Sweet! I’m in love. I have an 8N . Serial # seems to indicate a ‘51. But it has front mounted distributor. Has embossed “Ford” on hood but has smooth fenders with no embossing. Serial #8N42319(?) seems I’m missing a digit. Anyone have any ideas?
I think 1950 might have been a transition year for the distributor and generator location. My 1950 8N had a side-mount distributor on the right side and the generator was on the left side of the motor. I converted mine to 12V and changed the ignition to electronic.
@@andyallen7509 If you have a front mounted distributor, you likely have a early 1950, or earlier, model. Sometime in 1950, the distributors changed to side-mount. Your serial number would be correct for a 1948 model. The serial numbers were 37908 to 141369 for 1948. The serial number range for 1951 was 363593 to 442034; however, with a front-mount distributor, you likely have a 1948 model.
@@Mike--K Thats what has puzzled me. The distributor location would indicate an earlier year. But the serial number , though very difficult to read, I believe to be accurately interpreted. The serial number also seems to include a horizontal diamond which I understand indicates something about cylinder sleeves (or lack there of). I too am 12v with electronic ignition. What an awesome alteration that is! Thank you for your reply. Any further comments or suggestions are very much appreciated. I’m new to the tractor/8N world. Need all the input I can get!
@@andyallen7509 You definitely have a mystery! Ford used stars and diamonds to identify the beginning and end of the serial number. The stars were used on the 8N until sometime in 1951 when Ford changed to diamonds. That might be when they changed from steel to cast iron sleeves. From what I've been able to find, the 1951 serial number sequence ran from 8N343593 to 8N442034.
That was the most fancy name for some drum brakes ever. "internal expanding"
We used to put an 8 volt battery in our grain trucks so they’d start better. Didn’t seem to hurt anything.
you can look at the engine's serial number to determine the year of production
Every time I changed the oil bath air cleaners on our old equipment I was the one who got the oil bath.
There are two headlights. There are 4 wheels and 1 battery.
U sure they're only 4 wheels? What about the stirring wheel?
Nice review, thanks
I changed my 8N to a 12 volt, negative ground system.
do you have a videoon steering wheel and gear box connection etc
need that book
Do you have any videos on the air cleaner and how they mount
mounts on the steering box
Serial# will tell you the year..🇺🇸
That radiator cap would drive me insane!!!! FIX IT. LMAO
You sure the generator is 12 volt?
Nope....3 cellls on the battery... 6 Volt.
My 1952 8N has a 12 volt generator on it same style as original one with 12 volt battery so someone converted it...
It has to be 50 and back for the year because it has a front mounted distributer
Sweet! I’m in love. I have an 8N . Serial # seems to indicate a ‘51. But it has front mounted distributor. Has embossed “Ford” on hood but has smooth fenders with no embossing. Serial #8N42319(?) seems I’m missing a digit. Anyone have any ideas?
I think 1950 might have been a transition year for the distributor and generator location. My 1950 8N had a side-mount distributor on the right side and the generator was on the left side of the motor. I converted mine to 12V and changed the ignition to electronic.
@@andyallen7509 If you have a front mounted distributor, you likely have a early 1950, or earlier, model. Sometime in 1950, the distributors changed to side-mount. Your serial number would be correct for a 1948 model. The serial numbers were 37908 to 141369 for 1948. The serial number range for 1951 was 363593 to 442034; however, with a front-mount distributor, you likely have a 1948 model.
@@Mike--K Thats what has puzzled me. The distributor location would indicate an earlier year. But the serial number , though very difficult to read, I believe to be accurately interpreted. The serial number also seems to include a horizontal diamond which I understand indicates something about cylinder sleeves (or lack there of).
I too am 12v with electronic ignition. What an awesome alteration that is!
Thank you for your reply. Any further comments or suggestions are very much appreciated. I’m new to the tractor/8N world. Need all the input I can get!
@@andyallen7509 You definitely have a mystery! Ford used stars and diamonds to identify the beginning and end of the serial number. The stars were used on the 8N until sometime in 1951 when Ford changed to diamonds. That might be when they changed from steel to cast iron sleeves. From what I've been able to find, the 1951 serial number sequence ran from 8N343593 to 8N442034.
Mine starts better than at -10 degrees
idle is set too high other than tht its good
he didnt have it set at idle . it was almost half throttle when he started it
my mistake, i see it now
your good john , i had to go back an look myself after reading comment .. tractor was purrin just sittin there
Fix the radiator cap lol
Um the fuel boul is supposed to be turned all the way out that is why it was hard to start
Doesn't matter....Always starts this way.
My 1949 you turn the the shut off out 1 turn, reserve is 2 turns, and if it has generator it's 6v
@@busesdeerandsound100 all the way out is for reserve fuel...
I will not eat green eggs and ham
dying battery....geezzzzzz...keep cranking
I guess you never had a 6 volt system this one sounds petty good. I have mine so I get a whump start.