When you find a good deal on a loader!

That appears to be a well taken care of tractor. The caption should read 8 speed trans., not 6 speed. The
original 930's were 6 speed, but that was prior to 1965. This tractor is a later 932 Western Special.

That loader must have been used for stacking hay. It sure sticks out front a long ways.
Loren
 
That loader appears to just about tip over the tractor it is mounted so far forward.That loader must have some good reach. Would
be about prefect on a 900 where you get on the back and mount the loader back to the axle.
 
Keeping the front axle in the short wheel base position does not help the balance. Could the front axle easily be reversed to the row crop position?

The price looks to be at least double what it would sell at.
 
Is that really a good deal in your area?
I bought my gas 930 (941) with a loader for $2200.
It needed a valve job and a muffler, which I fixed/replaced.
Then I used it for two years and sold it for $3500.
Granted, mine was gas and really liked it's fuel.
Mine did not have a cab either. Open station.
 
(quoted from post at 15:42:21 05/27/19) Is that really a good deal in your area?
I bought my gas 930 (941) with a loader for $2200.
It needed a valve job and a muffler, which I fixed/replaced.
Then I used it for two years and sold it for $3500.
Granted, mine was gas and really liked it's fuel.
Mine did not have a cab either. Open station.

My point was that he must have gotten a good deal on the loader in order to mount it on a tractor that it obviously shouldn't be on....those Farmhand loaders were made to mount on or close to the rear axle. It has to be real hard on the front spindles....
 
I have thought about doing the same thing with my
farmhand but I was going to cut two feet off the
loader arms so it wouldn?t stick out so far but then
I?d have get new hydraulic cylinders so I decided it
would be easier to just take the loader off and put it
back on
 
(quoted from post at 19:19:04 05/27/19)
(quoted from post at 15:42:21 05/27/19) Is that really a good deal in your area?
I bought my gas 930 (941) with a loader for $2200.
It needed a valve job and a muffler, which I fixed/replaced.
Then I used it for two years and sold it for $3500.
Granted, mine was gas and really liked it's fuel.
Mine did not have a cab either. Open station.

My point was that he must have gotten a good deal on the loader in order to mount it on a tractor that it obviously shouldn't be on....those Farmhand loaders were made to mount on or close to the rear axle. It has to be real hard on the front spindles....
Ah, now I got it Eldon. I'm just a little slow on the uptake I guess!
 
Back in the day We collected corn cobs and trucked them to Ohmaha Nebr. -- the trailers were 13.6 so the loaders We had needed to reach
over that to load them cobs -- The loaders we had were made by Stroble(spelling?) they stuck out a long ways to but not that far --- Our
loaders were called a high lift loader and were just that -- We had to get over the 13.6 and still dump the bucket -- But I agree with
You Guys that loader was mounted a bit silly -- bet it worked just a bit silly too! Roy from muddy northwest Iowa
 
(quoted from post at 17:04:50 05/27/19) I can stack 4x4x8 big bales 5 high with a farmhand f11 on a 4020

Sold this Allis 190 to a guy who needed a high lift loader for stacking bales.
mvphoto36790.jpg
 
Great Bend also built loaders for Case. They were painted Case colors and badged with Case logos. The GB 880
in your pic was a Case model 75 Hy-Lift.
Loren
 

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