Grandpa has a 2005 Chevrolet 1500 pickup he bought brand new. It's up to low 30k miles now, it had 22k miles until a few years ago when grandpa told dad and I to drive the thing so it didn't sit there and rot away. I took grandpa to get new tires on it a 3-4 years ago, the OEM tires still had half tread but they were so dry rotted they leaked thru the side walls. It's had it's fair share of problems from sitting and age, regardless of the low miles. Front hub failed, brake line failure, it has a clunk in the steering you can feel thru the steering wheel (fixed it once and it came back a couple months later), misc. electrical gremlins and the frame is rusted as #e!! in 30,000 miles but I'm sure someone would be on cloud 9 to have it because it is a low mile, one owner truck. Early 2000's GM quality...........
I'd have given a lot more than that for the JD 60. The sheet metal and carburetor alone are worth more that the $550.
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Today's Featured Article - Antique Tractor Wiring Basics - by Curtis von Fange. One of the most neglected parts of old tractors is the wiring. After sitting in the elements for half a century or more much equipment wiring has deteriorated to sparsely covered strands of copper or other metal. Plastic insulation has cracked, mice have eaten through the older clothed style coverings and the exposed wires have reacted to winter moisture and salts by turning blue and powdery. Terminal ends have corroded, rusted or just plain evaporated away. Aged wires not only keep an engin
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