My "new" tractor

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RowCropRenegade

Feeling the Heat
Hearth Supporter
Mar 19, 2008
305
Southwest, Ohio
Bought my Dad's IH 574 with 2250 loader for 4500. 3500 hard hours but the motor and rear end is solid.

Put electronic ignition on it (screw setting points), rebuilt governor, rebuilt starter, new coil, cap, distributer, clutch, ignition switch, new front tires, rebuilt alternator, new water pump and turned flywheel. Plus all kinds of small things. 2800 bucks.

Great grandpa bought this tractor new in 1978. Many years of raising hogs and crops but a versatile tractor for gas 67 hp. Compression is over 170 (180 spec new). Has factory heavy duty hydraulic pump (wood splitting), rear loaded tires, 1 remote valve, but not MFWD. :(

To test it's starting capability, left it outside over nite. -10 with windchill. Fired up, 574, 674 gas tractors are known for being cold natured.

My Oliver 550 has appreciated double since I bought it in 2001. 4500 bucks for it and was offered 10k because it has 1510 loader and power steering. Not to mention only 1500 hours. It's to the point that it's unreasonable to put it to farm work considering it's age and limited hydraulic capabilities. Parts are scarce as well.

I've beat myself over the head looking at tractors, skid steerers, backhoes and loaders for over 2 years. This 574 won't fully satisfy my loader needs. It can run augers to unload and load bins, do small bushogging, wood splitting/hauling/stacking, grade stone, push snow etc. What it can't do is forklift work, grapple bucket (high dollar adaptation to current loader on 574). Looking for a 2500lb-3000lb capacity skid steer now, with cab and ac.

So there's your "new" loader tractor useless info of the day :) In picture it is 0 with wind of 20 mph and snowing. The helmit isn't for safety but warmth.
 

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Looks like you are going to have a white Christmas. I don't think you'll have to worry about getting snowed in either.
 
Nice work horse. That should serve you well. PLUS, it's been in the family since new, so there's probably more than monetary value to it at this point. I know that on a farm equipment comes and goes, but there are always a handful of things that stick around and get hard to part with. Always seems to be pre 1980's stuff, too.
 
Great Grandpa would be proud.
 
Nice to see an older machine still earning it's keep.
 
Nice little tractor. Maybe one day I will be able to save up for one.
 
Thankyou for the compliments. I believe in the 1970s made farm machinery. Some of the highest quality machinery during agriculture's golden age 1. (1970-1979). We are currently in the golden age part 2. (2005-201X?) Too bad some of the equipment isn't built as well today. Now have 5 tractors in the working rotation from way back. Most farms our size don't farm with this old stuff. 1976 JD 6030 200 hp. 1977 IH 1086, 145 hp, 1969 Oliver 550 50 hp, 1978 574 67 hp, and JD 1976 backhoe 85 hp.

Great grandpa had great taste and yeah, I consider it a family heirloom. The 550 is sentimental also, bought it at 18. I'm gonna tinker with a home made FEMA gasifier to mount on the loader of the 550. Might be fun to create electricity with PTO.

I really like the old IH tractors. 806, 1206, 1086, 656, 884, 560

More eye candy. JD 6030, awesome brute. Not many of these around. Everyone talks about this tractor.
 

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Wow, that 6030 sure is something! I've seen mismatched width tires on Duallies before, but it's weird looking to me to have different height tires. Is that an illusion? when it was on cement would the outer tires even touch the ground?
 
Every so often I try to compare farming today with what it was when I was growing up. For sure we saw many big changes during my younger years but it is downright amazing seeing today's equipment.

Hey, I think the new atv has more, or as much power than the first tractor I ever drove; a John Deere H.
 
danno, the outside duals are warn out. they touch the ground in field conditions for flotation more than traction. on concrete they would barely touch the ground. the big tires are new and duals are 30 years old, so it is not an optical illusion haha. new duals are 1250 a piece. running them another year.

backwoods, you are right about the atv's now being bigger than tractors from the 30-40-50 era.
 
