I have a 1979 1200 here in Sweden. But its massivly rebuilt sometime in the mid 80's. With a massive 7,3m forestry crane in the back and fuel tank moved to the side to make room in the cabin to be able to drive and sit backwards as well. Hudralic tank and extra pump in the front. 18.4-34 and chains on all tires, and steel plates underneath for forestry work. Exhaust moved to the side of the cabin etc. etc.. Its currently gets the engine replaced. It has a lot of flaws but its quite useful to have around the farm.
I had a 1200 for a number of years down here in Devon - used to take it to shows. Nothing will ever prepare you for the shock of taking up the floor and seeing a Massey 35 gearbox ! Yes I know its different on the inside but the casting is the same - including where the 35 foot pegs bolted....🤣🤣😁😁 Still loved it I did. Now lives in North Devon..
Hello Dave, I've also owned a Mark 2 1200, from 1978. It fell out of 3rd gear and have been looking for that gear for a long time untill I contacted you because of your MF 1200 FB account. You were the only one that could supply me with a new gear. 👍 I don't own the 1200 anymore but it was fun to drive.
Greetings from JT's neck of the woods! Thanks for the great, informative video. Not really a farmer, but I love the history of the Massey Fergusons. Thanks for keeping them going.
Happy memories of the late 70's and a job on a farm just after leaving school.They had a 1200 there and I remember it being quite a good bit of kit at the time.Sadly I can't remember the reg number now .Only just found out recently how few of them were made.There seemed to be quite a few of them around at the time,perhaps we were just lucky to be in an area where they were popular.Keep up the good work Dave,it's lovely to see and interesting to watch.Cheers Geeza.
Interesting to hear how you got into them Dave and the differences between them. I think you've sparked an interest for a lot of us in these models that we never had before! Is the 1200 staying in it's working clothes or going to have the Massey Dave treatment in time? Cheers 👍
Hi Dave! Love what you do! There were a few 1200's sold in New Zealand. I know of 3 in the North Island alone & there are a few in the South Island as well. One of our Friends of Ferguson Heritage members has imported a 1250 from the UK & a MF 4880 from the US to add to his already impressive collection of Massey Ferguson tractors. I'm working on restoring an early 1966 MF 165 with the 203 Perkins motor, so I appreciate the work you & the apprentice put into those tractors! Always enjoy your videos!
There was always a very distinct 1200/1250 almost Marmite/Bakelite type smell inside the cabs of them. Do yours smell similar? You also never forget the cluck/rattle of the door pull as you slammed the door shut and the thud of the window opening levers as they are opened or closed. Absolute heavenly things to drive and own. Wish I still had all 3 I have had over the years.
Come on Mike, lm in Sweden, further away so the signal is weaker here 😂😂😂😂😂. All joking aside, they are things of beauty,greatly underestimated and had MF not had financial difficulties the 1250 would have continued and the supposed bigger artics (140 hp) may have been built. Largest concentration of 1250's l knew of were in Indonesia. They went onto Sugar Projects. At that time l was working fur Fird and our projects were on Sumatera and we had 6610's, 7610 and 964 Counties. The MF Projects were on Java and Kalimantan if L remember correctly. They had 290's, 298 Turbos and 1250's. The 298T was not official but converted to meet the Tender Soecifications. Both companies won three projects with a total of something like 3 to 400 units total. Have details somewhere
What was the advantage over a traditional tractor? My dad drove one, as a small child I remember him chuntering every time he had to drive it. He normally drove a 2640.
Hello Dave, wonderful video on these legendary tractors! a terrible look....! You are an expert on these machines, and above all a great restorer....... I have a quick question regarding the 1200 and 1250: at what maximum speed did these tractors travel in England? I am in France, and here they were moving at 24 - 25 km/hour Thanks again, see you soon
Brillant video Dave. Ive only known about the 1200 and 1250 for the last couple of years and wondered what the diffrance was. Have you done any of the Americian v8 ones done know the model number . Hope your after bottle of beer. Im enjoying a pint of the Guiness
Bit late to the party here...Great bonus video Dave. My interest was sparked 30+ years ago after seeing one for sale locally and wanted one since. I always felt they had a lot more to offer than their blue equal wheel counterparts (might be a controversial statement but i think this is a safe space 😂). Keep up the good work Dave & Penny keeping the tractors restored along with those all important parts and most importantly the information (& entertainment 😂) you provide is priceless 👏
just found your channel very interesting i drove a 1200 then a 1250 on the farm i worked on in the 70,s the 1250 i drove had a straight chrome exhaust came from massey like that never new not many of them were made
Why Dave, has the 1200 got a 1250 steering wheel and the 1250 have a 1200 steering wheel? 1200/50’s are an obsession. Just different in every way. Nothing else in the power and weight class has ever come close for wheel grip. A joy to drive in the fields. 👍👍 Ps. Love your videos of what you do.
