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Can The Ford 8N Do Any Real Work? 6ft Heavy Duty Box Blade and 5ft Grading Blade with 1952 Ford 8N 

Derek's Workshop and Projects
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I show footage and discuss the work I do with the Ford 8n. This mostly includes pulling around a 5ft grading blade and a 6ft box blade to level and move dirt with the old tractor. A 5ft lighter duty box blade would work better with the Ford N Series Tractors.

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20 окт 2021

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Комментарии : 170   
@frederickjeremy
@frederickjeremy 9 месяцев назад
I’ve never run an 8n, but I’ve owned a 1941 9n for about 13 years now. In those years that machine has done an insurmountable amount of work. I work away for months at a time so I initially got it to mow down 5 acres of 3-4 foot tall grass that grew up when I was gone. It ran a 5’ bushhog for that with no problem. It did so well I actually started taking care of several of my elderly neighbors properties with it as well. And after I got married the list grew to my mother and father in laws 10 acres, 2 sister in laws places that come up to 5 acres between the two. I also cut shooting lanes and trails on 4 different hunting leases. Then I got a 6’ I believe grader blade. The hydraulic system on that tractor is beautiful for doing dirt work. I maintained 1/4 mile of defunct washed out neglected red clay private road I live down so my elderly newbies could actually drive up it when it rained, and to save wear and tear on vehicles. I then fixed almost a mile of similar but more tore up road on my hunting lease. I’m talking tanker semi trucks, sliders, and log trucks tearing up muddy red clay road infused with gravel. They looked at me like I was crazy.... and maybe I was,but I like playing on my tractor and everyone thanked me for it. Then I acquired a disc from a friend who had it laying around with no use for it. I went a little overboard with that. I disced up roughly 4 acres of my property, used the blade to level out high and low spots,and planted it with various crops. I did this couple years before I came to the conclusion I could not count on the rain to take care of it while I was gone and neither could I. But I still used the disc to tear up ground for food plots on those 4 leases,and a much smaller garden every year at my place. Then I came across a 25kw pto driven generator. Being 12 miles out in the pine trees of East Texas,I loose electricity every time the wind blows or the sun does or doesn’t shine. The 23 hp doesn’t yeild but 12kw,but that is just enough to run my entire house for countless outages, one lasted2 weeks for snowpacalyps. I also powered my mother in laws house for a week and a half after a hurricane went over their head. Then I got a2 bottom plow. Friend of mine had it and his new John deere3032e hydrostatic wouldn’t budge it. In talking to him about it I believed his tractor should absolutely pull that plow asi believed my older lesser hp 2wd tractor would pull that plow. One day curiosity got the best of him and he brought it over. Told me if mine would pull it I could have it as he couldn’t use it. 30 min later I had that years garden tore up and a brand used plow. Lets see. I also used the blade to add 4’ to the top of the dam on my pond. The dirt scoop I now have would have been a far better choice, but the blade did it, just took time, and I didn’t mind as I love playing on that thing. It has lifted countless heavy items around the place,engines,transmissions, 55 gallon drums of fuel to carry into and out of disasters zones, uprooted old fence post, shoved up brush piles. Heck I used it one time to recover my motorcycle that had a flat couple miles down the road when I didn’t have my trailer. Just picked it up with the gen pole and carried it back to the shop dangling off the back. I initially paid $1000 for the tractor that was tired. Used it tired first year. Spent 800$ on parts over the winter,rebuilt engine, both transmissions,tuned up the hydraulics, new fuel tanks and front tires. Converted it to electronic ignition. I’ve had to replace 3 front mount coils,several sets of light bulbs, and one alternator. I think all told I’m still not into it for2000$ yet. These are absolute workhorses and still very much so viable to this day. If you need a tractor and are on a budget, or just like messing with older non throw away stuff... get one. Parts are cheap, and readily available. Even if you don’t know how to mechanic. There is no finer machine to learn on. There are forums with endless knowledge about these machines at your disposal. I have loved mine and will always have it in my shed as it is part of the family now. Pick you up one sitting out somewhere, clean it up and bring it back. It will repay the favor many times over throughout the years you use it
@embededfabrication4482
@embededfabrication4482 2 месяца назад
How do you lift thinks with it?
@desotofiresweep58
@desotofiresweep58 23 дня назад
I have a '48 8N. It used to have the dearborn rear high lift attachment which lifts high enough to load a single axle dump truck!! It mows it, digs post holes, pulls a plow, cultivators, grader blades, I even have a 4" chipper attachment for mine, my friend has a 6' snow trower that fits his. The 8N and the ferguson T20 plowed and planted more crops than any other tractors in history. Parts are still readily available everywhere. Using it involves a little manual labor, no you're not going to climb into an air conditioned, or heated cab, but only men who squat to piss need all of that anyway.
@d.brownjr.4845
@d.brownjr.4845 2 года назад
I own a 50 model. If you take care of it. It'll take care of you. Don't be fooled by dealers and what not. That 8n. Is still the most popular tractor running today. A set of stabilizers would make your blades more controllable. You could use a scoop pan. Or a log dragging as well. With the right attachments you can do anything with an 8n. I've plowed with Taylor's way hires. Or a bottom plow.. you can use a smoothing hires and planters with that tractor. You can also dig post hole with an augers. Boompole to lift. You cut hay or raise a barn with one. We did. You'd be amazed how that little no good tractor helped build America. It's as American as apple fuckin pie. It had EARNED it too. No sir. It don't need to be in a museum. It needs to in the field working with someone who's willing to take the time and learn. It's an American ICON. It only needs a job to do..
