36,243 Hours

   / 36,243 Hours #1  

mjarrels

Elite Member
Joined
Nov 19, 2005
Messages
2,837
Location
Virginia
Tractor
1949 farmall, 1961 Fordson Dexta, 1986 Duetz Allis, 2001 Kubota.
Yep... checked the hour meter yesterday on my 46 year old ford tractor. 36,243 hours based on 1412 RPM... dang 3 cylinder perkins diesel engine has only been rebuilt once that I know of... keeps going and going! I rarely run above 1000 RPM unless I'm using a PTO implement.

mark
 
   / 36,243 Hours #2  
mjarrels said:
Yep... checked the hour meter yesterday on my 46 year old ford tractor. 36,243 hours based on 1412 RPM... dang 3 cylinder perkins diesel engine has only been rebuilt once that I know of... keeps going and going! I rarely run above 1000 RPM unless I'm using a PTO implement.

mark


Wow...that comes out to 4.13 years of operation!

That's a 1961 model...which one is it?
 
   / 36,243 Hours #3  
Wow... that's a LOT of seat time:eek:

GREAT post.... now, let's see if anybody can top it... with fewer repairs!
 
   / 36,243 Hours #4  
mjarrels said:
Yep... checked the hour meter yesterday on my 46 year old ford tractor. 36,243 hours based on 1412 RPM... dang 3 cylinder perkins diesel engine has only been rebuilt once that I know of... keeps going and going! I rarely run above 1000 RPM unless I'm using a PTO implement.

mark

Well, let's see. My Perkins powered Massey has 3285 hours as of this morning. It's 36+ years old. I should expect it to be pluggin' away when it's 115 years old or so.....;) That'll be about 2090 or 2100 give or take a summer or two. I'll be 135+. Hmmmm. Maybe I can use it just a little bit more'n I have been.

Those Perkins 3-banger diesels are the most reliable, most fuel efficient little buggers, and still they're probably the cheapest engine in the universe to rebuild when that does happen.

They don't build 'em like they used to.
 
   / 36,243 Hours
  • Thread Starter
#5  
1961 Fordson Dexta aka English Ford. 35 engine HP and 32 PTO HP.

mark
 
   / 36,243 Hours #6  
That's amazing. I've always said the Perk 3 banger was one of the greatest engineering achievements of all time.

I remember several years back reading about a fellow who drove his VW Bug over two million documented miles. He went through several engines and transaxles, though.

That figures, over 46 years, to about 788 hours per year, 65 or 66 hours per month, or nearly 2.25 hours per day, every day, on average, for 46 years.

Truly amazing.
 
   / 36,243 Hours #7  
redlevel said:
That's amazing. I've always said the Perk 3 banger was one of the greatest engineering achievements of all time.

I remember several years back reading about a fellow who drove his VW Bug over two million documented miles. He went through several engines and transaxles, though.

That figures, over 46 years, to about 788 hours per year, 65 or 66 hours per month, or nearly 2.25 hours per day, every day, on average, for 46 years.

Truly amazing.

As a matter of fact, gentlemen, that same engine in a Ford 3000 made as a gas engine will also last a very long time as that engine was built as a diesel so all the internals are about 3 times as heavy as a normal gasser...not unusuall for the gas 3 cyls to last 10,000 hrs with a modicum of maintenance. BobG in VA
 
   / 36,243 Hours #8  
BobG_in_VA said:
As a matter of fact, gentlemen, that same engine in a Ford 3000 made as a gas engine will also last a very long time as that engine was built as a diesel so all the internals are about 3 times as heavy as a normal gasser...not unusuall for the gas 3 cyls to last 10,000 hrs with a modicum of maintenance. BobG in VA

Completely different engine in 3000 vs. Dexta's.

I've got one of each diesel, (MF150/Ford 3000) had the gas 3000 until 2 years ago.

The 3-cylinder FORD diesel in the 3000 that was developed into a gasser isn't the same engine as the Dexta's used. The Dexta used a PERKINS diesel. It was used in those Fords (built in England), Massey FErguson 35/135/150/230/235/240/245/250/ect, and also in Allis Chalmers 160's, plus a LOT more applications. The Ford 3-cylinder was a good engine too, but nothing will ever come close to those Perkins 3's for efficiency of operation.

Perkins 3's were common by the late 1950's. Ford 3's were introduced in mid-to-late 1960's.

(I'm not POSITIVE that the Perkins used in the Dexta's had the same model designation as the rest, (AD3-152) but it WAS the same basic design concept)
 

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   / 36,243 Hours #9  
"The 3-cylinder FORD diesel in the 3000 that was developed into a gasser isn't the same engine as the Dexta's used. The Dexta used a PERKINS diesel. It was used in those Fords (built in England), Massey FErguson 35/135/150/230/235/240/245/250/ect, and also in Allis Chalmers 160's, plus a LOT more applications. The Ford 3-cylinder was a good engine too, but nothing will ever come close to those Perkins 3's for efficiency of operation."

Not really worried about the distinction....It was one of the smoothest running, long lasting gas engines ever divised for it application. BobG in VA
 
   / 36,243 Hours #10  
It's possible but check it again ,some older tractors used the last digit as 1/10 of an hour .
Funny i was just reading about a guy who claims to have 48'000 on a jd at YESTERDAYS TRACTORS . COM in the tractor talk catagory .
 

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