The 1200 there is a late one , almost bar 50 in the production , so it has a few 1250 similarity , the 1250 is an aftermarket one as the one it had was broken ! 🤷♂️🤦♂️
Worked on quite a few 1200's, but only ever worked on one 1250. Think when they were introduced, the 2000 series tractors were preferred as they looked more conventional
They were also cheaper to buy and more flexible in their application than either the MF 1200 or the later MF 1250. The MF 1250 used the same engine as the MF 2000 series, the 6-354•4, which had machined inlet ports in the cylinder head, a thickened and deeper 'skirt' and the tappet covers were eliminated, with a now constant section of material on the RHS of the engine. This made it structurally stronger, and in conjunction with the massively strong engine sump, allowed such tractors as the MF 2000s (US 1978, Europe 1979), and MF 699 (1984), to be feasible in the first place, since the engine block was now strong and rigid enough to be used as a structural member.
I worked at the combine plant in Brantford Ontario back in the 80's Thay had a implement newly built it ran for a year or 2 then gutted it and brought those articulation tractors from the UK to Brantford Thay built 7 V8 tractors and closed the plant and moved the production back to the UK . where were Thay built after that.
Was there not some connection with certainly the early 1200’s with Kilmarnock? My father had one of the first, if not the first non-demonstration 1200’s sold to any farm in 1972/3 and MF lavished a lot of entertainment and factory visits to him while sale negotiations took place, including a visit to the Kilmarnock factory and lots of Malt whiskey tastings! (“May I have some water with it?” …..”You will not!”) MF took his tractor away after a year and smash tested many important bolts on it before rebuilding it and sending it back, with several improvements, including the shaft bolts between Engine and transmission. We eventually had 2 1200’s and a 1250. All were adored, but the 1250 was definitely superior. Just brilliant tractors. Their grip was unbelievable! You have dome a fantastic job Dave.
@@MasseyDave Yes they definitely did build Combine there. Maybe I’m mistaken, but MF definitely took my Dad to Kilmarnock about the time he was negotiating with MF, through F A Standen at Ely to buy that first 1200. He was no fan of MF Combines, so he wouldn’t have gone there to see them. And I do remember something about Manchester. I wonder if Colin could enlighten us to the details? I also remember them being shown on Tomorrow’s World, but a while after we had taken delivery of ours. They also showed a 1505. Anther thing I remember was when they took ours away for testing, they lent us another 1200 which was a very early test model. It had weighted PAVT wheels on it which made it look awful! We used our first one with a 5 furrow Dowdeswell semi mounted (DP2?) plough, ploughing on land rather that in the furrow. This was no good when it got wet as the tractor would always end up sliding into the furrow. Eventually we bought a fully mounted 4 furrow Lemken and drove the tractor in furrow which sorted it all out. MF came out with its Diamond plough, but it would not turn the land over well enough on heavy land. By the time we had the 1250, we had a Dowdeswell DP8 plough and we thought this was the perfect plough for it
@@MasseyDave By the way Dave, just been talking to my brother Paul, who I now know has spoken with you several times. He drove our 2nd 1200, the S reg until it cremated itself. Then we replaced it with the 1250. Paul sends his regards and apologises for not having kept in touch recently. But he has been quite busy. He and my brother Mark have a lovely late 390 and an absolute peach of a 3125. Paul is still trying to find out where our old 1250 is, but knows she was exported. My Brothers’ are in North Suffolk and I am in the North Cotswolds. When I arrived here at Moreton-in-Marsh in 1996, the was a local Contractor, Tim Ingles, who has 3 1200’s and there still is another guy near me that has another 3 of them. One has a fore-end loader, mounted on the back of the tractor.
@@MasseyDave Not to worry Dave. It has been 2 years since brother Paul ward spoke with you. Those of us the had and loved our 1200’s and 1250’s absolutely love the fact that you collect, use and restore so many of them.
I have a 1979 1200 here in Sweden.
But its massivly rebuilt sometime in the mid 80's.
With a massive 7,3m forestry crane in the back and fuel tank moved to the side to make room in the cabin to be able to drive and sit backwards as well. Hudralic tank and extra pump in the front.
