Lot Ended
Description
Ferguson TED20
Recent refurbishment; good
tyres; lights; in recent use; ex-East Kent Girl Guides
Possibly
the best-known and best-loved tractor of all time, the Ferguson TE20 was
launched in 1946 and was the culmination of 30 years’ work by its inventor,
Harry Ferguson, to integrate the tractor and its plough into an engineering
whole.
At the heart of ‘The Ferguson System’ lay an ingenious three-point
linkage which transferred the ‘pull’ of the plough into ‘downforce’ using
hydraulic controls to vary the depth of ploughing. This allowed the little grey
Fergie to do the job of machines weighing five times as much and proved such a
worldwide success that it literally revolutionised farming, making Harry a
multi-millionaire along the way!
Produced under licence at the vast
Standard Motor Company ‘shadow factory’ in Coventry (used to make aero engines
in the war years), the TE20 employed Standard’s new 1,850cc wet-liner
four-cylinder engine, a version of which would also be used in Standard’s road
cars.
The first tractors ran on petrol but from 1949 the TED20 version
could also run on TVO (tractor vapourising oil – paraffin, more or less) and
over half-a-million were sold before production finally came to an end in
1956.
This 1952 model was used for light duties, mowing a paddock for the
East Kent Girl Guides and has shrugged off these light duties with ease. The
vendor gave it a good going over when he acquired it a few years ago, including
a new water pump, head gasket, coil/dizzy cap/leads and condenser; fuel tank,
manifold cover and rear crank seal. As this last job included 'splitting' the
tractor, a new clutch thrust bearing was fitted for good measure along with a
gearbox input shaft seal for good measure.
The rear hub seals were
replaced and new rear brake shoes fitted due to oil contamination and new
tyres front and rear.
As you can see, it also sports front and rear
lights.
We suspect it has ingested rather too much TVO from
cold as it isn't running smoothly, a common problem for the uninitiated and
current adivce is to dispense with TVO altogether as it tends to condense in the
sump unless the engine is working really hard and costs pretty much the same as
petrol anyway.
Further information - matthew.parkin@brightwells.com
* All charges are subject to VAT