BossofBBQ
Bronze Member
Hey all,
I’m a younger guy located south of Denver in Colorado, with a decently nice 1950 Ford 8N sidemount. It runs very well, has been reliable, and doesn’t currently need anything. Mechanically, it’s very solid.
For attatchments, I’ve got:
One thing I’m unsure about is whether it really pencils out here. There are plenty of folks with bigger, newer machines that have loaders, live PTO, more horsepower, etc. However, there are some people with 5-10 acres who either want work done, can't do it themselves, or don't want to pay for a professional contractor.
I know the 8N has its limits, and I’m trying to be realistic about what I can and can’t do without overworking it. I'm pretty familiar with tractors in general, and I've owned this particular 8N for about 7 months now.
For those of you who’ve tried similar side work, especially in areas with newer equipment competition — is there still room to make a modest profit with an older tractor like this? Or does it usually end up being more trouble than it’s worth once fuel, wear, and time are factored in? I have a truck and trailer to transport it.
I just came from the vintage Ford subforum on this site. Based off what I learned there, I'll be getting insurance if/when I do work on someone elses property.
Thoughts?
Thanks,
BossofBBQ
I’m a younger guy located south of Denver in Colorado, with a decently nice 1950 Ford 8N sidemount. It runs very well, has been reliable, and doesn’t currently need anything. Mechanically, it’s very solid.
For attatchments, I’ve got:
- Dearborn 6.5’ disc
- 6’ back blade
- 6’ ripper/subsoiler
- 5’ brush hog (with overrunning PTO coupler)
- Homemade 1 row middle buster/potato plow
- 1950 New Idea 12A manure spreader
- 3pt auger/posthole digger
One thing I’m unsure about is whether it really pencils out here. There are plenty of folks with bigger, newer machines that have loaders, live PTO, more horsepower, etc. However, there are some people with 5-10 acres who either want work done, can't do it themselves, or don't want to pay for a professional contractor.
I know the 8N has its limits, and I’m trying to be realistic about what I can and can’t do without overworking it. I'm pretty familiar with tractors in general, and I've owned this particular 8N for about 7 months now.
For those of you who’ve tried similar side work, especially in areas with newer equipment competition — is there still room to make a modest profit with an older tractor like this? Or does it usually end up being more trouble than it’s worth once fuel, wear, and time are factored in? I have a truck and trailer to transport it.
I just came from the vintage Ford subforum on this site. Based off what I learned there, I'll be getting insurance if/when I do work on someone elses property.
Thoughts?
Thanks,
BossofBBQ