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We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. It has been much more difficult and expensive to find parts for my Ford tractor. Normal service parts such as filters, hoses, points, plugs are very reasonably priced. Buy good new parts from someplace like just8ns. Shopping cheapest price for new parts will only buy junk that looks new, but won't fit well or last if it works at all. New restoration quality parts such as sheetmetal, headlights, and castings are getting expensive.
Used original parts generally fit better and are much cheaper. The best trick to finding good used parts is to catch the right ads on ebay. I have been buying and selling used parts on ebay for many years with mostly good results. If you really need a part, and don't have time to shop around, what I have is mostly for sale at current market value. These are photos of the actual electrical parts with proper wiring.
There is a lot of information available here. The best way to find anything on this site is to click the Index A-Z button found at the top of every page.
As you can see from the last entry on the list of tractors, this site will be adding information for some of the 'newer' Ford tractors. It was obviously neglected, but the initial list of repairs was not too bad; the radiator was leaking, air cleaner was dry, fluids were dirty, hoses and tires not so good, and the steering was very loose.
On the plus side; it started on the first try, ran great, and the hydraulics worked. After a more detailed inspection, the engine serial number was a 9N tractor. All the other castings, sheet metal, and parts were standard or 8N tractor parts.
That isn't a typo, the engine block really is from a 9N. All I wanted was a small tractor to maintain our driveway, and maybe do a few other chores on our 12 acre, mostly-wooded property. What should have been a relatively simple purchase, mushroomed into a full-blown hobby, disease, or obsession depending on who you talk to.
Honestly, all I wanted was a used tractor! How did I end up creating, and maintaining this web site? Prior to this, I knew very little about farm tractors, and absolutely nothing about creating or managing a web site. The web site started as a place to put before and after pictures of my first tractor. I was proud of the refurbished machine and wanted to publish some photos. Uploaded disassembly photos were very convenient to access for reassembly.
Photos led to descriptions that generated feedback from many other first-time tractor owners. It soon became obvious there was a genuine need for a site that was dedicated to the simple stuff any tractor newbee needs to know, but might be afraid to ask.
Most on-line forums can be a very scary place for a newbee to start asking dumb questions. Perhaps the main reason for this site was personal convenience. Paper manuals do not survive very long in a barn. A small laptop, tablet, or even a cell phone can access wifi, and get on the web.
All I need is a bookmark to my index and all the information on my web site is available on my screen. One big problem with any internet search is the total freedom to upload bs. Every question asked on every forum generates a range of replies that have to be run thru a filter. It is a fact that the amount of energy required to refute bs is at least an order of magnitude larger than is being expended to produce it.
Publishing my own web site provided a place to save good information that I can look up and use without a filter. This photo was taken on July 10, after about six weekends of work, including normal weekend chores some chores were neglected. REPAIRS included adjusting the steering box, changing fluids and filters, welding up rust holes in the air filter oil cup, 12 volt conversion, lots of scraping, cleaning, priming, and painting. This was a lot of work, but new wheels and tires were the only big expense.
Most of this was low or no cost maintenance that should have been done anyway. This work found and fixed many things before they could cause problems like won't crank, no spark, no fuel, no power A reliable machine is not an accident.
Neglect is the mother of all problems. I liked the metallic silver and felt it was better than making a poor attempt to match the 'correct' Ford gray. Any paint will keep it from rusting. In the future, I intend to try a little harder to match the original colors. This was intended to be a 'working' tractor, not a restoration. These pictures were taken Feb. That was Fun! The timing was perfect. Grading the driveway and other chores for the last few months helped a lot.
Icy patches and one deep spot could have been bigger problems with less time to become comfortable using brake pedals to help steer. Maybe I should have run my tractor longer without live hydraulics so I would fully appreciate how much better it is to have a lift that works independant from the clutch pedal. Whaddyamean you have to take it out of gear, and let the clutch pedal up to raise the implement?
Yep, that really was normal for these tractors. Restoration quality parts - the right parts - plus our fast shipping and low prices makes us your best choice to repair your tractor.
Select a Model: 8N. In Henry Ford built his first experimental tractor. By , the distribution of the Fordson was shifted to the Ford Motor Company. Over the years Ford has produced many models of tractors and continues to this day to be a leading manufacturer in the industry. Some of the most popular tractors they produced were models 8N, 9N, 2N, NAA, Jubilee, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , and As one of the largest suppliers of new and rebuilt parts for this tractor, you can count on our fast and reliable service.
Use the links above to select your model and view our selection of parts for your Ford tractor. You will be shown a number of categories, and after selecting a category you will find specific Ford part names and part numbers. All of our parts for sale are new, aftermarket parts unless specified otherwise in the description. Once again - Thank you for shopping at servicemanualvault.
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