Was great to meet you at the auction. Was there with a friend who watches your videos. I hadn't heard of you before. Now I'm subscribed and enjoying all the great content. You all are truly good people. Good coverage of the auction, too.
I always liked going to auctions. I remember my grandpa taking me, we would stop at the store and pickup a loaf of bread and a ring of sausage to eat on the way there. Memories, thanks.
I had a '72 Chevy pickup I bought for $450.00 in about that condition, had a dent in the right side fender. It was my favorite truck of them all. Sadly, $10,000.00 don't seem like so much these days. 5020 row crop JD is something you dont see every day. The first piece of farm equipment I bought on my own was a JD 494 planter just like that one. Man that was a long time ago. Thanks for taking us to the sale. Best regards from Indiana.
Always cool to see old tractors and equipment still at work. makes me think, a farmer bought that tractor brand new and it was his baby from the day it came home till the day it left
Howdy Alan, Jen, Family, I hope ya'll are having a Fantastic day, That was a Cool auction, alot of Cool tractors, implements, and even some classic trucks and a roadster, although I did not expect that JD 5020 go for $15.750 Wow !! That went for $3.500 more than I expected it would, Wow, anyway, Thank you for sharing your footage of this very Cool auction, very Cool indeed 👍 Stay safe, God Bless and Farm on my Friends, Peace
i absolutely love the internationals all the way from when they first came out but that grille on the front from the 70s and 80s is just beautiful to me :)
Got to tell you they're John wingfield Hill we have a fleet at 12 here at home or some sort of derivatives like Case IH for McCormick. Use them all they all have specific jobs they served us well leaving 1947 m hear that is probably the most treasured one of the bunch of was my grandfather's. He bought it brand new 1947 edition custom work all over the community here besides our own and it's still being used. I tell everybody when they go to bury me there might as well bury me sitting on the seat because none of the rest of the family values it like I did. Nothing against them but it's mainly because I was the one here and grew up on it. I always say it's as much a family heirloom was my grandmother's Good China .
I read some comments. I'm not sure why some are so grumpy about the old tractors. I like them. There is no way I could justify buying a new one. We have a successful farm because we spend money wisely on older equipment and if you maintain them they don't depreciate like new ones. From what I have watched you are the same.
Looked like a couple of pretty decent chopper boxes and some pretty well preserved antique equipment. Seemed like the red power was going at a reasonable price.
In a few years I'm going to start going! My favorite hobby...farm sales! I can buy stuff cheap to use for landscaping and construction work on the side.
Thanks for sharing. Always like a good auction. That old Fox chopper brought back memories. We chopped all our silage in the early eighties with one of those.
Fox was regarded as a good chopper years back. A farmer about 3 miles south of me had a Fox self propelled that he bought new. I believe Freeport Implement carried Fox choppers back then. (Freeport Mn)
Wow used equipment sales are soft, things went cheap! $15,750 for a good 5020 John Deere, cab, 3pt. hitch, and new clutch..... Engine sounded good. That tractor went dirt cheap! A lot of guys are still farming with 5020 John Deere's, no computerize crap, easy to work on, just a straight good old horse. There's a RUclips farming channel that has 6 or 7 5020's and another 10-12 for parts. I think they are in South Dakota, farming a bunch of acres. If I was farming today I would be stock piling 5020 John Deere tractors. 15,000 dollars wouldn't buy a set tires on some of these late model front assist tractors.
Hello, I've been playing fs22 recently but I wanted to see what real farming was like. I've always liked the country and hate living in the city and I've recently moved away from big towns. Most my friends have farms but I havnt known them for long as I just moved recently so I havnt seen much of it, so I looked up farming and your what I found. Thanks for showing me what real farming is like I'm gonna keep subscribed and keep watching your videos
i would of bouth that 1486 for that. the one for 4750 also. and the 706. oh wow the 786 and loader for that price? i would of took that also. probably better off i stayed home ha ha. love the videos!!!
That John Deere 2630 was on Consignment at a dealer by me for the past few months, it was still listed on the website the day of the auction.😅 They were asking $11,000 It didn't make the video so I don't know if you saw it sell but that CaseIH 8312 disc mower with the junk cutterbar brought $2000.
It is always interesting to go to an auction, especially when I don't have to stand there. I also appreciated your showing the winning bid as listening to the auctioneer sometimes isn't my favorite thing to do. Love the flowers. What did you think of the prices ?
