Gorgeous tractor, F-22, and – if it’s anything like a neighbour’s Massey 35 that I worked on when I lived in the countryside – probably very practical too.
That Massey Ferguson was
a wondrous machine. You can still get
essentially that 1950s machine in some parts of Africa. Imagine a small farm built around an imported brand new African Massey 35. Stuff of dreams, man.
I honestly think the world would be a better place if tractors were still built as simply as these ones … and motorcycles as simply as the Honda CG … and bicycles as simply as 1990s road bikes … etc., etc. To me consumer technology has jumped the shark, so to speak, in almost every field. Certainly my life has only gotten more annoying with each new tech shift for about the last two decades. At least there has been progress on the social front to go along with our technological dystopia. IMO.
The Fendt really is awesome. It is in continuous use since it was made. Fuel consumption is next to zero, it's just an air cooled single cylinder diesel with ~14hp. I mainly use it for towing and raking hay. Wish I had the old side mower attachment. Probably works very well with it. Mine does have the optional hydraulic three point hitch, cause original base models at the time had a manual long lever instead. The hydraulic is ridiculously oversized. I had to replace the rod and seal, and if I recall correctly it's a 50mm piston rod - it's really slow for modern tractor standards because the pump does not have a high output either, but it really can lift anything.
Old water cooled tractors always got a cracked block cause people poured water in it and forgot about it in winter. For a low rev diesel, air cooled is just indestructible and simple.
With the mower:
Very interesting reply to me, cause I just bought a very simple Honda myself. It's a brand new Honda Livo.
Probably one of 10-20 in Europe. Drum brakes, simple slide carburetor, enclosed chain, four speed engine. Has an electric starter and a kickstarter and starts up just fine even without a battery (even the lights work fine without a battery). Honda claims 180MPG. I hear it is around 150 in reality, but I'm not minding it
Some guy brought a container of them over from India and managed to make them road legal here. I paid 620€ for a brand new bike. It costs 595€ new in India (he probably got some kind of a bulk discount though?). Equivalent CB125F here costs 3090€ brand new, and comes with a disc brake up front, LED lights, 5 speeds and fuel injection.
For a commuter bike, it does the job fine. I could buy 5 of them for the price of one European CB125F - and they definitely aren't 5 times worse. Even the emissions are probably neglectably different, since even these originally come with a catalytic converter.
I typically use a scooter to commute to work, but I wanted something with large tyres and this will work just fine. A full tank costs 15€ and gets you over 700-800km. My Land Cruise... well, 15€ would nearly be enough for 100km
Edit:
Also, my current mower is this crazy Italian contraption:
The BCS Motofalciatrice. No safety devices whatsoever, but it is very effective. The drive is through an eccentric ball which is very unique.
It is also in continuous use since the 70's. After the mowing, all the rust goes off and it's shiny every year. Always starts on the first pull and its built like a tank, everything is steel or an alloy casting. It has a differential so it is easy to turn, it has a diff lock so it does not pull at the side while mowing or on the hill, it has a central handbrake but also individual left and right wheel brake levers so you can turn on the spot when the diff is not locked.
You can see the crazy eccentric drive on this video at around 0:33
With the drive and the wheels at the side, it does not get the typical buildup of grass on the middle as with most modern mowers. But it necessitates that very weird power transfer...
I hear they still sell new ones in third world countries like India. You can get attachments for it to tie together weath or I think something for processing rice plantations (not sure).
Doubt they ever sold it in the USA. Probably did not want to deal with the lawsuits. As well as it works, it is really fast and if you're not careful or don't know exactly how to operate it, it can quickly impale stuff or push you on the wall. If you fall off the seat or let go of the handlebars it won't stop going