18.4-34 and chains on all tires, and steel plates underneath for forestry work.
Exhaust moved to the side of the cabin etc. etc..
Its currently gets the engine replaced.
It has a lot of flaws but its quite useful to have around the farm.
Eu já tive um máximo 1805 era um motor
Por que que a Massey Ferguson não volta nos articulado que se é um trator eficiente
I had a 1200 for a number of years down here in Devon - used to take it to shows.
Nothing will ever prepare you for the shock of taking up the floor and seeing a Massey 35 gearbox ! Yes I know its different on the inside but the casting is the same - including where the 35 foot pegs bolted....🤣🤣😁😁
Still loved it I did.
Now lives in North Devon..
Unbelievable restoration Dave a real credit to your skill and patience. Great to see both side by side and the difference between them.
Cheers 👍
Hello Dave, I've also owned a Mark 2 1200, from 1978. It fell out of 3rd gear and have been looking for that gear for a long time untill I contacted you because of your MF 1200 FB account. You were the only one that could supply me with a new gear. 👍 I don't own the 1200 anymore but it was fun to drive.
Was very lucky to get that gear ! 👍👍
Credit to you Dave brings back a lot of happy memories. Dad had two brand new in 70s had a lot of happy hours with him in the cab 😊regards😊👍👍😊
Thank you 👍❤️
Greetings from JT's neck of the woods! Thanks for the great, informative video. Not really a farmer, but I love the history of the Massey Fergusons. Thanks for keeping them going.
Hey , thanks , I do 3 vids a week of mostly tractor stuff with sum truck and plenty of banter 👍
A serious credit to you Dave.. the time and effort alone without the cost of everything is amazing. Keep her lite 👌
Thank you 👍👍
Happy memories of the late 70's and a job on a farm just after leaving school.They had a 1200 there and I remember it being quite a good bit of kit at the time.Sadly I can't remember the reg number now .Only just found out recently how few of them were made.There seemed to be quite a few of them around at the time,perhaps we were just lucky to be in an area where they were popular.Keep up the good work Dave,it's lovely to see and interesting to watch.Cheers Geeza.
Great video n nice tractors
@@MrBen-uk thank you 👍
Super video….. 👍🏻👌🏻 nice bit of history….
Thanks Dave,love all the articulated masseys.
Great video Dave! Always wondered what the upgrades were 😊
Interesting to hear how you got into them Dave and the differences between them. I think you've sparked an interest for a lot of us in these models that we never had before! Is the 1200 staying in it's working clothes or going to have the Massey Dave treatment in time?
Cheers 👍
Cheers , she will say as she is
Hi Dave! Love what you do! There were a few 1200's sold in New Zealand. I know of 3 in the North Island alone & there are a few in the South Island as well. One of our Friends of Ferguson Heritage members has imported a 1250 from the UK & a MF 4880 from the US to add to his already impressive collection of Massey Ferguson tractors. I'm working on restoring an early 1966 MF 165 with the 203 Perkins motor, so I appreciate the work you & the apprentice put into those tractors! Always enjoy your videos!
Excellent video kept you busy for a hour or two on a Sunday morning!
Half hr this avo ! Was in work this morning makin parts !!
Lovely informative video.
There was always a very distinct 1200/1250 almost Marmite/Bakelite type smell inside the cabs of them.
Do yours smell similar?
You also never forget the cluck/rattle of the door pull as you slammed the door shut and the thud of the window opening levers as they are opened or closed.
Absolute heavenly things to drive and own. Wish I still had all 3 I have had over the years.
Thanks ! Yea know what you mean 👍👍 ole skool so much better than this new stuff !
Come on Mike, lm in Sweden, further away so the signal is weaker here 😂😂😂😂😂. All joking aside, they are things of beauty,greatly underestimated and had MF not had financial difficulties the 1250 would have continued and the supposed bigger artics (140 hp) may have been built. Largest concentration of 1250's l knew of were in Indonesia. They went onto Sugar Projects. At that time l was working fur Fird and our projects were on Sumatera and we had 6610's, 7610 and 964 Counties. The MF Projects were on Java and Kalimantan if L remember correctly. They had 290's, 298 Turbos and 1250's. The 298T was not official but converted to meet the Tender Soecifications. Both companies won three projects with a total of something like 3 to 400 units total. Have details somewhere
I wonder if they’d ship any of them back for spares!!