@matthewklejeski6641 The best one was a 2011 Pete 386. Cummins, 13 speed, single bunk, 100 gallon tanks. 887,000 miles. Trying to remember price. $24,500 or $27,500. Right in there anyway.
About buying newer machinery............it has been my observation that more farmers went broke from over spending on machinery than those who went broke because they got their crops planted/harvested late due to farming with older machinery.
I wonder how many who bid on something were collectors. Because some of that stuff would cost too much for a farmer to get field ready. Only a collector would see value in them.
Honestly, I'm not sure of a stalk count, but it should be at least 10 pounds of silage, which would be the whole plant chopped up. Hay is another forage that's fed.
He is a salesman for sure, but when he offers that ride and drive guarantee, if you think the tractor is junk after buying it, he will give you your money back.
So right, that 282 IH diesel motor needed good batteries plus properly working glow plugs ( 30,40 or maybe 50 full seconds on glow plug)throttle at fast idle, and they will start ,no glow plugs and no start.
@@alspeers6931 my boss bought a 706 new in 1967 and he told me that he would go inside for lunch then come back 45 minutes later and need to use glow plugs on a 85 degree day
some of this stuff wouldn't even be in a British farmers scrap pile let alone on sale for actual farming its crazy some of the vintage gear that america has in spades.
I was at a machinery auction last month here in Ireland and the truth is that any tractor older than 2000 was sold by the tonne with a few exceptions which were in mint condition after someone had spent a fortune on them for a complete rebuild, oldest tractor was a complete refurbished Massey 250 unsold at €9500 , apparently it cost more than that to get it back to the way she was when new, in fairness the tyres alone cost € 1000 at least.
@@dawillieman9238 Sorry, brain freeze, up too late. Should have said GBP (Great British Pound). Somehow Great British Sterling got into my head. Thanks for pointing it out.
Are you guys all nuts? Have you ever spent a week sitting on a cabless tractor eating dust and breathing fumes 14 hours a day for a week? To do what I can do now in 5 or 6 hours in an air conditioned cab with tinted windows and a decibel level of less than 70! I am half deaf because of these horrible old tractors, but I am not thankful losing my marbles, I worked to many of those horrible uncomfortable machines over the years to have any love for them! As for them being reliable, no they were not! They broke down from the day they were bought new and it was usually only out of sheer stubbornness that anyone kept them going, I am an old man and I have been driving tractors for 70 years plus, hell I even worked horses as a boy and only for progress I sure as hell wouldn’t still be driving them still, in reality I just sit on my nice comfortable armchair and monitor the screens now, I don’t even steer or change gear, my biggest problem is climbing up into the cab!
These computerized tractors that you brag about are also what everyone is fighting for the right to repair? Pretty soon, you will have to purchase a subscription to have a certain amount of horsepower. You aren't the owner, but just another person borrowing technology. My brother in law works for John Deere, and he is constantly making service calls on new machines. Heck, they have a lot full of new combines that they can't run because they need a computer chip from China. These old tractors are still running 50 years later, so that speaks for itself that they are built well. Hearing protection would've saved your hearing.
@@trinitydairy I am not bragging about the modern tractors , I just don’t understand how anyone can think that the old ones were somehow better. For the most part they were just as unreliable and for their time expensive as they are now, truthfully I drive a fendt and it is probably the most reliable machine I’ve ever owned, I don’t drive it all the time just for silly season ( planting) but it is a great machine and we have 6500 hours up on it in less than 3 years without an unscheduled stop. We run other makes as well and for the most part they are just as reliable, I remember back in the day when we had to have a couple of spare tractor’s just to ensure we had enough running to get the work done. I don’t understand where you are coming from with the right to fix thing as far as I know you can take any tractor apart if you want to but you are not going to have a warranty thereafter and most dealers will not be willing to sort out the mess you have made . I could strip a 4020 in my sleep 50 years ago because I did it so often, engine, transmission, backend. Come up a decade and it was the same story . I am not as an amateur going to get into a vario transmission because I don’t know what I am doing and I don’t have a clean room to do it in either , but most importantly since I bought the first vario fendt that I owned twenty years ago I have had no reason to get into it because it never caused any issues. The video was interesting to me but the comments that it generated were just plain daft, there is no other way to describe them, nostalgia is all well and good but not everything was better back in the day and anyone who worked those tractors back in the sixties seventies and eighties will never want to go back to that era, it was just hardship.
