I bought my first 8N 1994, it was an unloved 1950. But it ran and everything worked. I liked it so much I bought 1951 8N to keep it co.pany. I named one Pretty and the other Sexy. I got old and I'm falling apart, but those old Ford tractors still run good. Sold both tractors last year and made 1700 bucks more than I paid for each. 3400 dollar profit, and had fun on my 320 acres for 30 . I just can bring myself to sell those farms yet. Good deer and turkey hunting and a live creeks running through the place. I'm headed for a wheelchair soon, but I can set on the porch and remember 30 years playing on those Fords that are 4 years older that me. Ha
Wow, you have some great memories there, Im getting to the worn out stage in my life also. The area I was cutting ,I had been letting grow each year for the pollinators ,honeybees that I raise. But I have let it go too long so it had to come down. A 5 ft bushog and this brush was about all it could handle. Hang in there, enjoy life , Thanks for watching !!!
OMG! Tractor porn. My Grandpa had that same tractor and my father used to bushhog paths for our dirt bikes. I wanted to drive that thing sooo much, but by the time I was old enough, they sold the tractor. That video brought back some great memories. Thank You
Hi Richard, im sad to hear the tractor got away from your family .Time makes that happen a lot nowadays as we age. Priorities change over as we age. I have 6 other tractors they are mostly larger, specialty use . This was my grandfather's tractor, I use it alot too. If you are ever around in virginia,give me a shout, and I will let you take it for a spin !! Thanks for watching.
@josephbruceismay6832 Years ago as a teenager, I couldn't stand fooling with trying to use it for work, pulling hay wagons, bushoging all day, these task were not suited for it, it's too small to use it safely. Then when you had to tinker with it to get it started, or fix it when it stalled in the middle of nowhere. This drove me crazy haveing to stop to try and fix the dang thing . I wanted diesels and cabs, go all day long with no problems. However, I have learned to repair this 9n and listen, pay attention to different sounds that could indicate that trouble was comeing , just around the corner. Ect. Now I look at it as a dependable tractor with several tasks that it is suited for. It also brings me a sense of accomplishment and pride when I complete whatever is necessary at the time. ]p])
5 hrs on that tractor was enough for 1 day kinda stressful , this cutting was the limit for the tractor and 5 ft bushhog about all it was capable of. Thanks for watching.
@CH-um4iy I'm lucky to have the huge white oaks here. , I hated to cut the saplings also. However, I had not cut here in over a year. They will take over quickly if left alone. See if acorns are falling now in your area, plant them where you wish. They are hardy and establish themselves quickly.
If you can knock it down, a hog can cut it. Pretty much anything UNDER 3". Use a 8N with a brush hog to clear trails at my hunting land, then a secret I learned is to drop pine needles on the trail to keep trees and ect from growing back
9n owner here. No sherman anything. Just got new tires. I hope they last another 50 years; it'll be aomeone elses problem. Im not gonna lie, dads kubota is pretty nice, but i can fix mine in the mud on a Saturday with some parts from napa...
I can relate to that, a neighbor here had a 8n, he thought it was slow when bushoging in 3rd gear , it could be difficult starting at times also. No problem it could have been fixed for sure. Well they got rid of their 8n and got a kioti diesel with a loader, 25 or 28 hp, now when cutting on the same ground, with the same 5ft ft cutter, it has to stay in 1st sometimes 2nd gear!!! That's a expensive lesson that I'm glad I didn't make.
No it doesn't have a Sherman or the other one, ive tried to find a complete running tractor with one in the past, no luck. I've seen one at a steam and gas show, wasn't for sale, though. Thanks for watching.
Hi, I didn't want to move any faster, in case there was a downed tree, or something else that I couldn't see. There are lots of bottles thrown from vehicles on the ground also, have to keep a eye out for those too. Thanks for watching.
And yet all we get to mostly see is what was in front of you. We barely got to see the bush hog itself at all. Lame. And shake the camera a bit more next time.
I bought my first 8N 1994, it was an unloved 1950. But it ran and everything worked. I liked it so much I bought 1951 8N to keep it co.pany.
I named one Pretty and the other Sexy.
I got old and I'm falling apart, but those old Ford tractors still run good.
Sold both tractors last year and made 1700 bucks more than I paid for each.
3400 dollar profit, and had fun on my 320 acres for 30 . I just can bring myself to sell those farms yet. Good deer and turkey hunting and a live creeks running through the place.