What was the advantage over a traditional tractor? My dad drove one, as a small child I remember him chuntering every time he had to drive it. He normally drove a 2640.
1200/1250 was predominantly a pulling tractor for arable , weight distribution with implement on and manoverability
Agree with you that she's a thing of beauty👌made for an interesting and good watch. 👍🍻🍻
Machines of beauty Dave keep up the good work
Still the coolest looking tractors around dave
Hello Dave, wonderful video on these legendary tractors! a terrible look....! You are an expert on these machines, and above all a great restorer....... I have a quick question regarding the 1200 and 1250: at what maximum speed did these tractors travel in England? I am in France, and here they were moving at 24 - 25 km/hour
Thanks again, see you soon
Hi , thanks 👍👍 probably about 16-18 mph
Great video Dave. Nice comparison
That 1250 is a beauty, do you know how many hours you put into the restoration?
Super stuff as always , what classic beauts ,
Brillant video Dave. Ive only known about the 1200 and 1250 for the last couple of years and wondered what the diffrance was. Have you done any of the Americian v8 ones done know the model number . Hope your after bottle of beer. Im enjoying a pint of the Guiness
Absolutely fantastic video Dave, very interesting and informative
Is that the 1250 you had at the Somerset vintage show a couple of years ago ?
Bit late to the party here...Great bonus video Dave. My interest was sparked 30+ years ago after seeing one for sale locally and wanted one since. I always felt they had a lot more to offer than their blue equal wheel counterparts (might be a controversial statement but i think this is a safe space 😂). Keep up the good work Dave & Penny keeping the tractors restored along with those all important parts and most importantly the information (& entertainment 😂) you provide is priceless 👏
Cheers @eamondempsey3018
just found your channel very interesting i drove a 1200 then a 1250 on the farm i worked on in the 70,s the 1250 i drove had a straight chrome exhaust came from massey like that never new not many of them were made
Thanks , yea 322 1250s were made
Great video just wondering were they built in the uk
Thanks , yea Manchester
I wonder was that the same site that mf 50 series diggers later fermec were built and what happened to it thanks for reply 👍
@thomassmyth1725 bardon dock , yea it was the industrial site 👍
Were there many differences between the early and later 1200s?👍
Not much , went from dry brakes to wet and then a constant mesh gear box from a crash box
Also tinted glass in the cab from about 1977 onward.
Very informative Dave.
👍
brings back memories 😊
👍👍
Why Dave, has the 1200 got a 1250 steering wheel and the 1250 have a 1200 steering wheel?
1200/50’s are an obsession. Just different in every way.
Nothing else in the power and weight class has ever come close for wheel grip.
A joy to drive in the fields. 👍👍
Ps. Love your videos of what you do.
The 1200 there is a late one , almost bar 50 in the production , so it has a few 1250 similarity , the 1250 is an aftermarket one as the one it had was broken ! 🤷♂️🤦♂️
I remember chisel ploughing with a 1200 at Brackenhurst College in 1986/87.
Happy days.
👍👍
I was a brymore school then learning farm stuff 👍
Worked on quite a few 1200's, but only ever worked on one 1250. Think when they were introduced, the 2000 series tractors were preferred as they looked more conventional
They were also cheaper to buy and more flexible in their application than either the MF 1200 or the later MF 1250.
The MF 1250 used the same engine as the MF 2000 series, the 6-354•4, which had machined inlet ports in the cylinder head, a thickened and deeper 'skirt' and the tappet covers were eliminated, with a now constant section of material on the RHS of the engine. This made it structurally stronger, and in conjunction with the massively strong engine sump, allowed such tractors as the MF 2000s (US 1978, Europe 1979), and MF 699 (1984), to be feasible in the first place, since the engine block was now strong and rigid enough to be used as a structural member.
I’m struggling for signal out here at sea
they are special would nice to have one one day but there now to dear
I worked at the combine plant in Brantford Ontario back in the 80's Thay had a implement newly built it ran for a year or 2 then gutted it and brought those articulation tractors from the UK to Brantford Thay built 7 V8 tractors and closed the plant and moved the production back to the UK . where were Thay built after that.
I was of the understanding that there was 322 1250 built
Yep 322
Hi, my brother in law owns a MF1200 (1976). We are looking for a circuit diagram, maybe someone can help us!? Greetings from Germany!
Email me , ferguson1200@btinternet.com
@@MasseyDave Oh, great! 😊
Hi Dave what would you estimate the price of a Mf 1250 in original good condition thanks
You selling or looking to buy ?
