I've still got and use my Granddaddy's Farmall Cub and all the bells and whistles that go with it he bought it brand new in 1949, it was and will be the first and last tractor I've ever drove very proud of it
Just bought a ‘54 farm all 100. My drawbar crank is on the left, not right like yours. ( but mine smokes BADLY) neat little tractors. Paid $2500 and came with a plow.
Lil Cubby doing what Cubs were designed for they were built for small tract gardens aka Truck Patch. Let me explain this to a few that may not know what I mean. Back when the Cub came out they were built especially for small sections of ground mostly flat bottomland. Cubs were not designed to be used on sloped or hilly land. The size of them made them very easy to turn over on the sides. Weights were available front and rear but that did not seem to help the roll-over problems.
@@longdistancefarmer7836 It was my favorite part of field work when the family was still farming. In another 12 year or so, I'll have my 30 years done and plan to get back to doing some farming.
After plowing, do you disc the soil? I'm all new to this whole thing. I own a 1.3 acre lot was thinking of possibly buying a cub from someone on FB marketplace. Would this be too much tractor for my little plot? Have always wanted to plant my own corn and potatoes and a few other things.
Hi,bro I am new for farming but like to see how it works, so can u tell me how approximately the used Farmall costs without attachment and what is the difference if with attachments because I have been doing farming 7 acres with just a Walk behind craftsman rear-tine tiller (it is just a very small teller which doesn't fit the work ;too slow working and too much work for it and nobody wants to walk behind it all day with just done only 1 acre/day) wasting time. I am looking for a used fanmall, plz tell me the info...and ones more thing, what model of Farmall is best for cultivating the weeds between spaces of rows and planting corn seeds
I got a farmall cub but if possible get something a bit bigger like a Allison Chambers B tractor. You can do so much more with it at about the same cost.