prof fate
Platinum Member
- Joined
- May 30, 2018
- Messages
- 684
- Location
- beaver pa
- Tractor
- kioti ck3510 Cub Cadet 149, 2146, Toro Zero Turn
Emmssions 'crap' can be removed...many did it to 70s cars and I met a guy that did it a 5 year old Ford pickup. Claims his MPG doubled too.
Car computers were indeed black boxes and just about nobody over 50 messes with fuel injection like they did with carbs 25 years ago, but it can be done. You can buy off the shelf EFI kits for any car (or engine) or google a bit and find ones you can BUILD from junk yard components and freeware on a laptop for programming.
Car computers were indeed black boxes and just about nobody over 50 messes with fuel injection like they did with carbs 25 years ago, but it can be done. You can buy off the shelf EFI kits for any car (or engine) or google a bit and find ones you can BUILD from junk yard components and freeware on a laptop for programming.
Maybe I am missing something...
I have several restored and working tractors from the 1940's and early 1950's... Ford, Deere and Farmall…
No qalms saying I expect these tractors will last forever... and still perform and capable as when new.
Same with my antique cars...
The kicker is I have seen a lot of high end mostly foreign cars that are so complicated emission wise they are often scrapped when emission problems crop up 10 to 15 years out... parts no longer available, manufacturer out of business or sold... and it only gets worse...
Then there is the VW, Audi debacle over Diesel... owners were most satisfied but the vehicles did not meet the standards required... the parts for the affected vehicles are removed from the shelf as they cars are not supposed to be driven... even have issues with some of my gas powered equipment... manufactures decide something is obsolete because it no longer meets current standards...
We have all seen things like this... often called forced retirement.
So... I wonder just how many 25 to 60 hp tier IV final diesel tractors will still be viable when they are 60+ years old like my 1953 Jubilee?
Remember... it might take a decade of more for most of us to put on the same hours that someone in business does in 6 months... and if bought new... any problems are the Manufacturers problem... once the warranty is over... it lands squarely on the owner...
Seen this with new cars... leasing is huge again here... I work with many that have not Owned a car in years... they simply don't want to own out of warranty and willing to pay a premium.