Doing the rear main seal in a farmall cub at the moment, there's heaps of these around Motueka New Zealand they were used for tobacco but now are mainly used for potato's.
We used them cultivating tobacco in my youth, and as a general all- around workhorse on the farm. I learned to drive on one. Great tractor, crank start, but not for side hill work.
The Farmall Cub is the coolest one. Cubs are a smaller version of the A but with hydraulic lift for belly mounted tillage and rear mounted cultivators.
Hello the A's super A's very comon in the states . On are dairy farm of 40 acres the A's were what repalced the horse .And for the size they worked Great.🏆🇺🇸
Thanks for the info! In all honesty I'm starting to think they are not so rare in the UK as I thought. I has never seen an offset one before. Thanks for commenting.
Its amusing for me to see this tractor treated as rare in your part of the world. Here in the states you can throw a stone in an old farmyard without hitting one of these farmalls. Between the different models they quite literally built hundreds of thousands of them with 117000 "A"'s being built alone.
Britian did have a factory in Doncaster that built them from 1939 so they did build a fair amount but honestly I've not seen many around now. Definitely not many offset.
Doing the rear main seal in a farmall cub at the moment, there's heaps of these around Motueka New Zealand they were used for tobacco but now are mainly used for potato's.
We used them cultivating tobacco in my youth, and as a general all- around workhorse on the farm. I learned to drive on one. Great tractor, crank start, but not for side hill work.
Very cool! Thanks for sharing! amazing the memories these tractors made.
Farmall Cubs, A's and B's all had cultivision seat set ups or "offset" like that so you could see the row crop as you cultivated.
That’s very interesting information thanks for sharing!
The Farmall Cub is the coolest one. Cubs are a smaller version of the A but with hydraulic lift for belly mounted tillage and rear mounted cultivators.
Oh never seen an offset tractor before!
Not sure I had seen one until this show I visited mate.
Hello the A's super A's very comon in the states . On are dairy farm of 40 acres the A's were what repalced the horse .And for the size they worked Great.🏆🇺🇸
Thanks for the info! In all honesty I'm starting to think they are not so rare in the UK as I thought. I has never seen an offset one before. Thanks for commenting.
Howdy
I myself own a 1939 A model Farmall tractor. I couldn't figure out why you thought that model was rare, I didn't realize you're in the UK
🚜
The rear wheels are mounted backwards (I assume to give it a slightly wider stance)
Very cool, yet simple.
Yep. Love how it’s offset also. Just not something you see nowadays
Wow that's a lot of redness
Yep 👍🏼 love the restoration on it!
@@Raymondoleemotors looks a great resto
I have never see one of them either but cool design though.
Yes love the fact it’s offset. Actually very rare to see one ☝️
very rare I would think but very cool though@@Raymondoleemotors
Compare that to the tractors of today....what a difference....
Yep! Still amazed at the offset
Wooow, 🤝😎
Cool isn’t it
Its amusing for me to see this tractor treated as rare in your part of the world. Here in the states you can throw a stone in an old farmyard without hitting one of these farmalls. Between the different models they quite literally built hundreds of thousands of them with 117000 "A"'s being built alone.
Britian did have a factory in Doncaster that built them from 1939 so they did build a fair amount but honestly I've not seen many around now. Definitely not many offset.
They're far from Super Rare, even here in the UK 🇬🇧 🇬🇧 🇬🇧
They really aren't rare. IH made about 200000 of them. That one is slightly unusual as it's early and has no place for the starter. But most did.