Creamer
Elite Member
The 148 is not quick tach in terms of pins like today but it is 4 bolts in each rear mount and then the hydraulic hoses then drive out. Just reverse order to put it back on. With a wrench and level ground it is certainly less than 10 minutes probably less than 5.I don't think that 148 is a QA loader. At least not in the modern sense.
301a is not as common of a tractor.
But the real reasons I didn't reccomend it is because the price and hours don't seem to jive. Hours are too high for the price or the price is too high for the hours...however you want to say it.
the price may be a little high or may not depending on the condition which certainly does not look bad in the photos. the loader has not been abused which is a good sign of how the rest of the tractor was treated. 4600 hours over 40 years - I certainly wouldn't call that a lot. my nephews have a 4450 that they took to 22,000 hours before they overhauled it. If it has been taken care of I would not be scared of it at all.
The higher flow hydraulics, shuttle shift, heavier front end, loader definitely put this a notch ahead of the Massey. Diesels of that vintage were very notably much harder to start so if you are thinking that old of tractor in a cold climate such as Wisconsin I would hesitate to go diesel. I grew up in that era and envrionment - with JD 4010, 4020, 4230, Oliver 88, White 2-150, IH 66 and 86 series, Case 70 series - and the IH were pretty good starting when they were new and the rest had a hard time at 0 degrees without some type of assistance. Once it started getting below 0 then it got fun.