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Farmall & IHC Tractors Discussion Forum
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Super C Utility tractor

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Ray Clark

09-10-2003 18:48:24




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I have a very nice Super C utility tractor and am anxious to sell it and would like to know how much to ask for it.

Ray Clark




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Hugh MacKay

09-11-2003 05:25:49




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 Re: Super C Utility tractor in reply to Ray Clark, 09-10-2003 18:48:24  
Ray: Just some thoughts on utility tractors. If we look at the term utility one would question the use IH made of the term. They determined that there were 300, 350, 240, 340, 460, 606, 656, etc. utility tractors. To the average guy a lot of other tractors could have been considered utility tractors. I know a lot of people that view the term utility tractor as the small tractor we do a host of light jobs with.

So as IH determined, the super C was never a utility tractor, it was just a plain old row crop tractor. In the tractors I listed above with the exception of the 606, IH made what they called a Farmall row crop version and what they called a Utility version of same tractor power train. The IH Utility was clearly a tractor to compete with Ford and Ferguson. (same configuration)

I listened to two farmers once arguing on which was best Farmall or Utility. One fellow said that since the Utility was closer to ground it was much easier for the many times one had to get on and off during the working day. To which the Farmall guy responded, " On the Farmall your sitting up high enough to better see your working surroundings that you don't have to be getting off tractor all the time to find your way around the field." I'm not sure here whether good eye sight or long in the legs would be most important factor. Seriously both versions did indeed have their uses, I just don't think IH made the best choise, in the word Utility if you consider what the dictionary has to say on the subject.

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Ray Clark

09-11-2003 06:36:54




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 Re: Re: Super C Utility tractor in reply to Hugh MacKay, 09-11-2003 05:25:49  
I stand correceted. Several people more knowledgable than I explained that the tractor that I described as a utility tractor is just a Farmall Super "C" row crop tractor. Sorry.

Ray Clark



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Hugh MacKay

09-11-2003 19:02:14




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 Re: Re: Re: Super C Utility tractor in reply to Ray Clark, 09-11-2003 06:36:54  
Ray: I figured you had that explained by the time I came on the scene. I really wasn't suggesting you need correcting. My suggestion is IH didn't make a very good choise of the word Utility back in 1955. Your use of the Super C is probably more of a utility use than someone farming 200 acrea with a 656 Utility.

I just looked at the dictoinary and what it has to say about utility. Nothing in the description fits a tractor used in commercial farm production. It could describe all those great little farm tractors we all use for yard work, your Super C included. So in my opinion you were more correct than engineers and management at IH.

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Dave_Id

09-10-2003 18:54:07




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 Re: Super C Utility tractor in reply to Ray Clark, 09-10-2003 18:48:24  
Tell us more about it, I didn't think there was such a thing as a Super C Utility... Can you post a picture? How many were built?



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CNKS

09-10-2003 18:53:16




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 Re: Super C Utility tractor in reply to Ray Clark, 09-10-2003 18:48:24  
You have something else. That model does not exist, Super C's came only in row crop versions. Super C? $1500-$1700 if it is as nice as you say it is.



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Ray Clark

09-10-2003 19:57:42




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 Re: Re: Super C Utility tractor in reply to CNKS, 09-10-2003 18:53:16  
All I know is when I bought it from a farmer about 20 years ago he said it was a Super "C" Utility. I had a plain "C" at the time and the super "C" had extra hydrolics on the rear and a drive pully plus more power. I'm going to post a picture of it tomorrow.



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