@peacetruth3074
@peacetruth3074 Год назад
My husband is considering getting a 8N. We are new to this. Could you use it to pull trees out of the woods for logging? We have a few trees in our woods that we could sell. Thanks for any suggestions.
@JerryWick
@JerryWick Год назад
​@@peacetruth30748N does great on both. My 9n is a champ on my 4acre property for both.
@d.brownjr.4845
@d.brownjr.4845 10 месяцев назад
@@peacetruth3074 Yes , I made me a small boom them you buy at tractor supply are med strength can break. I added a hand crank boat wench with a cable. Plus some pull hooks from a school bus to wrap my chains too. Then put a set forks on it. No matter how tall the tree cut it up in 16ft lengths or shorter. 14 12 10 etc. Wrap the chain around the tree or take rail road spike drive in half way hook a cable to it drag them out. Or Use the folks lift them out.
@DarkElfDiva
@DarkElfDiva 10 месяцев назад
Can confirm on digging post holes. My grandparents 8N did that all the time.
@d.brownjr.4845
@d.brownjr.4845 2 года назад
You can get a slip clutch for your pto. You can bushhog with the best of them. Just make sure to not allow the grill get too full of debris. Don't allow it to run hot. It's nothing to put a temp gauge on one. Or just watch your radiator cap. Keep a 5 gallons of gas with you all the time. To keep you going. Check the oil regularly. Don't allow water in the transmission or rear end. If it looks milky, change it. Wash it out with kerosene and put new back in it. 10w30 oil fine for that tractor. That lift can hold 1.500 lbs. I've logged with mine with snaking dogs and chains. Or a boom and grappler. If you keep the 19in wheels on front that best as plowing. Drop to 16in to do other work. Wider is better. Some use windshield washer or antifreeze in the tires. Here in the south we can use just water. Done it for years. Keep it greased. Protect that clutch. Keep the lock on your back wheel bolts. Don't allow them to shake loose. Mine still the 6v. System. Hadn't had a reason to change it over. At least once you understand what it can do what it can't at the end of the day it's paid for. No big note to pay. If they're a will they're a way to make it happen. All I can say if find it.
@raymondpetrovits2336
@raymondpetrovits2336 11 месяцев назад
I inherited a 1953 Golden Jubilee from my wife’s granddad. He bought it new and worked it every day on his 200 acre farm. He lived to be 92 and said keep my girl in the barn and change the oil religiously. Pops past on but his beloved Ford still looks new and purrs like a kitten.
@100texan2
@100texan2 2 года назад
When those fords were new they were a great improvement over any tractor in its day due to the three point hitch. It used to take half a day to bolt on the implements under the belly of tractors in those days. Big farmers would buy several of these tractors and work them in tandem to plow several hundred acres back in the 1950’s.
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
I understand they somewhat standardized the 3 point hitch.
@dirtyshame2444
@dirtyshame2444 7 месяцев назад
Farm/Ranch I grew up on had 9 of these tractors. Cowboys hated them because they would have to plant/cultivate cotton. In a day those tractors could cover many acres.
@Hotrodford
@Hotrodford 7 месяцев назад
The three point hitch was the brainchild of Harry Ferguson who talked Henry Ford into installing them on his tractors. ​@@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@Vize_Iron
@Vize_Iron 2 года назад
My grandpa has a very nice 1950 ford 8n tractor. It runs great and has done its job for anything we've ever needed it for. In my opinion, it's very handy to have for moving large things. Me and my grandpa unloaded a 3-400 pound wood stove from his car with the tractor. Would have been a pain without it. Grandpa use to plow his garden with it every year and still does sometimes. For someone who has decent size land and enjoys growing gardens and stuff, it would be handy.
@radamson1
@radamson1 2 года назад
One thing a lot of people don't realize is the difference in weight. All of the extra weight comes from the heaver castings of the motor, transmission, and rear-end housings. My 8N is over 70 years old and still going strong, MY New Holland is a 2008 model bought new and is done...forever. The engine block has a crack due to the extensive loader work I do. Broken in half, done after 14 years, the 8N is as good as new after 70+ years. One I paid $1200 for one I paid $15000 for.
@jarvisfamily3837
@jarvisfamily3837 5 месяцев назад
Suggestion for box blade work: put the three-point hitch into draft mode instead of position mode, and move partial loads dirt at a time instead of loading up the box blade with a full load every time. That's how I grade and level my driveway and it works great - I set the 3-point to near minimum draft load and the box picks up gravel from the high spots and lets it drop into the low spots without digging the box in and loading up too much. One thing to keep in mind - if you're going to do PTO work with any of the old tractors that don't have a live PTO, get yourself an overrunning clutch that mounts on the back of the PTO shaft. That way if you're running something like a brush hog and you want to stop, you won't have the mower continuing to push you forward when you slow down. Might save you from having the mower push your tractor through a fence or a wall or up a tree.
@tomr3074
@tomr3074 2 года назад
My new to me 8n does it all. I rely on it too much.....fire wood, driveway , garden duties, bush hogging, deer dragging. ...I'm getting another since the local adds have them weekly. My life is complete now that I've got mine.
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
It's a versatile and still usable little tractor. Thanks for sharing!
@knuckle47
@knuckle47 Год назад
Same for me…. It took me 69 years but it’s here and I love it… I can get the same work done now as when I was half that age. It lifts, it scoops ( has a loader) it levels, it works!
@cspfitch
@cspfitch 2 года назад
I just bought a 1952 8n I’m doing the same things plush bush hogging and the 8n has no problem with it. I bought it to give my big tractor a break. I love mine and thank you for posting this!!!
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
Good idea, thanks for watching!
@nedflanders620
@nedflanders620 2 года назад
8 n is a hell of a tool
@fordbailey8173
@fordbailey8173 2 года назад
Great camera work ! Excellent video- thank you.
