Ted
The pilot formerly known as Twin Engine Ted
- Joined
- Oct 9, 2007
- Messages
- 30,006
- Display Name
Display name:
iFlyNothing
I thought about resurrecting my "Thinking about a Tractor" thread:
https://www.pilotsofamerica.com/community/threads/thinking-about-a-tractor.84148/
But with the last post being made in 2016, and this having a different theme, I decided to start over.
So for a brief refresher: I have 4 tractors. A Massey Ferguson 165, Allis Chalmers D17 with a good-sized front end loader, a Farmall H, and a Ford 9N. All but the Farmall have 3-points on them, and they are all gasoline powered. The tractor fleet has been consistent for the past... 7 years or so. The 9N I rebuilt the engine on at some point; it and the Farmall have basically been used for fun driving around the property. The Allis is extremely useful with the bucket on front. The Massey is basically used for powering the finish mower and (this is the big thing) the brush hog. I have done very little maintenance to these tractors on the whole.
Over the weekend I went to go get the Massey stared or at least attempt to and found that the block had cracked at some point, filling the crankcase with coolant. End result, the engine is seized.
The Allis Chalmers has never been a great starting tractor. I suspect this is mostly due to a weak ignition system (something I've never bothered trying to improve), but it also only runs on 2 or 3 cylinders when it first starts and then the others kick in. I haven't diagnosed this at all. However at least when I tried cranking it the other day it was cranking freely and was not seized.
I'm trying to figure out what the best course of action is. The reality is the past couple of years we haven't used any of the big tractors all that much. The kids have taken over the job of mowing, and we have three riding mowers that they are able to ride. With 11 acres we do still have some need for brush hogging. The front end loader is something that is just incredibly useful when it's needed. It was especially useful with some of the construction we were doing in 2020-2021 but that is behind us and I don't see us doing much more with that.
I'm trying to figure out the best course of action going forward. I would honestly like to thin the herd at least somewhat, and I really have no desire to rebuild or do an engine swap on the Massey. My inclination is to sell it. It's in decent shape overall for a 50 year old tractor, but it's a 50 year old tractor. The brakes have never worked well (barely worked at all). We put new tires on it not too long after getting it, and the fronts are foam filled (we had a lot of issues with flat tires for a while due to the trees from the 7th circle of Hell that are around our property:
(Google-sourced photos - our trees have even worse spikes)
The simple answer would be to attach the brush hog to the Allis, sell the Massey. I could do this. Right now it has a hydraulic pump on the PTO which drives the hydraulics for the bucket, etc. I think I would need a PTO extension to basically go through the hydraulic pump and then provide enough PTO shaft to attach the driveshaft from the brush hog attachment. I'm a bit concerned about the condition of the Allis's engine, but it's not seized.
I suppose I could try attaching the brush hog to the Farmall, and set it up to just get dragged along rather than modulated with the 3-point, but I feel like that would probably limit what I could do with it. I definitely would not want it powered by the 9N. When you have it going down over stuff, sometimes it will throw things out, and the 9N would have your legs in-line with that stuff that gets thrown.
The 9N has had an issue ever since rebuild the engine where it loses oil pressure once the oil gets warm. That appears to be an issue with the oil pickup, which I pulled and am going to replace with a new one and new gasket.
I am thinking that the Farmall or 9N could get the finish mower attached to it and that could be fine for that use, which has been not very much, but will probably be used more once the boy gets big enough that we'd be comfortable with him driving the tractor. The Farmall is lower horsepower than the Massey, but really that should be just fine at a lower speed, and with 84" width, going slow still cuts a lot of grass fast.
Definitely do not want to buy a new tractor with how expensive the things are.
So, farmers/tractor folks, what say you for this city boy out in the country?
https://www.pilotsofamerica.com/community/threads/thinking-about-a-tractor.84148/
But with the last post being made in 2016, and this having a different theme, I decided to start over.
So for a brief refresher: I have 4 tractors. A Massey Ferguson 165, Allis Chalmers D17 with a good-sized front end loader, a Farmall H, and a Ford 9N. All but the Farmall have 3-points on them, and they are all gasoline powered. The tractor fleet has been consistent for the past... 7 years or so. The 9N I rebuilt the engine on at some point; it and the Farmall have basically been used for fun driving around the property. The Allis is extremely useful with the bucket on front. The Massey is basically used for powering the finish mower and (this is the big thing) the brush hog. I have done very little maintenance to these tractors on the whole.
Over the weekend I went to go get the Massey stared or at least attempt to and found that the block had cracked at some point, filling the crankcase with coolant. End result, the engine is seized.
The Allis Chalmers has never been a great starting tractor. I suspect this is mostly due to a weak ignition system (something I've never bothered trying to improve), but it also only runs on 2 or 3 cylinders when it first starts and then the others kick in. I haven't diagnosed this at all. However at least when I tried cranking it the other day it was cranking freely and was not seized.
I'm trying to figure out what the best course of action is. The reality is the past couple of years we haven't used any of the big tractors all that much. The kids have taken over the job of mowing, and we have three riding mowers that they are able to ride. With 11 acres we do still have some need for brush hogging. The front end loader is something that is just incredibly useful when it's needed. It was especially useful with some of the construction we were doing in 2020-2021 but that is behind us and I don't see us doing much more with that.
I'm trying to figure out the best course of action going forward. I would honestly like to thin the herd at least somewhat, and I really have no desire to rebuild or do an engine swap on the Massey. My inclination is to sell it. It's in decent shape overall for a 50 year old tractor, but it's a 50 year old tractor. The brakes have never worked well (barely worked at all). We put new tires on it not too long after getting it, and the fronts are foam filled (we had a lot of issues with flat tires for a while due to the trees from the 7th circle of Hell that are around our property:
(Google-sourced photos - our trees have even worse spikes)
The simple answer would be to attach the brush hog to the Allis, sell the Massey. I could do this. Right now it has a hydraulic pump on the PTO which drives the hydraulics for the bucket, etc. I think I would need a PTO extension to basically go through the hydraulic pump and then provide enough PTO shaft to attach the driveshaft from the brush hog attachment. I'm a bit concerned about the condition of the Allis's engine, but it's not seized.
I suppose I could try attaching the brush hog to the Farmall, and set it up to just get dragged along rather than modulated with the 3-point, but I feel like that would probably limit what I could do with it. I definitely would not want it powered by the 9N. When you have it going down over stuff, sometimes it will throw things out, and the 9N would have your legs in-line with that stuff that gets thrown.
The 9N has had an issue ever since rebuild the engine where it loses oil pressure once the oil gets warm. That appears to be an issue with the oil pickup, which I pulled and am going to replace with a new one and new gasket.
I am thinking that the Farmall or 9N could get the finish mower attached to it and that could be fine for that use, which has been not very much, but will probably be used more once the boy gets big enough that we'd be comfortable with him driving the tractor. The Farmall is lower horsepower than the Massey, but really that should be just fine at a lower speed, and with 84" width, going slow still cuts a lot of grass fast.
Definitely do not want to buy a new tractor with how expensive the things are.
So, farmers/tractor folks, what say you for this city boy out in the country?