I have a 830 case with the case o matic transmission from the early 60s and that transmission has never been touched, it has done every job on the farm from heavy tillage to raking hay. Tractors from the 60s, 70s, and 80s, have done nothing but increase in value, because they are much simpler to work on yourself, and you don't have all the electronics and emissions stuff to deal with. I don't have any new tractors but I know plenty of people who do, and they break down just like the old ones, but the old ones they can fix themselves, a lot of times with the new ones, they can't. I don't have a problem with anyone buying a new tractor, but to say the old ones were unreliable is just plain wrong! I've spent many hours on open station tractor, and cabs without heat or ac, and believe it or not, I've ate plenty of dust behind a team of horses. If it's loud, I wear hearing protection, if it cold, I wear a jacket, and if it's hot out, I drink some water and get on with my work. Our oldest tractor is 77 years old, and still gets used every day, I would love to see where the tractors built today are, in 77 years!
@Andy-ix2ox so basically, you were triggered because people who watch this channel (a channel which features old tractors and horse-drawn machinery) commented that they like old tractors best. This then caused you to go on a rant calling anyone who shares that opinion nuts. You are really in the wrong place if those opinions are in your opinion, daft. People on the internet will have different viewpoints from you, but there is no need to then be insulting. I know an old farmer, almost 100 years old. The highlight of his summer is climbing onto a John Deere 60 to rake hay for his son. It has nothing to do with nostalgia and everything to do with working with a machine he understands and feels comfortable running. I would never call him nuts or daft that he doesn't want to drive a new tractor. If you're happy with your newer tractor, that's great, but if someone prefers a 1976 international, that's great, too.
Was great to meet you at the auction. Was there with a friend who watches your videos. I hadn't heard of you before. Now I'm subscribed and enjoying all the great content. You all are truly good people. Good coverage of the auction, too.
Great meeting you too, thanks for watching!
Really enjoy the Auction videos ... thanks for taking us along.
I always consider it a successful day at the auction if I come home empty handed!
I always liked going to auctions. I remember my grandpa taking me, we would stop at the store and pickup a loaf of bread and a ring of sausage to eat on the way there. Memories, thanks.
The sales are fun to watch. "That's a nice little tractor boys, hard to find".
Appreciate the auction videos
I had a '72 Chevy pickup I bought for $450.00 in about that condition, had a dent in the right side fender. It was my favorite truck of them all. Sadly, $10,000.00 don't seem like so much these days. 5020 row crop JD is something you dont see every day. The first piece of farm equipment I bought on my own was a JD 494 planter just like that one. Man that was a long time ago. Thanks for taking us to the sale.
Best regards from Indiana.
Always cool to see old tractors and equipment still at work. makes me think, a farmer bought that tractor brand new and it was his baby from the day it came home till the day it left
Great video, I love the auctions! That loudmouth that kept butting in and calling everyone "boys" was driving me nuts!
That "loudmouth" is the owner of the auction company,lol
@@trinitydairy I figured....if he wasn't, they would have thrown him out. Lol
Howdy Alan, Jen, Family, I hope ya'll are having a Fantastic day,
That was a Cool auction, alot of Cool tractors, implements, and even some classic trucks and a roadster, although I did not expect that JD 5020 go for $15.750 Wow !! That went for $3.500 more than I expected it would, Wow, anyway, Thank you for sharing your footage of this very Cool auction, very Cool indeed 👍 Stay safe, God Bless and Farm on my Friends, Peace
Some really nice stuff... That Badger self unloading box made me think of you.
Thank you for taking us along to the sale
I miss going to farm auctions, they have there own " all American " vibe.......and you get to see friends you haven't seen for awhile........😊
Some really neat stuff at that auction. It would of been fun to be at!
That Farmall 706 looked inviting..
thanks for taking us along to the auction.
i absolutely love the internationals all the way from when they first came out but that grille on the front from the 70s and 80s is just beautiful to me :)
Got to tell you they're John wingfield Hill we have a fleet at 12 here at home or some sort of derivatives like Case IH for McCormick. Use them all they all have specific jobs they served us well leaving 1947 m hear that is probably the most treasured one of the bunch of was my grandfather's. He bought it brand new 1947 edition custom work all over the community here besides our own and it's still being used. I tell everybody when they go to bury me there might as well bury me sitting on the seat because none of the rest of the family values it like I did. Nothing against them but it's mainly because I was the one here and grew up on it. I always say it's as much a family heirloom was my grandmother's Good China .