@jadonlikesgreentractors6167
@jadonlikesgreentractors6167 2 года назад
I still use ford 8n on my almost 600 acre ranch
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
It's a good tractor.
@johndowning2231
@johndowning2231 4 месяца назад
Back in the 50s and 60s, my Maternal Grandpa bought an old farm in central Wisconsin and with it, a Ford 8N. As a teenager, I was taught to use it to tow a small trailer to take our hunting group out west of the farmhouse. It was a great little tractor and even though I really have no need for it, I am getting the bug.
@wilhelm_iron2359
@wilhelm_iron2359 Год назад
Our 8N Jubilee was used to haul trailers and brush hog. Very nice, reliable little tractors
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects Год назад
Yup, I like mine a lot!
@jacklabloom635
@jacklabloom635 Год назад
I have a 1952 8N that I use to grade my gravel road. I used to pay between $500 to $700 to have my road graded. One day I saw an 8N tractor with a scraper blade and finish mower for sale. I have easily paid for the tractor by doing my own road grading. I can now grade my road anytime it needs it, instead of once a year to have it graded. I plan to sell the finish mower and purchase a box blade. I’m going to try a used five foot box blade.
@tripler3724
@tripler3724 Год назад
Great post from D.Brown Jr. to which I will add, keep thumbs outside rim, kick-back is a bear. using a box scraper effectively and efficiently takes time and to a point weight is your friend. To get best results adjust your top-link for the proper cut. For final smoothing, extend it so the leading edge does not contact the ground and the trailing edge will not pick up dirt, just ride over like back dragging with a front end loader in float. I use a Land Pride HR3584 on bigger tractors and LMC etc. on the smaller ones, no use paying for the name brands on the smaller ones. The 3-point hitch was patented in Britain by Irish born Harry Ferguson and he partnered with Henry Ford in theto market the Ford-Ferguson, essentially a gray Ford 9N Series, essentially a Ferguson-Brown Model A. You can guess who came out on top of this hand shake deal. The early models were pretty slow, so plan ahead
@jefffreestone8476
@jefffreestone8476 3 месяца назад
Grew up in the early 1970s using my father’s 1952, 8N. It had 8 forward speeds, 2 reverse operated by a lever on the side of the transmission in front of the clutch pedal. It had a front end loader of sorts with a trip lever to unload the bucket. we used to bail hay & even had chains for it to use in the winter snow.
@Kristian_Saile
@Kristian_Saile 2 года назад
We had a couple of old 8n’s that were either free or super cheap. They were super useful, easy to work on and I really enjoyed running them. I had the same 5k’ blade and excavated a whole slope to make room for a new building, snow plowed with it, brush hogged with it, and used it to water animals out in pasture as well as move our eggmobile. I sold them and bought a new tractor and having a bucket and 4wd is amazing, but at the cost of a payment and that was something the old Fords didn’t have. There was definitely more sense of pride doing a job with an old 8n and getting the dance down of shifting and operating the clutch efficiently to run the non live pto and read lift. Plus they are just so cool.
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
Ya definitely not a perfect machine in the modern age but seriously hard to beat for the money they cost!
@adiamondforever7890
@adiamondforever7890 2 года назад
I'll second the use what you own, my brother gave me a 631 after he took the front end loader for his 860. Over time, I now have added rear wheels, power steering, a different front end loader, and a sickle mower. Previously someone added the PTO. I do not have enough power to run his 16' land pride mower when the field is wet or heavy. Engine has blow by when run hard, but the engine doesn't even seem to be working with the mower in operation. Have fun
@dustindavy4319
@dustindavy4319 6 месяцев назад
Cool old tractor still doing some work. And it looks nice, too.
@pondacres
@pondacres 2 года назад
That's a classic man, good looking tractor.
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
Thanks 👍
@spudhut2246
@spudhut2246 2 года назад
If you ever look to stabilize your rear implements get a pair of stabilizer bars. They connect under axle perch with pins and pin in place on cat 1 pins with lower arms to implement. Takes out all the left to right sway. I have some on a Ford Dexta Diesel I own and they work great
@WhoDaBoss-dc4or
@WhoDaBoss-dc4or 2 года назад
That blade will work better with stabilizer bars.
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
I need to get my hands on some. Found some for cheap at a local farm supply store!
@mmielcarek3046
@mmielcarek3046 2 года назад
Don't know why more people don't use the stabilizers. Saves the lift bars from left to right moving. Don't use them for plowing with a garden plow. But is controls the side movement with a disc or rotary mower or a snow plow.
@jvin248
@jvin248 2 года назад
My maternal grandfather ran his dairy operation with a Ford N-series tractor. My father used a Ferguson TO35 (live clutch and a bit more horse power) on the farm when I was a kid (but we had more for a few specific jobs). We ran the baler, manure spreader, silo filler, grain drills, corn planter, and more with that Ferguson. When you can buy a working N-series tractor for less than the down payment on a modern tractor it's a great deal. Otherwise you've got dozens of months of payments. Parts are pretty easy to find for these old tractors because so many were built and so many are still out there.
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
That's what I understand is that these N series tractors parts are readily available and cheap for most pieces of the tractor, I have found that to be true. Really happy with it.
@adoptdontshop9378
@adoptdontshop9378 Год назад
Have a 1950 8N with the Sherman Trans. New to old machines, slowly restoring it. This machine is a beast. I've graded, pulled giant downed pine trees and spread tons of dirt with it. It's a solid machine with tons of parts available. Hard to beat for the cost.
@scrapeyhawkins5299
@scrapeyhawkins5299 Год назад
Having a Sherman really helps...