Backwoods Savage said:
Hey, I think the new atv has more, or as much power than the first tractor I ever drove; a John Deere H.

It might have more "rated" HP, but don't go chaining them up... ;-)

Nice looking chore tractor ya got. Drove one similar for many hours.
 
Nice, I keep looking at tractors, might get one when I build the pole barn although the Bobcat is all I really need (although a backhoe would sure come in handy). It is strange how the tractor looks blue in the one picture.
 
GolfandWoodNut said:
Nice, I keep looking at tractors, might get one when I build the pole barn although the Bobcat is all I really need (although a backhoe would sure come in handy). It is strange how the tractor looks blue in the one picture.
That's not the same tractor. it's his Oliver and it's probably green, not blue!!!
 
Nice looking IH! As you can see I have a couple of IH's smallest offerings! But also from the 70's... yeah they made good stuff back then thats still in daily use today. I wonder if todays machines will last half as long - and probably cost a TON more money in maintenence. The family has many IH's, a pair of 1466's are there most used machines.

Personally I like the older ones, the letter series, and think they were the best built and most reliable & easy to fix tractors of all time. I'd love to have a super A. But I'd love to have all the fancy live clutch and hydraulics and a lot of the features that werent around until the numbered ones.

HP... yeah it seems lawn mowers today have more HP than these tractors... somewhow I think the ol 26hp Farmall M will outpull my buddies new 26hp cub cadet mower!
 
►►OhioBurner◄◄™ said:
Nice looking IH! As you can see I have a couple of IH's smallest offerings! But also from the 70's... yeah they made good stuff back then thats still in daily use today. I wonder if todays machines will last half as long - and probably cost a TON more money in maintenence. The family has many IH's, a pair of 1466's are there most used machines.

Personally I like the older ones, the letter series, and think they were the best built and most reliable & easy to fix tractors of all time. I'd love to have a super A. But I'd love to have all the fancy live clutch and hydraulics and a lot of the features that werent around until the numbered ones.

HP... yeah it seems lawn mowers today have more HP than these tractors... somewhow I think the ol 26hp Farmall M will outpull my buddies new 26hp cub cadet mower!

Lol We had a super m growing up I think you could throw a couple dozen of those lawn tractors at it.
 
►►OhioBurner◄◄™ said:
HP... yeah it seems lawn mowers today have more HP than these tractors... somewhow I think the ol 26hp Farmall M will outpull my buddies new 26hp cub cadet mower!

Yep, the HP of today is rated at "Peak" - basically you wind up the engine and then slam a dyno down on it to see where the needle points to. The HP of yesteryear was a "continuous" rating. It would pull that rating all day long on a dyno.

As an example- a 12hp cast iron Kohler has a "true" rating of 9.2 or 9.6 HP (depends on year build).
 
Danno77 said:
GolfandWoodNut said:
Nice, I keep looking at tractors, might get one when I build the pole barn although the Bobcat is all I really need (although a backhoe would sure come in handy). It is strange how the tractor looks blue in the one picture.
That's not the same tractor. it's his Oliver and it's probably green, not blue!!!

Gotcha, I thought I was missing something. Pretty similiar looking tractors.
 
Yeah... I have a loaded 1975 Massey Ferguson Industrial 20 (souped up 135) diesel. Those older machines are awesome. There's no REplacement for DISplacement. Those old motors have torque in droves, are unbelievably fuel efficient, and run nice and cool... only wish they weren't so loud. Time on my tractor, time fly fishing, and time staring at a fire in the stove are good for my soul!
 
I have a little IH too. Its a 125 from 1968.
 
I have satisfied my grapple bucket, forks and muddy/snowy conditions machine.

Went half and half on a 2011 JD 333 Track Loader (skid steer). Brand new, 2 hours. Dad regains 50% ownership of 574. LOL. I'll get a picture of it in action after the ground freezes up. Purchased 84" material bucket, 84" root grapple bucket and forks.

Any ideas on good telescoping saws that match skid loaders?
 
Very cool, nice "new" old tractor you got there.
 
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