If you tried to sell it you probably wouldn't get much. Yet as you say, it's there when you need it. My father had a 1975 (?) Ford 4400 gas tractor like that. It was only a few years old when he bought it and got a lot of use for the first 10 years or so... not so much once he retired but it was always there. He thought about selling it a couple of years before he died but the first potential buyer gave him such a lowball offer that he parked it back in the barn and never moved again. After he passed away that was the first thing my brother wanted to sell, but I resisted. He kept showing me similar tractors on Tractor House and other sites thinking that $4000 was a good price. It was in the barn and had set for so long that I didn't want to mess with it inside for fear of fire, so had to wait for him to help me drag it out. It hadn't been in the daylight 5 minutes when somebody offered me a low price for it... I wasn't 100% sure that I could get it running so told him I'd think about it. Then my brother got involved so I had to agree to sell it... then found out it had to be running first. It took me a day to get it started, then it went down the road for a pittance... $3000 or some stupid amount like that.have a very old 89 hp 10,000 lb. tractor that I bought for sentimental reasons, but it is still a brute that builds adrenaline in your veins when the power is called for.