I'm headed for a wheelchair soon, but I can set on the porch and remember 30 years playing on those Fords that are 4 years older that me. Ha
Wow, you have some great memories there, Im getting to the worn out stage in my life also. The area I was cutting ,I had been letting grow each year for the pollinators ,honeybees that I raise. But I have let it go too long so it had to come down. A 5 ft bushog and this brush was about all it could handle. Hang in there, enjoy life , Thanks for watching !!!
OMG! Tractor porn. My Grandpa had that same tractor and my father used to bushhog paths for our dirt bikes. I wanted to drive that thing sooo much, but
by the time I was old enough, they sold the tractor. That video brought back some great memories. Thank You
Hi Richard, im sad to hear the tractor got away from your family .Time makes that happen a lot nowadays as we age. Priorities change over as we age. I have 6 other tractors they are mostly larger, specialty use . This was my grandfather's tractor, I use it alot too. If you are ever around in virginia,give me a shout, and I will let you take it for a spin !! Thanks for watching.
I've only ever drove a '54 Farmall Super C but that 9N looks like smart ol' yeller. Great tractor!
@josephbruceismay6832 Years ago as a teenager, I couldn't stand fooling with trying to use it for work, pulling hay wagons, bushoging all day, these task were not suited for it, it's too small to use it safely. Then when you had to tinker with it to get it started, or fix it when it stalled in the middle of nowhere. This drove me crazy haveing to stop to try and fix the dang thing . I wanted diesels and cabs, go all day long with no problems. However, I have learned to repair this 9n and listen, pay attention to different sounds that could indicate that trouble was comeing , just around the corner. Ect. Now I look at it as a dependable tractor with several tasks that it is suited for. It also brings me a sense of accomplishment and pride when I complete whatever is necessary at the time. ]p])
Works better than I thought have to mow it every year
So very cool! Looks like fun!
5 hrs on that tractor was enough for 1 day kinda stressful , this cutting was the limit for the tractor and 5 ft bushhog about all it was capable of. Thanks for watching.
Sure wish I had a bunch of those oak saplings that you're mowing over, on my place!
@CH-um4iy I'm lucky to have the huge white oaks here. , I hated to cut the saplings also. However, I had not cut here in over a year. They will take over quickly if left alone. See if acorns are falling now in your area, plant them where you wish. They are hardy and establish themselves quickly.
Great grand father had a rule of the tractor can push it over then the bush hog would cut it
I remember hearing that also.
If you can knock it down, a hog can cut it. Pretty much anything UNDER 3". Use a 8N with a brush hog to clear trails at my hunting land, then a secret I learned is to drop pine needles on the trail to keep trees and ect from growing back
That pine needle trick makes sense, ive noticed nothing usually grows on my roads where the pines are thick. Great observation.
@hnorton8298 pine needles lower the soils acidity. Can do the same with lime, but pine needles are free
9n owner here. No sherman anything. Just got new tires. I hope they last another 50 years; it'll be aomeone elses problem.
Im not gonna lie, dads kubota is pretty nice, but i can fix mine in the mud on a Saturday with some parts from napa...
I can relate to that, a neighbor here had a 8n, he thought it was slow when bushoging in 3rd gear , it could be difficult starting at times also. No problem it could have been fixed for sure. Well they got rid of their 8n and got a kioti diesel with a loader, 25 or 28 hp, now when cutting on the same ground, with the same 5ft ft cutter, it has to stay in 1st sometimes 2nd gear!!! That's a expensive lesson that I'm glad I didn't make.
Does that tractor have an auxiliary transmission. (high and low range)?
No it doesn't have a Sherman or the other one, ive tried to find a complete running tractor with one in the past, no luck. I've seen one at a steam and gas show, wasn't for sale, though. Thanks for watching.
@@hnorton8298 I have a Hupp trans in my TO 20. The low range helps with the extreme brushhogging
It's not a '39 but still gets the job done
39would be a 2n😊
No a 1939-1942 is a 9n, 2n's were built during WW2 and had no starter and no battery.
Damn dude give it some gas jeez you moving slow
Hi, I didn't want to move any faster, in case there was a downed tree, or something else that I couldn't see. There are lots of bottles thrown from vehicles on the ground also, have to keep a eye out for those too. Thanks for watching.
would look better cut shorter if you could
1939..back when Ford made things a man needed.....today its all plastic shit..
@@raginroadrunner They were dependable back then also.
And yet all we get to mostly see is what was in front of you. We barely got to see the bush hog itself at all. Lame. And shake the camera a bit more next time.