@Derekmartin20
@Derekmartin20 Год назад
Have had my 1950 8N for 30 years. Definitely a little American work horse . Easy to work on.
@bubbacomputer
@bubbacomputer 2 месяца назад
I have a '52 8n that I've owned for 30 years and a B2401 series Kubota I bought a year ago. The Kubota does all the loader and blade work, but the 8n is better at running the 5' rotary cutter. Great little tractors, I've been around them for almost 60 years. The Ford has much larger rear tires and weighs almost a thousand pounds more than the Kubota, so there are certain jobs (like running a rotary cutter with fixed height chains or picking up something with a lift pole) where it still does a fantastic job, and the larger wheels and extra weight means it rides better when mowing all day long.
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 месяца назад
Great insite! Good to know!
@jamesgerrald9047
@jamesgerrald9047 Год назад
Used mine today to tear down hills fill in a low driveway and build it back up even at an “idle” thing is a beast
@PaulWhitedWoodStoneIron
@PaulWhitedWoodStoneIron 2 года назад
Better than a shovel and wheelbarrow.
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
It’s a pretty dang good tractor in my opinion.
@PaulWhitedWoodStoneIron
@PaulWhitedWoodStoneIron 2 года назад
@@DereksWorkshopAndProjects I love them. For the age and ability to get parts. Can’t beat it for a lot of work.
@stanleyspurgeon5339
@stanleyspurgeon5339 Год назад
The 8 N For it’s size Can perform lots of work with the equipment that it was designed for. I would rather own a Ford 8N then a Kabota Of the same size, I live in Wisconsin and I have seen those tractors in plowing contests and they work very well with the plow that it’s designed for then if you want the diesel equivalent you go with the Jubilee
@SF-fm7ov
@SF-fm7ov 2 месяца назад
Just to help you. You should tighten the sway chains so that the implement doesn't swing back and forth for most jobs. I never had an 8n but a Massey Ferguson 65 has draft control that automatically lifts the 3 point according to load so that you don't spin out. Also, many tractors have an adjustment for the rate of drop so that the implement doesn't fall so fast when you lower it. Hope this helps.
@trentmulkey7673
@trentmulkey7673 10 месяцев назад
I love my 8 N ford
@d.brownjr.4845
@d.brownjr.4845 2 года назад
That box blade is fine. When you lift it the front wheels don't jump up. Now, with all you said, do you have water in your tires? That gives the back weight. To use that blade learn to control the blade with the lift or or your drag. The little arm under your seat. That tractor can work the hell out of that box blade or anything else you got. Majority of it is the operator and NOT, THE TRACTOR..
@KitchenAlpha
@KitchenAlpha 2 года назад
I'm getting ready to buy my first tractor and I'm thinking an 8n will be a good place for me to start. Need it mostly for grading work and a little but of farming. Great video!
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
I think it's a good starter tractor. Easy to work on.
@Machi74005
@Machi74005 2 года назад
When I was a kid, my grandfather had an 8N then an NAA. My personal recommendation is to try to find an NAA or Jubilee(same thing different year). The Jubilee/NAA's had overhead valves and just better overall performance with a 4 speed transmission.
@Vize_Iron
@Vize_Iron 2 года назад
I don't think you'll be disappointed unless you have a big farm. But even then, you'll still get it done!!
@JohnHBatte
@JohnHBatte 9 месяцев назад
If you have and proper use the overrunning clutch, almost any job without hydraulic cylinders is doable, and with a front mount pump and modified drain plugs can have live remotes. We did most of the farming on 750.acres with two 9Ns and a Ferguson TO30 in the 1980s and 1990s before that they did all the work since bought new. Move 4x4 rolls easy, while 5x4 can be really tricky. Pull 125 square bales on a wagon, mow hay, rake, bale, cultivate, plow, blade, haul manure, use rear manure fork, Post auger, 6ft harrow 7ft is doable but at very limit of front end weight, moderate, rotary cutting, snow removal, etc. I’ve used the heaviest rhino 6ft blade, 7ft lift harrow, and a double hitch of hay 160 bales all at the limit. So yes they will do real work and do it well just not as easy but way more fun.
@reedbreneman9443
@reedbreneman9443 2 года назад
I have the wheel weights on the inside of my wheels on my 8 N and I have a full hydraulic loader on it and it handles all jobs well and I bought it for $700 at auction and put about $300 more in repairs ,Way cheaper than that $20,000 Kabota my neighbor has and does more work than his can.
@newenglandhuntingfishingan4429
Get yourself sway bars for the hitch. I love my 8N, if your patient with it you can do anything.
@oldretireddude
@oldretireddude 2 года назад
Any work that uses the drawbar or 3pt hitch or a loader when available and within the engine HP limits, it is and will continue to be a wonderful tractor for the price. They will probably still be running when many modern tractors are rusty piles. That being said, as your only tractor, a tractor without live PTO would never be on my radar for consideration. The 600/800 series Ford's would be the earliest I would consider.
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
I intend on getting a SCUT with a front end loader that will be the main PTO work horse for my property when I finally get on it. I’d like to keep both around for a long time for but grading and leveling ground, creating roads, etc… on the property the Ford is going to do the job. The post hole digger didn’t really work out but more due to my land being rocky more than the tractor, but I did learn the problem with not having a live PTO when I used it. It would work, but not great. But that’s okay, cause most holes I dig will have to be Jack hammered out anyhow.
@oldretireddude
@oldretireddude 2 года назад
@@DereksWorkshopAndProjects As many will point out the "live PTO" can be worked around but it does get annoying. If the tractor is a family heirloom, I get it, but I just have to throw a red flag when someone suggests the 8N as their first and only tractor. Mine is the model 860 and is effectively an 8N with some MY updates and live PTO but that's a huge difference. I grew up in the '60s and the both models were around, the 8N was not anyone's first choice.
