Jeff Ludeke has come across his fair share of tractor parts. For two decades, he was a repair technician at a John Deere dealership in rural Nebraska. Recently, he started his own repair shop out of several garages he built at his home in Atlanta, Nebraska (population: 131).
So, what do you do with a bunch of extra farm equipment parts? If you’re Ludeke, you build the Ludekrusher, a DIY monster truck built on the chassis of a ’99 Chevy Silverado.
Ludeke’s garages are filled with various Frankenmachines: He’s got an extra-horsepower tractor named after President Trump, a lime green convertible he modified to look like a classic whip, and various old farm vehicles outfitted with custom twists. But his pride and joy is the Ludekrusher, a street-legal monster truck with harvester combine wheels, a modified suspension, and a stock engine, which lets him drive it around town and in local parades.
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“I’ve got some looks from cops but they just kind of nod at me,” Ludeke told me.
Having never before ridden in a monster truck, I asked Ludeke to take me for a spin. We strapped a GoPro to the ladder I used to get into the cab, put our camera operator in the truck bed, and went ripping through a cornfield outside of Ludeke’s house.
The Ludekrusher rides smoothly, but we did have one serious problem. After roaring through a small swamp, the truck hit the edge of a hill, breaking the its drive shaft and leaving us stranded at the bottom of a bog. After calls to a half dozen of Ludeke’s relatives, someone rescued us. I’m happy to report that Ludeke towed the Ludekrusher out of the bog and it’s since been repaired to ride another day.
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