Very good videos with posting what it sold for and you got right in there from Edmonton alberta
I read some comments. I'm not sure why some are so grumpy about the old tractors. I like them. There is no way I could justify buying a new one. We have a successful farm because we spend money wisely on older equipment and if you maintain them they don't depreciate like new ones. From what I have watched you are the same.
Those pull type Case combines, the JD 494 planter, and that Massey Harris 44 with loader impressed me by their great condition.
Yeah they were nice, the combines and the planter were part of an estate.
@@trinitydairy .."part of an estate"
That would put my mind at ease when bidding.
@@douglasmacarthur8775 yeah, everything from that estate was very well maintained.
That man makes the auction more interesting hes very passionate about his job.
🏆🏆🏆🏆 Video . Finally rain yesterday in southern Wisconsin
Nice road trip ,thanks for taking us along .God Bless
Many thanks for sharing the tractor auction results. Wish I could have been there!
where I'm at in Ontario all that stuff would be 2 or 3 times as much.
Isn't that strange? A couple of people from overseas commented that this stuff would be considered scrap there.
It's not raining, very dry, might have to buy a lot of feed, for me to be buying right now is not an option
Must've gotten some rain recently, from the size of that puddle. Thanks for showing those CASE combines.
Yeah we've been getting some nice rain. I figured you would like those combines!
Oh i love 786's
Looked like a couple of pretty decent chopper boxes and some pretty well preserved antique equipment. Seemed like the red power was going at a reasonable price.
In a few years I'm going to start going! My favorite hobby...farm sales! I can buy stuff cheap to use for landscaping and construction work on the side.
Thank you for sharing. Auctions are fun..
Alot of nice equipment at that sale.Great video
Thanks for sharing. Always like a good auction. That old Fox chopper brought back memories. We chopped all our silage in the early eighties with one of those.
Fox was regarded as a good chopper years back.
A farmer about 3 miles south of me had a Fox self propelled that he bought new.
I believe Freeport Implement carried Fox choppers back then.
(Freeport Mn)
That 1486 was sure worth the money , Good video !
Hello from Collinwood Tennessee good video y’all 👍👍👍🙏🏻
Love the video. Always love the M IH. Dad was a Case and his brother was John Deere. He had a 4010, 4020😮
Very interesting..thanks for sharing
Thanks for sharing. Interesting seeing the prices south of me here in Alberta Canada
I really like these tractor auctions
Very good and God bless y'all
Wow used equipment sales are soft, things went cheap! $15,750 for a good 5020 John Deere, cab, 3pt. hitch, and new clutch..... Engine sounded good. That tractor went dirt cheap! A lot of guys are still farming with 5020 John Deere's, no computerize crap, easy to work on, just a straight good old horse. There's a RUclips farming channel that has 6 or 7 5020's and another 10-12 for parts. I think they are in South Dakota, farming a bunch of acres. If I was farming today I would be stock piling 5020 John Deere tractors. 15,000 dollars wouldn't buy a set tires on some of these late model front assist tractors.
Another awesome video!!!
Hello, I've been playing fs22 recently but I wanted to see what real farming was like. I've always liked the country and hate living in the city and I've recently moved away from big towns. Most my friends have farms but I havnt known them for long as I just moved recently so I havnt seen much of it, so I looked up farming and your what I found. Thanks for showing me what real farming is like I'm gonna keep subscribed and keep watching your videos
i would of bouth that 1486 for that. the one for 4750 also. and the 706. oh wow the 786 and loader for that price? i would of took that also. probably better off i stayed home ha ha. love the videos!!!
Great video
Quite a variety. Sometimes wonder about the background of consignment sale tractors unless there is paperwork to prove work done.
Yeah, you definitely have to know how to check things over for yourself.
@@trinitydairy ...years back a neighbor advised me to never buy anything at a consignment auction that had an engine........UNLESS...I knew the owner.
That's what you need, that JD 60 standard!
Wish I could find some small equipment auctions down here. Because of all the big farms, it’s impossible to find any equipment smaller than 16 row.
My first tractor was a 5020 John Deere.
👀🙄🐾👍Great video A&J I thought Alan might have been in at the silage boxes
Badger will forever hold a place in my heart. We had badger cleaners and all of our Chopper boxes were Badger except one Rex
I grew up with a badger manure spreader I pulled with a 900 case. Good memories for sure.
thank you
That John Deere 2630 was on Consignment at a dealer by me for the past few months, it was still listed on the website the day of the auction.😅
They were asking $11,000
It didn't make the video so I don't know if you saw it sell but that CaseIH 8312 disc mower with the junk cutterbar brought $2000.