@ericnoney3770
@ericnoney3770 Год назад
@@oldretireddude The 8N is my first and only "real" tractor (as opposed to things that would be better classified as a glorified riding mower). I've had it for years, and have never once hooked anything at all to the PTO, nor can I think of anything I'd ever use the PTO for. The PTO could fall off the tractor, and other than the gaping hole left behind, I wouldn't even notice it missing. Never once has the lack of a live PTO ever even crossed my mind as a reason to get anything better than this old iron...
@ryandienes6526
@ryandienes6526 2 года назад
I recommend staying with a 6ft box. I have an 8n and love it for the grading work I do with it. Yes a 6ft box pulls more dirt/weight but it covers the width of the tractor which I needed. I have the TSC 6ft box and I'm very happy with the combination
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
The 6ft box stalls the tractor out in any gear at any RPM for me. The 6ft I had was nearly 200lbs heavier than the TSC 6ft and had a greater capacity so a 6ft blade might be right fromTSC, but I still think I might go with the 5 footer. Someone earlier say it was the operator, AKA me, that it stops and peels out, and I’m pretty doubtful that it’s my fault, I’m not the most experienced heavy equipment or tractor operator but I’m not a complete idiot you know. Anyway, thanks for the suggestion.
@ryandienes6526
@ryandienes6526 2 года назад
@@DereksWorkshopAndProjectsrunning the correct 11.2 tires over the 12.4s that a lot of ppl run helps out with that a lot. I made a switch recently to the smaller tires. Just can't let the box dig to China or it will stop almost any tractor. To me having a box that covered my 8ns width was way more important especially grading stone. Your not wrong if you think the 5 ft will work better for you.
@rmcjr5206
@rmcjr5206 2 года назад
@@DereksWorkshopAndProjects I'm no pro, but it looked to me like letting out the top link a bit may have helped. Looked like it wanted to mine for coal as much as level the ground.
@jameswilliams977
@jameswilliams977 5 месяцев назад
In September of 1968 I bought a 1941 Ford 9N when the neighbor sold his farm. That winter I rebuilt the engine and bought aa loader for it. When I got the tractor I also bought the porthole digger, and the home made buzz saw for cutting firewood. Within the next year bought a two bottom plow and a 8 foot sickle mower. Used the tractor for several years till I left home my dad continued for several more years till he quit farming. I did plow our 20 acre field with it one year and after that would mow that field every year for two crops of hay. We also had a John Deere H and an A. Raked hay and pulled wagons with the H. The A pulled the 8 foot double disc and the hay baler. Wish I still had those tractors and the family farm.
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 5 месяцев назад
What happened to the family farm?
@jameswilliams977
@jameswilliams977 5 месяцев назад
@@DereksWorkshopAndProjects After our father passed my brother and his wife bought the property from our mother. When he got divorced he had to sell it to settle the divorce. I was deployed and there wasn’t much I could do from overseas.
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 5 месяцев назад
@jameswilliams977 That’s really too bad. Im sorry. I have grandpas on both sides of the family in agriculture. One is a cattle rancher here in my area. My uncles are taking that over here when he passes way (any day now) as my dad hasn’t been nearly as involved as them. But I’m bummed about it. My mom’s dad is a citrus farmer. He has 10 acres of citrus groves about 4 hours away from where I live just north of Mesa AZ (a suburb of Phoenix). He could pass any day now too. That’s much more of a toss up but most likely my mother won’t see a drop of it either. It’s a little slice of heaven where they live. So both living grandpas are farming and I’m likely not going to ever have an opportunity at either one. So I feel your pain just a little. But I imagine losing the family farm you grew up on is far more painful.
@jameswilliams977
@jameswilliams977 5 месяцев назад
@@DereksWorkshopAndProjects Yes it was. Now that I’m retired I’ve been thinking I’d like a small farm. Just can’t do the winters in northern Wisconsin anymore. Hope you enjoy your little tractor.
@briancupp6767
@briancupp6767 2 года назад
Great tractor. Labor savor that don’t break the bank
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
Definitely. Used it the other day that could have been borderline a hand done dirt project and it only took about 30 minutes with the tractor. Makes it go quick.
@toddcarlisle7909
@toddcarlisle7909 9 месяцев назад
I have a 52 8n that I've owned for 15yrs and I love it. It handles my gardening needs plus cuts and bales about 10acre hayfield. It's cheap to run and easy to maintain.
@jerrymiller8313
@jerrymiller8313 7 месяцев назад
I( have an 8n that is the same year as me. only thing added were sway bars and an overrunning clutch. Makes brush hogging much safer.
@melvinhunt6976
@melvinhunt6976 9 месяцев назад
Been doing All the jobs for 70 plus years!
@hughdanaher2758
@hughdanaher2758 2 года назад
My grandmother had a ford tractor for her walnut orchard. Possibly the one you have now. ;-)
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
Haha, really though, you just can’t beat em. My grandpa has an old Ford Jubilee he used to pull around his citrus orchard, until he replaced it with a newer New Holland because it was just getting really old and worn out.
@jchlawncare5730
@jchlawncare5730 Год назад
I used my 8N to haul firewood today
@user-ch9bu6tx5n
@user-ch9bu6tx5n 10 месяцев назад
I use a 8n ford tractor to farm with it, a 6 foot grader blade does fine with it have no problems, the 8n did farm 20 to 80 acres back that is you had farm with.
