Egon
Epic Contributor
Considering the extreme wear and condition of most of the tractors i have resurected, plus looking at the hour meters.. for the ones that have meters.. or for the meters that were still working.. or looking at where they stopped.. I can say.. at least for my machines.. they had plenty of -work- hours on some of them. 3pt linkages with egged draft link holes, bent support and lift members, etc... telltale that high draft forces were encountered.
wear on running gear, bearings and moving parts and general wear / tear on drivetrain components, along with evidence of decades of repairs give proof positive that these machines were not bought, parked for 40-60 years, then sold to me.
I have one unit, a 58 ford that was used for public works around paving. had decades of layers of tar and asphalt products on the underside. had to use diesel and heat, and chipping hammers to remove it. the strata gave details to the era's change as you saw differeng aggregate like chip and slag materials in different layers.. also you could see evidence of lean mix layers like asphalt emulsions, vs tars.. etc. Being in the road contracting business myself for the last 22 years, it was almost like a trip to the past working on that machine.
Mind you I also have machines that saw very little use. For instance, a 55 ford that has the original proofmeter as far as I can tell from looking under the dash, etc.. it has about 550 hours on it now.. that's about 10hrs a year or so.
soundguy
Thats nice.
Do you have a maintenance history detailing the parts replaced and work done on the machines.
How many of those hours did you put on?