Looks like ya'll got some rain there. Hopefully it rained up north where you live.
Yeah we had over an inch.
One of each 👍👍
It is always interesting to go to an auction, especially when I don't have to stand there. I also appreciated your showing the winning bid as listening to the auctioneer sometimes isn't my favorite thing to do. Love the flowers. What did you think of the prices ?
You must be in Minnesota, I seen some tractors that were from Gotvald implements over my hillman MN
Yeah, Gotvalds bring stuff to this sale, pretty often.
@@trinitydairy you over that way?
@@notschfarm the sale was in Rock Creek, but we live about 40 miles north of there.
Alan it seems like the camera is attracted to red paint some how. 😊
I know my camera is
I was hoping to see some semis sell
We left before they sold, but we can try to get some next time.
@@trinitydairy see that you do 🤨
@matthewklejeski6641 The best one was a 2011 Pete 386. Cummins, 13 speed, single bunk, 100 gallon tanks. 887,000 miles. Trying to remember price. $24,500 or $27,500. Right in there anyway.
5020 looks nice
It was pretty nice, I think it was part of an estate.
Nice video did u buy anything
Jen bought some flowers
About buying newer machinery............it has been my observation that more farmers went broke from over spending on machinery than those who went broke because they got their crops planted/harvested late due to farming with older machinery.
How much did the 2 old grain trucks sell for??
I don't remember
if you know what did the 610 bobcats sell for i have one so jest want to know
I watched them sell but I can't remember what they brought.
@@trinitydairy thank you
I think they went for 1200 or 1300
@@AldenHayFarmer wow thank you
One of these days we’ll get a video where the kids get an auction buy 😜
I wonder how many who bid on something were collectors. Because some of that stuff would cost too much for a farmer to get field ready. Only a collector would see value in them.
I'd like to have the john deere m to tool around with
❤
Allan,what is your dream tractor or machine that you could get a great buy. Use that on your dairy farm??! 🇨🇦day here
As far as a tractor, I would love a 52 or 5488 IH, front wheel assist. But a discbine or a newer round baler is something I could use more.
Where was this auction?
Rock Creek, Minnesota
What did the 64 chevy c20 sell for?
I didn't see that one sell.
There were a few diamonds there. And a few lumps of coal.
Hey guys. I know it's not healthy for cows to have a straight diet of gran .. still currious how many stalks of corn a cow would eat in a day??
Honestly, I'm not sure of a stalk count, but it should be at least 10 pounds of silage, which would be the whole plant chopped up. Hay is another forage that's fed.
Tgat ih 766 would go good in ur collection was it diesel
Gas
That salesman would put me off buying anything hes too sweet. He must been busy he drove every tractor out their 😅😅😅😅
He is a salesman for sure, but when he offers that ride and drive guarantee, if you think the tractor is junk after buying it, he will give you your money back.
1:39 that idiot is going to burn up the starter on that 706 the battery is dead
So right, that 282 IH diesel motor needed good batteries plus properly working glow plugs ( 30,40 or maybe 50 full seconds on glow plug)throttle at fast idle, and they will start ,no glow plugs and no start.
@@alspeers6931 my boss bought a 706 new in 1967 and he told me that he would go inside for lunch then come back 45 minutes later and need to use glow plugs on a 85 degree day
Good video I'd like to had that 165 MF
At
5020 sold for too much
🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸👀👀👀🍻🍻🍻👍👍☕️☕️👍☕️🥃🥃🥃🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
Those little Fergusons went very cheap, 8000 seems a bit much for that old deer though.
The guy in the audience that's running his mouth should have been the auctioneer cuz he loves talking
He's the owner of the auction company
some of this stuff wouldn't even be in a British farmers scrap pile let alone on sale for actual farming its crazy some of the vintage gear that america has in spades.
Americans will pay top dollar for this stuff for yard art too.
I was at a machinery auction last month here in Ireland and the truth is that any tractor older than 2000 was sold by the tonne with a few exceptions which were in mint condition after someone had spent a fortune on them for a complete rebuild, oldest tractor was a complete refurbished Massey 250 unsold at €9500 , apparently it cost more than that to get it back to the way she was when new, in fairness the tyres alone cost € 1000 at least.
Not to disagree, but you do need to calculate the exchange rate. Currently $1000 USD equals 786.62 GPS.
@@dawillieman9238 Sorry, brain freeze, up too late. Should have said GBP (Great British Pound). Somehow Great British Sterling got into my head. Thanks for pointing it out.