@apoc8265
@apoc8265 2 года назад
There's a reason that 8N been around for 75+ years, that tractor will pretty much do anything you ask it to do. But it's like anything else the right knowledge, the right attachment makes the difference! I'm by no means dissing newer tractors they are nice but these ol fords been battle tested and proven themselves time and time again.. The only thing ford screwed up on it was they all should of came with a low gear from the factory that's the only thing I've found wrong with them.. i wouldn't trade my 48 for anything
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
Definitely happy to have mine!
@hotchihuahua1546
@hotchihuahua1546 9 месяцев назад
It’s cheap and easy to maintain with lots of parts available . How many tractors can say that with 70+ years of service ? Yes it can do the job with many things with many impliments for a small farm .
@donaldhanger9807
@donaldhanger9807 6 месяцев назад
It help build America look at farm history in America.
@cecilandrews7479
@cecilandrews7479 9 месяцев назад
They work just as hard or harder than the same horsepower tractors up today
@Srmoore79
@Srmoore79 6 месяцев назад
Go to red rock tractor parts you can get a throttle pedal for the 8n along with other things to modernize your N series a little bit
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 6 месяцев назад
Nice. thanks for the suggestion!
@michaelschreiner95
@michaelschreiner95 Месяц назад
8n are nice but all of them Ive been around overheat when you work em hard in the summer.
@rh4459
@rh4459 2 года назад
Good job i got one to
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
It's a good tractor.
@tylerwynne8248
@tylerwynne8248 7 месяцев назад
The old Ford 8n will outlive the new stuff
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 7 месяцев назад
That’s what everyone says!
@ryanwalker388
@ryanwalker388 2 года назад
My 8n Has weights inside the wheels. The rear ones seem to make a huge difference when pulling heavy dirt. Mine has it on all 4 corners and seems to carry momentum very well. Might be something to consider. I noticed your wheels spinning when pulling the bigger scraper.
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
They do spin. I need a small scraper too. This one normally rides behind a diesel tractor this is probably almost twice the horse power. And its a heavy duty box blade so It's already quite a bear for the tractor to handle on its own. It needs a good 5 ft blade.
@benpbraun
@benpbraun 2 года назад
Should use stabilizers to keep the blade from swinging side to side. Looks like you're missing the category 0/1 pins there.
@benterbieten9540
@benterbieten9540 4 месяца назад
Dad and I did all our baling work for years with 2 2Ns, so obviously a 8N will do it too.
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 4 месяца назад
I’ve seen videos of N series tractors bailing hay. I love it!
@alk5749
@alk5749 Год назад
If it’s digging too deep, shorten the bit on rippers so they don’t dig as deep until you get it loosened up.
@WhoDaBoss-dc4or
@WhoDaBoss-dc4or 2 года назад
Get a set of stabilizer bars. You really need them on ground engaging implements. I use mine on everything.
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
I need to get some, you’re right.
@joetterolison4093
@joetterolison4093 2 года назад
If You search the Tractor Supply stores on the internet within a distance You are willing to drive You might find it cost effective to drive 90 minutes to get what You want cheaper than the closest. I was searching for a 5 foot 3 point rototiller and TSC had a sale. The closest TSC does not stock Tractor implements and they were going to have to order it and then charge Me $113.00 delivery Fee on something they did not have in stock plus the sales prices was $1499.00 I looked up the stores within 100 miles and put their zip code in to see if they had one in stock and what was their sales price were. I found a TSC store about 90 miles away that had several in stock and their sales price was $1,299. It was $200 cheaper and I did not have to pay the $113 delivery fee, plus I did not have to wait 30 or more days to get it. It was worth driving 180 miles round trip and save $313 dollars back when gas was $1.87 a gallon I was surprised the same rototiller was that much less from the company.
@mmielcarek3046
@mmielcarek3046 2 года назад
The shifter boot looks cracked. If the tractor sits outside there is a chance of rain water getting in the transmission oil. Turning it milky.
@WhoDaBoss-dc4or
@WhoDaBoss-dc4or 2 года назад
Interesting plumbing ( what I can see of it ) You might consider adding a sediment bowl. Never ever use rubber fuel line on gravity fed carb. I can't see yours but it's pretty common on modified fuel systems.
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
Why do you not want to use rubber fuel lines with a gravity fed carb? Small engines use them all the time don't they?. It is definitely a modified fuel system. Kind of ugly. I'd like change some of it out in the future.
@jeremydavis2595
@jeremydavis2595 2 года назад
@@DereksWorkshopAndProjects one very good reason not to use them on these tractors is the fact that oftentimes the exhaust manifold is right below the carburetor. The rubber in those hoses tends to get hard and begin cracking over years and believe me they will start leaking and with the carburetor and exhaust arrangement on these old tractors, once a leak starts you won't know it until the engine is on fire. A properly connected steel line from the tank to the carb is much more reliable and less likely to spring a leak than a rubber hose. Many riding mowers have burned to the ground because the owners didn't pay close enough attention to see the rubber hoses had cracked until it was too late. A good rule of thumb I is if a piece of equipment has rubber fuel hoses and is over 10 years old, I replaced them especially if the lines run anywhere near the exhaust. The small cost and a little bit of time just isn't worth having a fire in my opinion.
@jeremydavis2595
@jeremydavis2595 2 года назад
@@DereksWorkshopAndProjects and on top of that if you were out in the field doing work with these tractors that line is more exposed than it is on a riding mower. So let's say your brush hogging and as you're driving through tall Weeds something snags that rubber line and it starts leaking, you have a fire the moment that gas starts dripping down on the exhaust manifold. Whereas the steel line is much less likely to be cut or twisted to the point of linking.
