Pics of the Nortrac...
View attachment 572247View attachment 572248View attachment 572249View attachment 572250
View attachment 572247View attachment 572248View attachment 572249View attachment 572250
What's the consensus on Chinese tractors?Just got word, 579 hours...it's a tractor from 1996.
I’m kind of in the same boat, we’re closing on 10 acres this week. I found an 86 ford 1710 4x4 with fel, came with a 5 ft brush hog, 5ft angle blade, box blade and a John Deere finish mower on Craigslist for $8500. Plenty of tractor for our land and I absolutely love it. Keep looking and something will come along, good luck on your new property!
What's the consensus on Chinese tractors?
I like my 1993 Rhino (Shanghai) 55hp tractor seen 4 go for between $4500 and $7500
about a 7000 lb 4x4 tractor with american Koyker FEL mounted.
imo tougher than my Ford 3000 with FEL
The older heavier and bigger tractors will use more fuel due to being heavier and bigger. Nothing special about it. My little 1720 New Holland at 28 HP would barely use a gallon and hour. My 4610 SU Ford at 60 HP would use 2 to 3 gallons per hour. It would do 2 to 3 times the work also. It's all relative. For 12 acres that little 1720 IMHO would be perfect. The older Fords have great parts support. Some of the Shibaura built units in the 00 or 10 series may be a little more dicey. As stated nothing wrong with a Chinese tractor if you have parts support.
If you are worried about roll over protection (a valid concern), you can always have a roll bar or even a full cage fabricated for an older tractor. The cage on my tractor isn't factory and is better built than the factory roll bar. Or if you weld, you can do it yourself.
I have no experience with Chinese tractors and will leave that one for others.
Old iron tends to be built better and is simpler to fix than today's tractors. So you can't really compare apples to apples. 40 hp in a modern tractor is not nearly the same as a 40 hp tractor from the 80's or earlier. The older tractor is likely to weigh twice as much and will be much harder to stop for ground engagement. Also the hp ratings on older tractors were much more conservative. They were often rated at the PTO and testing often showed they were under rated. Today's tractors are typically rated at the engine crank and not conservatively, so comparing hp is deceiving. If you don't mind operating a clutch, and have some real pulling to do, the older tractors are very attractive.
A 2wd Yanmar is not the same beast as a 2wd farm tractor. I agree that if you are talking about a CUT, then 4wd is a must. If you are talking about a farm tractor from the 60s or 70s, 2wd will provide sufficient traction (just watch them work in the fields).