Ooops, I should have said GBP instead of GPS.
Are you guys all nuts? Have you ever spent a week sitting on a cabless tractor eating dust and breathing fumes 14 hours a day for a week? To do what I can do now in 5 or 6 hours in an air conditioned cab with tinted windows and a decibel level of less than 70! I am half deaf because of these horrible old tractors, but I am not thankful losing my marbles, I worked to many of those horrible uncomfortable machines over the years to have any love for them! As for them being reliable, no they were not! They broke down from the day they were bought new and it was usually only out of sheer stubbornness that anyone kept them going, I am an old man and I have been driving tractors for 70 years plus, hell I even worked horses as a boy and only for progress I sure as hell wouldn’t still be driving them still, in reality I just sit on my nice comfortable armchair and monitor the screens now, I don’t even steer or change gear, my biggest problem is climbing up into the cab!
These computerized tractors that you brag about are also what everyone is fighting for the right to repair? Pretty soon, you will have to purchase a subscription to have a certain amount of horsepower. You aren't the owner, but just another person borrowing technology. My brother in law works for John Deere, and he is constantly making service calls on new machines. Heck, they have a lot full of new combines that they can't run because they need a computer chip from China.
These old tractors are still running 50 years later, so that speaks for itself that they are built well. Hearing protection would've saved your hearing.
@@trinitydairy I am not bragging about the modern tractors , I just don’t understand how anyone can think that the old ones were somehow better. For the most part they were just as unreliable and for their time expensive as they are now, truthfully I drive a fendt and it is probably the most reliable machine I’ve ever owned, I don’t drive it all the time just for silly season ( planting) but it is a great machine and we have 6500 hours up on it in less than 3 years without an unscheduled stop. We run other makes as well and for the most part they are just as reliable, I remember back in the day when we had to have a couple of spare tractor’s just to ensure we had enough running to get the work done. I don’t understand where you are coming from with the right to fix thing as far as I know you can take any tractor apart if you want to but you are not going to have a warranty thereafter and most dealers will not be willing to sort out the mess you have made . I could strip a 4020 in my sleep 50 years ago because I did it so often, engine, transmission, backend. Come up a decade and it was the same story . I am not as an amateur going to get into a vario transmission because I don’t know what I am doing and I don’t have a clean room to do it in either , but most importantly since I bought the first vario fendt that I owned twenty years ago I have had no reason to get into it because it never caused any issues. The video was interesting to me but the comments that it generated were just plain daft, there is no other way to describe them, nostalgia is all well and good but not everything was better back in the day and anyone who worked those tractors back in the sixties seventies and eighties will never want to go back to that era, it was just hardship.
I have a 830 case with the case o matic transmission from the early 60s and that transmission has never been touched, it has done every job on the farm from heavy tillage to raking hay. Tractors from the 60s, 70s, and 80s, have done nothing but increase in value, because they are much simpler to work on yourself, and you don't have all the electronics and emissions stuff to deal with. I don't have any new tractors but I know plenty of people who do, and they break down just like the old ones, but the old ones they can fix themselves, a lot of times with the new ones, they can't. I don't have a problem with anyone buying a new tractor, but to say the old ones were unreliable is just plain wrong! I've spent many hours on open station tractor, and cabs without heat or ac, and believe it or not, I've ate plenty of dust behind a team of horses. If it's loud, I wear hearing protection, if it cold, I wear a jacket, and if it's hot out, I drink some water and get on with my work. Our oldest tractor is 77 years old, and still gets used every day, I would love to see where the tractors built today are, in 77 years!
@Andy-ix2ox so basically, you were triggered because people who watch this channel (a channel which features old tractors and horse-drawn machinery) commented that they like old tractors best. This then caused you to go on a rant calling anyone who shares that opinion nuts. You are really in the wrong place if those opinions are in your opinion, daft. People on the internet will have different viewpoints from you, but there is no need to then be insulting. I know an old farmer, almost 100 years old. The highlight of his summer is climbing onto a John Deere 60 to rake hay for his son. It has nothing to do with nostalgia and everything to do with working with a machine he understands and feels comfortable running. I would never call him nuts or daft that he doesn't want to drive a new tractor.
If you're happy with your newer tractor, that's great, but if someone prefers a 1976 international, that's great, too.
@@Andy-ix2ox20:04
This auctioneer is the WORST ive ever heard!! I hate it when helpers say BOYS!!! And fenders come with it??? Fenders were on IT!!! WTF??
Aren't you pleasant.