@PolishRadom1944
@PolishRadom1944 2 года назад
@@DereksWorkshopAndProjects the screens in the system are all you need for filtering unless your tank needs to be cleaned and or relined. I agree , add your metal line back
@alk5749
@alk5749 Год назад
Absolutely that tractor can do “Real work” , I use a heavy duty box place with five rippers all the time. It’s a good all around tractor. Mane slower but it’ll geter done.
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects Год назад
My feelings for sure!
@wbsims2996
@wbsims2996 11 месяцев назад
I have a new 4wd tractor with fel and a 1948 8n. The new tractor is a fine machine but the 8n is still a bery capable tractor. I plow, grade, snake logs, bush hog etc with the 8n. It is not meant to be a loader but can do limited loader work. I can't see getting rid of the 8n anytime soon.
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 11 месяцев назад
I don’t actually want to get rid of the 8n but I could easily get $5000 out of it and a couple implements that would be too big for a modern SCUT and pay 25% plus some savings down on a modern SCUT with some implements combo package with that $5k. Also I couldn’t convince my wife we need two tractors haha!
@wbsims2996
@wbsims2996 11 месяцев назад
@@DereksWorkshopAndProjects I hear you, if I had to make a choice, I would sell the 8n to buy new.
@rodneytyus
@rodneytyus 4 месяца назад
Can 8Ns still do work? Absolutely, and in 1948 when they first came out, they were innovative and a big improvement over other tractors of the day. But there are far better options available than an 8N. Even if someone wants to stick with older tractors, you can get a 3000 Ford, a 235 MF, or an Oliver 550, just to name a few, that can be bought for about the same money as an 8N, but are all available with power steering, diesel engines, and independent PTOs. I wouldn't mind having an 8N to ride in parades, but not for a working tractor. There are just too many limitations to what it can do these days.
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 4 месяца назад
It’s not the world greatest tractor. But I think the bottom line is that it worked for farmers in the 1940s and 1950s and probably on into the 1960s and it’ll still get work done. That being said. You could say the same thing about the older but newer than the 8n tractors you mentioned above. Just go up another 10 or 20 years and you’ll have better tractors. I can afford an 8N so I think it’s a great tractor. I’d like to upgrade some day while keeping this to something with a front end loader.
@markcote2387
@markcote2387 6 месяцев назад
Have you researched the little lever under the seat??
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 6 месяцев назад
Draft control I believe.
@peacetruth3074
@peacetruth3074 Год назад
My husband is considering getting a 8N. We are new to this. Could you use the 8N for clearing some trails in the woods? Could you use it to pull trees out of the woods for logging? We have a few trees in our woods that we could sell. Thanks for any suggestions.
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects Год назад
I think it could be used for those things. Hard to say though. Is it the best for the job you are describing? Far from it. But would it help with those projects over having nothing? Definitely. Sorry that probably isn’t exactly what you are looking for.
@peacetruth3074
@peacetruth3074 Год назад
I appreciate that. Buying one of these used is a whole lot better than spending $30,000 on a Kubota B 2601. Getting some help at a reasonable cost is better than something that's perfect but spending 30K.
@cspfitch
@cspfitch Год назад
If you put some stabilizing bars on there you will be pleased.
@scottmackay4504
@scottmackay4504 2 года назад
How in the world did they manage to sell like a million of them if they are useless? Many farmers made their livings with these over the years. Yes live PTO's, power steering, and other advancements all help, but for the money they are awesome and you can still get parts easily.
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
Amen dude. My motto has become “if it’s good enough for farmers in the 1950s, it’s good enough for me.”
@TF856
@TF856 3 месяца назад
Use stabilizers, get wheel weights, load the tires, don't get any attachments narrower than the tractor, get an underdrive sherman if possible,
@thesprinklerguy2598
@thesprinklerguy2598 7 месяцев назад
8n can do anything but round bales... not meant for 100+ acre farms unless you want to spend weeks plowing.. not to say you couldn't make/find a use for it. But on a 40 acre farm that 8n is basically the only thing you need besides all the attachments.. that and a Kubota with a loader/excavator attachment. This is why is 8n are a dime a dozen because people still use them
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 7 месяцев назад
Ya and I won’t ever farm over 40 acres ever if I ever even farm 5 honestly.
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 7 месяцев назад
So it’s perfect for me.
@cspfitch
@cspfitch Год назад
Please realize that the pto is a lot more then the new tractors there around 900 at the pTO where most small tractor’s are definitely a lot less. That’s why they were made for the PTO for different implements. I use mine to bush hog and it does a better job than my 40 hsp New Holland.
@jeffbarger3465
@jeffbarger3465 9 месяцев назад
Ha! those people saying an 8N won't work anymore, come and see My 47 2N work. box and straight blade, rotary cutter, 2 blade plow, disc. maybe they just don't how to work the implements and use the over horsed and over priced tractor to compensate. And buy or make wieghts for front and rear wheels.
@embededfabrication4482
@embededfabrication4482 2 месяца назад
I need something cheap to grade the runways for my ultralight and make some trails Just don't take such a heavy cut with the box blade maybe?
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 месяца назад
Good option.
@earlhannah8616
@earlhannah8616 2 года назад
8n not useful? I have a 1952 8n that ive used for years plowed gardens, brush hogged, built food plots, graded roads and moved hay bails plus many other farm jobs even after buying my LS 35hp compact I still use the 8n on my farm for many task alongside the ls 8n is a proven platform
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
It's incredibly useful. Love mine. I'll try and keep it forever. Pass it on to my Grandkids hopefully.
@ed9492
@ed9492 Год назад
the question is, can it do what is was designed to do? If it can then it can do "real" work.
