they brought in some big steam powered equipment on occasion.

NEW_HOLLAND_006.jpg
 
August 9-12 this year the Sycamore, Illinois, annual
steam tractor show will be held. Sycamore's
not too far west of Chicago.
 
We see a lot of them at tractor and farm shows around here, too.

For years, there was an old farmyard just outside Montgomery, MN that was a graveyard/parking lot for maybe as many as forty or fifty old steam tractor, many of them probably restorable. I used to make a point of stopping by there for photo ops whenever my motorbike rides took me down to that quadrant of the state.

The story was that these machines were tied up in an estate for years. One day about 25 years ago, I went by there and they were gone. The farmhouse and all the outbuildings had been leveled.i didn't have any contacts in that part of the state, and never did find out what the deal was, although it must have made some news down there at the time.

I hope that at least some of those old locomotives will show up at farm shows from time to time. I remain skeptical, however. The Xers and millenials do not seem to have the affinity for old machinery that we and our grandfathers did.
 
I can remember the county fair would have steam tractor races every year. I think the top speed was around 5 mph so it took awhile to determine a winner....
 
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