John Deere 450 Crawler Dozer: Specs, Parts & Serial Numbers
Introduced in 1965 as the mid-class JD crawler dozer, the original 450 paired a JD 4-cylinder diesel with a stout mechanical drivetrain and proven undercarriage. It launched what became one of the longest-running model lines in construction equipment history.
Where the 450 fits in the JD crawler family
By the mid-1960s John Deere had completed its move from the 2-cylinder Johnny Popper era into the New Generation of Power lineup. On the crawler side the small-frame slot was filled by the new 350 Dozer, while the mid-class slot — the size customers had been buying as the JD 2010 Crawler — needed a successor. That successor was the John Deere 450 Crawler Dozer.
The original 450 carried a JD 4-cylinder diesel and a fully mechanical drivetrain with multi-speed gearbox, clutch-and-brake steering, and a planetary final drive package built around the proven JD crawler undercarriage. The 450 nameplate it launched would go on through B, C, E, G, H, J, K, and current P-Tier generations — making it one of the longest-running construction equipment designations on the market. Every later 450 traces back to this original 1965 machine.
JD 450 Crawler Dozer — original generation quick specs
- Production start
- 1965
- Class
- Mid-size crawler dozer
- Engine
- JD 4-cylinder diesel
- Drivetrain
- Mechanical, multi-speed
- Steering
- Clutch & brake
- Successor to
- JD 2010 Crawler Dozer
- Direct successor
- JD 450B Crawler Dozer
Serial number ranges by year
The 450 serial number plate is typically located on the front left side of the machine frame. Use this table to identify production year by serial range. Always cross-reference parts orders against the serial number on your machine — JD made running changes during each model year.
| Production year | Starting serial number |
|---|---|
| 1965 | 10001 |
| 1966 | 16160 |
| 1967 | 42767 |
| 1968 | 65000 |
| 1969 | 82276 |
| 1970 | 102144 |
Engine, drivetrain, and undercarriage
The original 450 ran a JD 4-cylinder diesel engine producing power in the mid-class crawler range. Power was routed through a dry clutch and multi-speed mechanical transmission to a planetary final drive package. Steering was managed through left and right steering clutches and brakes — the operator pulled a lever to disengage drive to one track and feathered the brake to swing the machine.
Like the 350 family, the 450’s mechanical drivetrain is straightforward to service. There is no torque converter, no hydrostatic motor, no electronic engine control — every adjustment is mechanical, and a competent operator with a JD service manual can keep one of these running indefinitely. Undercarriage is the proven JD crawler design: oscillating track frames, sealed-and-lubricated track chain, and JD-pattern rollers and idlers.
Common service items on the original JD 450
At 60 years from initial production, every original 450 still working has had multiple rounds of major service. The components customers ask for most often:
- Undercarriage: track chains, track shoes (grouser plates), rollers (top and bottom), idlers, and front idler springs. Undercarriage is the highest-wear system on any crawler dozer.
- Engine internals: JD 4-cylinder diesel rebuild components — pistons, rings, sleeves, bearings, gaskets, oil pump.
- Fuel system: injection pump rebuild kits, injectors, fuel filters, lift pump, fuel lines.
- Cooling system: radiator, water pump, thermostat, hoses, fan belt.
- Steering clutches: clutch packs, brake bands, control linkage — high-wear items on a mechanical crawler.
- Hydraulics: pump rebuilds, dozer cylinder seal kits, hoses, control valves.
- Final drives: sprockets, planetary gears, seals, bearings.
- Electrical: starter, alternator (or generator on early machines), wiring harness, switches, gauges.
Parts and cross-fit components for the John Deere 450 Dozer
| Category | Common parts | Browse |
|---|---|---|
| Undercarriage | Track chains, track shoes, rollers, idlers, sprockets | Browse undercarriage |
| Engine | Pistons, rings, sleeves, bearings, gaskets | Browse engine parts |
| Fuel system | Injection pumps, injectors, lift pumps, filters | Browse fuel system |
| Cooling | Radiators, water pumps, thermostats, hoses | Browse cooling parts |
| Steering & brakes | Steering clutches, brake bands, control linkage | Browse steering & brakes |
| Hydraulics | Cylinders, seal kits, pumps, valves, hoses | Browse hydraulics |
| Final drives | Sprockets, planetary gears, seals, bearings | Browse final drives |
| Electrical | Starters, alternators, harnesses, switches | Browse electrical |
| Operator station | Seats, gauges, controls, decals | Browse operator station |
For 450 parts inventory and cross-fit confirmation, browse the John Deere Dozer Parts hub or contact our parts desk directly.
Need a part for your John Deere 450 Crawler Dozer?
The original 450 is a 60-plus-year-old machine — year and serial dictate which parts fit. Our specialists can verify fitment by serial and walk you through cross-fit options across the 450 family.
Mon – Fri, 7:00 AM – 5:00 PM CT
Request a PartWhat to verify before ordering
The original 450 had a long enough production run that JD made several running changes. Before ordering parts, confirm the serial number on your machine and note these common variation points:
- Engine variant. JD made running changes to the 4-cylinder diesel during the 450’s production run. Confirm the exact engine serial number when ordering internal engine parts.
- Charging system. Earlier 450 machines may have a DC generator; later machines moved to an alternator. The change date varied by application.
- Undercarriage configuration. Standard, narrow-gauge, and wider-track variants existed. Track shoe width and roller count affect parts fitment.
- Hydraulic configuration. Open-center hydraulics with single or multiple control valves depending on attachments equipped.
- Attachment package. Dozer blade angle, tilt, and lift configurations varied. Cylinder bore and stroke specifications differ between configurations.
Why the original 450 still matters today
Sixty years after its introduction, the original JD 450 Crawler Dozer remains a working machine on farms, ranches, small construction sites, and forestry operations across North America. Its appeal is straightforward: a stout JD 4-cylinder diesel, a mechanical drivetrain that any competent operator can troubleshoot, a planetary undercarriage built for service life, and parts availability that has stayed strong for six decades.
For a customer running an original 450 today, the path forward is parts maintenance: keep the undercarriage replaced as it wears, rebuild the engine on a sensible interval, replace steering clutches and brake bands when they slip, and the machine will keep working. Broken Tractor maintains the inventory to support that maintenance cycle on the original 450 and every later 450 generation.