@ashleighelizabeth5916
@ashleighelizabeth5916 2 месяца назад
The fact that you even have to answer such a stupid question from people is just absurd. Of course it can do real work. My grandfather had a Golden Jubilee that he bought in 53 and did REAL work with right up through the 90s when he got too sick to be active anymore. Yeah it would help if you have the Sherman trans put in and the lack of live hydraulics in stock mode are something to work around but that doesn't mean the tractor can't do real work.
@timfleenor3705
@timfleenor3705 2 года назад
If 8N's were live power most farms wouldn't need another tractor.......
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
Probably true. Wish there was a company that produced these still. Only modern technology where it really counts.
@johnwehner8096
@johnwehner8096 2 года назад
Can you adjust the teeth not to dig in as deep?
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
Yes, you can completely keep them from digging at all.
@TheBcrug
@TheBcrug 2 года назад
Use what you got,learn it's limitations, someone wants to buy you a brand new tractor because yours is not up to their standards, let them. Have done a lot of work with the 8n.
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
It's a great tractor!
@Tcrim354
@Tcrim354 2 года назад
Do you ballast water in the tires?
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
I did not.
@MrNachocheeze50
@MrNachocheeze50 2 года назад
Just read the title, haven’t watched it, just have to say, “Ask ma daddy”🍻
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
Well, in short, the answer is yes!
@MrNachocheeze50
@MrNachocheeze50 2 года назад
@@DereksWorkshopAndProjects “GIT_____ER _______DUNN”
@jonesy4588
@jonesy4588 Год назад
only in loose dirt
@richardgreen7811
@richardgreen7811 Год назад
You have made a "wise purchase". At this juncture I recommend You take Your advise from "the wise" and not the millennial morons who, while having no life experience, proclaim to be the repository of all things knowledge related. My Grandfather bought a Ford 8N in 1949 to augment his farming (40 acres) with mules who could not perform the heavier work being demanded by his customers desire for certain crops (corn and alfalfa). He modified many of the implements to tractor use and successfully proceeded. This tractor can perform all the work currently being done by subcompact tractors and much of the work being done by compact tractors. There are certain nuances You need to know in order to be more effective and safer. #1. Your tractor is "traction limited", evident by the tires slipping too easily. Go to Tractor Supply and pick up an adapter (very cheap) that lets You fill Your tires with a 50/50 ratio of antifreeze and water. It will immediately become an entirely different tractor in the traction department. It will also help stabilize the tractor on side grades (use Your own common sense). #2. Don't overload Your box-blade. It's true that a much larger tractor would allow You to "spill over" a box-blade, however that's not their intended use. I noticed that You're using it correctly in the video so enough said. #3. If You don't listen to anything else, go to Tractor Supply and pick up a PTO Shaft Over-Runing Clutch Adapter. They're not expensive and what they do is allow You to safely operate implements that store energy (bush hog). Your tractor has a "non-live PTO Shaft". Meaning that the protruding shaft is directly connected to the engine's crankshaft via the transmission. If You're bush hogging and push in the clutch, the stored energy in the bush hog blades will push You and Your tractor until the energy abates. This is "monster dangerous". True there's a lever on the right side of the seat that is "supposed to" disconnect the driveline from the PTO, however under a load, that lever will routinely jam then You are along for the ride and there's "NOTHING" You can do about it. #4. Sooner or later, You will take that magnificent looking Son of Yours along with You. LISTEN TO ME. Create a belted seat arrangement for him with full consideration for the Three-Point Arms that have a lot of travel. Don't let him sit or stand next to Your seat where he will definitely get caught (I was 9 when it happened to me). Don't get caught up in the BS. You have a nice example of the Ford 8N. It will do everything You need and will do so on 5 gallons of gas per day. Enjoy Your accomplishments and savor the heritage of Your "wise decision".
@josefnewsom7992
@josefnewsom7992 2 месяца назад
Put some fluid in them tires
@motoXcR
@motoXcR Год назад
say basically more..
@radamson1
@radamson1 2 года назад
Good lord, it has 30 hp, almost all of the modern subcompact tractors that people buy are 30 horsepower and under. Four-wheel-drive is the real reason new tractors do better.
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
Most people stick to 24hp tractors to avoid DEF fluid. It’s a good tractor no doubt. I’m loving mine.
@TF856
@TF856 3 месяца назад
We cannot hear the tractor with that music playing!!!!!!!
@koop1987
@koop1987 Год назад
I can't watch this is first tractor video on RU-vid can a Ford 8n do real work City slickers
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects Год назад
Hey man, I defend that it can for sure. It’s other fellers saying it’s too old to do much “real work”.
@koop1987
@koop1987 Год назад
@@DereksWorkshopAndProjects I know loggers use them a guy would be surprised what it could do today's people want everything new and replaceable and not repairable I had bought mine for 500 bucks best money I've spent
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects Год назад
It’s cheap and easy to repair. That’s why I love it.
@koop1987
@koop1987 Год назад
@@DereksWorkshopAndProjects yup
@markcanfield7151
@markcanfield7151 Год назад
Dude put chains on it problem solved
@scottbehr5690
@scottbehr5690 2 года назад
Those " little tractors" have fed millions of people......naw...they can't do anything.....
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects
@DereksWorkshopAndProjects 2 года назад
Everyone just wants to compare them to modern equipment. Most of the time, this tractor is going to do exactly what I need it to. There is no front end loader, and no backhoe, but it’s all I need.
@paulwomack5866
@paulwomack5866 Месяц назад
Let me save viewers 10 minutes. It's essentially a clone of the famous Ferguson TE20, and the answer is "yes". Some TE20's have been in continuous use since they were made.
@robcrissinger776
@robcrissinger776 Год назад
THey do real work. For modern equivalent you'd spend $25,000 or more. The Kubota dealer would love to sell you a new tractor.
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