@@MasseyDave looking to buy Dave
@@MasseyDaveHi Dave any thoughts I'm only after a very rough guide
A couple sold in Sweden few months ago in region of £55 k
@@MasseyDave thanks Dave
interesting
Was there not some connection with certainly the early 1200’s with Kilmarnock?
My father had one of the first, if not the first non-demonstration 1200’s sold to any farm in 1972/3 and MF lavished a lot of entertainment and factory visits to him while sale negotiations took place, including a visit to the Kilmarnock factory and lots of Malt whiskey tastings! (“May I have some water with it?” …..”You will not!”)
MF took his tractor away after a year and smash tested many important bolts on it before rebuilding it and sending it back, with several improvements, including the shaft bolts between Engine and transmission.
We eventually had 2 1200’s and a 1250. All were adored, but the 1250 was definitely superior.
Just brilliant tractors. Their grip was unbelievable!
You have dome a fantastic job Dave.
Thanks , thought Kilmarnock was where they built the combines ?? Colin Cloude is a font of knowledge on that front 👍👍
@@MasseyDave Yes they definitely did build Combine there.
Maybe I’m mistaken, but MF definitely took my Dad to Kilmarnock about the time he was negotiating with MF, through F A Standen at Ely to buy that first 1200.
He was no fan of MF Combines, so he wouldn’t have gone there to see them.
And I do remember something about Manchester.
I wonder if Colin could enlighten us to the details?
I also remember them being shown on Tomorrow’s World, but a while after we had taken delivery of ours. They also showed a 1505.
Anther thing I remember was when they took ours away for testing, they lent us another 1200 which was a very early test model. It had weighted PAVT wheels on it which made it look awful!
We used our first one with a 5 furrow Dowdeswell semi mounted (DP2?) plough, ploughing on land rather that in the furrow. This was no good when it got wet as the tractor would always end up sliding into the furrow. Eventually we bought a fully mounted 4 furrow Lemken and drove the tractor in furrow which sorted it all out.
MF came out with its Diamond plough, but it would not turn the land over well enough on heavy land.
By the time we had the 1250, we had a Dowdeswell DP8 plough and we thought this was the perfect plough for it
@@MasseyDave
By the way Dave, just been talking to my brother Paul, who I now know has spoken with you several times. He drove our 2nd 1200, the S reg until it cremated itself. Then we replaced it with the 1250.
Paul sends his regards and apologises for not having kept in touch recently. But he has been quite busy. He and my brother Mark have a lovely late 390 and an absolute peach of a 3125.
Paul is still trying to find out where our old 1250 is, but knows she was exported.
My Brothers’ are in North Suffolk and I am in the North Cotswolds. When I arrived here at Moreton-in-Marsh in 1996, the was a local Contractor, Tim Ingles, who has 3 1200’s and there still is another guy near me that has another 3 of them. One has a fore-end loader, mounted on the back of the tractor.
@Rickwardful hi , Paul ? Soz I have a lot of people contact me so forgive me if I can’t recall 🤦♂️🤦♂️😂😘 u not that far from me. I’m in Somerset
Dave
@@MasseyDave Not to worry Dave. It has been 2 years since brother Paul ward spoke with you.
Those of us the had and loved our 1200’s and 1250’s absolutely love the fact that you collect, use and restore so many of them.
Waiting for it
Is there any difference in hp?
1200 was 105 , 1250 is 112
Thank you
Olly blog has one
I’d love to see and hear the 1250 on a plough...
All way's liked 1200 1250
Sous titre svp merci
Muito bons trctor
First, come on Mike and Spudhauler
👍well deserved never saw this one coming 👀👀👏😂🍻🍻
1250 for me dave at 1200 money though 😂😂
Doesn’t she sound sweet 👌
Hi.dave.farmer.phil.got.u.new.subscriber.from.ireland.like.father.phil.said.ur.restorations.are.top.notch.u.have.a.full.range.of.skills.for.every.aspect.of.the.job.it.should.leave.your.owrestorationsthat.bit.less.exspensive.your.a.one.off.man.keep.up.the.good.work
Thank you
No difference. Both equally important
Get a stainless steel pipe on the 1250 😂
Noooooooooo
IMT 5000 series SFRJ YU tractors
great video, dreadful tractor! i speak from experience!
Thanks , each to their own , Tis a piece of history ! Bet u won’t see these modern day tractors still running on 40 + years time ?!? 👍
You are correct!!!@@MasseyDave