I haven't read T & M for a while, although I do read Classic Tractor every month, it's about tractors working for a living whereas I wasn't so interested in the rallies and road runs and 'hobbyist' tractor owners (no disrespect) in T& M. I keep old tractors because using them reminds me of my youth, a mid-life crisis thing I guess; my mum is from Leicestershire and our summer holidays were always a week at the dairy farm where she grew up, run by her brothers, and my earliest tractor-driving as a kid was scraping slurry with their Major (which I think must have been a Mk2 like mine, certainly Live-Drive and with the dash low-down).
I grew up on a 20-acre 'croft' (smallholding), dad worked full-time as a mechanic and we had a Fergie TEF; he wasn't really interested in farming although I always have been. Incidentally we kept the Fergie although it was never easy to start, I got an engine overhaul kit to renovate it - and then the tractor was stolen when scrap was at its highest a few years ago. Our neighbour drove past and saw someone pushing it onto a trailer, but assumed we'd sold it so didn't stop. So that was that - dad's tractor which he bought in 1967. I do still have, what was our next-door neighbour's TEF when I was a kid, better than our one at the time, I managed to buy it although it was 'spares or repair' needing engine overhaul.
Photos.. I'm on the Leyland forum where posting via Photobucket is exactly the same as here; and also on the Farming Forum, where posting photos is just a couple of clicks.
So this is 1440276, which I bought in 2009 - it has 7.50 x 16 and 13.6 x 36 radial tyres on PM rims, an alternator, and a scruffy cab (possibly originally from a 4000) but otherwise original, I think the bonnet has been brush-painted and the wings are being held together by the cab

but it starts and runs well. When I got it i had to fit a new silencer, a starter solenoid, a governor diaphragm, and a seal in the lift cylinder - the lift used to drop quickly, and there was a little wedge of wood which I think the previous owner had used to jam the lift-lever 'up'.. what Massey would call 'Constant Pumping'

But now the lift will stay up for days and not drop an inch, although I'm not sure how good the hydraulics are - I have a Ransomes 102 plough and it struggles to lift that, although i don't have any front weights and it waves its front wheels in the air if I drop it in the ground? I would need to drastically shorten the lift rods as I can't lift high enough to turn the plough over cleanly. It's not important, I have a bigger plough and tractor, I'm happy if the Major can saw firewood, and mix concrete (with a Teagle mixer), cut thistles (IH B-23 mower), haybob, pull a 3-ton trailer, etc, etc. It needs hub seals and better brakes, but that'll be a winter job.
I bought this
post-
hole borer a few months ago, as I have some concrete slats I want to plant as posts; there is no name-plate on it, but I was looking on ebay and found a brochure for it, so had to get that too
