How many acres was an 8N designed to farm, when new?

   / How many acres was an 8N designed to farm, when new? #31  
The 8N’s biggest drawback with lack of traction. The smaller wheels and the lighter weight made it vulnerable to slippage. Same as a WD-45. Good engines, but not much traction.
Don't dis my ACs! The WD-45 was a little lighter than a Farmall M, but it was well over 1000 pounds heavier than an 8N and had significantly larger tires. In our are it was about an even split between AC and Farmall with a few JDs, mainly because the AC and Farmall dealers were the best. We did usually weight the wheels but the ACs could outwork the Farmalls, especially when we put D-17 kits in the WD-45s. We had ACs and my uncle had Farmalls, so we had a direct comparison.
 
   / How many acres was an 8N designed to farm, when new? #32  
One thing I will say about the AC and Ford. They had good motors. While this may seem like an odd metric, you saw a lot of AC and Ford engines running carnival rides. That meant they were reliable, started well, and had some longevity. If they had not, the carnys would have ran something else.

I did have some familiarity with the AC brand. My uncle and his son ran them as did a close neighbor. So I got to drive them occasionally. I always thought having a hand clutch and foot clutch on them was interesting!
 
   / How many acres was an 8N designed to farm, when new? #33  
The ACs were great for baling hay because you could use the hand clutch and keep the PTO running, which most other tractors of the era could not.
 
   / How many acres was an 8N designed to farm, when new? #34  
Imagine it's 1948, and a farmer has just bought a brand spanking new 8N as his primary tractor. How many acres would he likely farm? The large scale of agriculture industry today makes it hard to imagine a time when a feller could successfully farm with just an 8N, especially for us young guys...;)

In my area there were a lot of small ranches, seems like almost every one of them had an N Ford at one point or another, mainly for augering post-holes, backblading dirt roads, and brushhogging. I knew of one that was used solely for snow removal, with a Dearborn 19-1 snow blade. That was a pretty slick setup. In my memory, the N's have always been regarded as faithful little "chore" tractors, while bigger machines handled the heavy lifting. Was this always the case?

Thanks for entertaining my rambling, folks- Fell down a rabbit hole looking at old Dearborn equipment brochures I've recently acquired....:)
if you consider the 8n was replacing a team of horses then it was a big improvement. We had two teams of horses on the farm I grew up on, which was around 70 acres of tillable land. One Formal C replaced both teams. C was around the same hp as the 8 N. I still have the C today.
 
   / How many acres was an 8N designed to farm, when new?
  • Thread Starter
#35  
It was definitely a massive improvement over working with a team of horses or mules. If a farm used an N-series as the chore tractor and a Farmall M or JD G as the big tractor, did that mean they had to buy separate implements for each machine? A Farmall M is much larger than an 8N, but I can imagine it could be inconvenient having to purchase and maintain two different sets of implements.

I’m especially curious about the 3-point implements for the N-series Fords. Since other tractors at the time didn’t use a 3-point hitch, those implements wouldn’t fit anything else. How did farms handle that mismatch?
 
   / How many acres was an 8N designed to farm, when new? #36  
If you wanted mounted implements you had to dedicate them to the tractor. We had snap coupler plows for the ACs but we also had a pull type trip plow for the old F-20. Other than plows and cultivators there weren't many mounted implements.
 
   / How many acres was an 8N designed to farm, when new? #37  
Not an 8N, but dad had an old Ford NAA, Jubilee, that he drug many many loads of hardwood time out to the road for grapple trucks back when there were small independent sawmills with grapple straight trucks in WVa. We had 90 acres of mountain woods, and raised sheep, and about an acre of garden and another acre of fruit trees. He did replace the engine at one point. Ive kinda wondered a time or two what happened to the tractor after he died in a roll over. I think mom either gave it away or sold it for next to nothing. It did a Lot of work, but also had a lot of limitations. This would have been late 80s; so very obsolete at the time.
 
   / How many acres was an 8N designed to farm, when new? #38  
In the '50's and '60's a diversified family farm that had some cows, chickens and pigs, made hay and grew feed grain was commonly 60 acres. Coming off the depression and war, the 8N did most of what was required and was priced right. It was a great tractor for that use. That same farm might later add an Int'l H or M or Deere.

The need for HP grew fast but Ford was slow on that so IH and Deere elbowed in and the Ford 8N was pushed aside to became a great utility tractor for raking hay and pulling wagons. They didn't get much use and that's why so many survived with fairly low use. Anyway, that's what I saw.
We didn't have a farm in the 50s or 60s but we did have a 127 acre dairy farm we had an 8n and a JD 520. The little 8n was the handy tractor that we used for all the small work (mowing, raking, planting, etc.) and the JD handled the bailing, plowing, and discing. We tried "dirt" farming for a bit but the weather wasn't reliable enough to make it work. Pastured cows with winter hay forage was the money maker for almost 20 years before all the boys left to make their own fortunes.
 
   / How many acres was an 8N designed to farm, when new? #39  
I bought my '52 8N from the original purchaser. He still had his owner's manual, sales receipt and customer survey (attached here). With the 8N, I got his Dearborn 2-14 Economy plow, Dearborn cultivator, and Love Tractor disc harrow. You will see from the survey that he farmed 70-99 acres with it. It replaced his mules. Can you imagine how hard that was? Mr. Bangs worked this 8N hard, but loved it and took great care of it. He started getting emotional as I loaded it on my trailer and I offered to back out of the deal, but he would not hear of it as long as I promised to take good care of her. I've had her for about 30 years now. I've also attached the sales invoice that shows the original price of the 8N and implements.
Think about how much middle America was farmed with 1 horse power...
 
   / How many acres was an 8N designed to farm, when new? #40  
We didn't have a farm in the 50s or 60s but we did have a 127 acre dairy farm we had an 8n and a JD 520. The little 8n was the handy tractor that we used for all the small work (mowing, raking, planting, etc.) and the JD handled the bailing, plowing, and discing. We tried "dirt" farming for a bit but the weather wasn't reliable enough to make it work. Pastured cows with winter hay forage was the money maker for almost 20 years before all the boys left to make their own fortunes.
Yep, we all went off to serve our country and never came back!
 

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