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Farmall & IHC Tractors Discussion Forum
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H distillate

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Zach Bouchard

01-05-2008 17:20:56




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If an H has a starting tank is it Distillate? It has the suffix X1A at the end. I think Guy Fay said is was gas with low speed gears. Is it distillate or is it Gas? The guy wants $650 but i'm going to try to get it for $400

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LenNH

01-06-2008 06:13:46




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 Re: H distillate in reply to Zach Bouchard, 01-05-2008 17:20:56  
How about the manifold? The distillate mfld. was more massive around the middle than the gas model, AND had a lever you moved to shift from "hot" for distillate to "cold" for gas. Of course, even if the tractor had originally been for distillate, manifolds had a nasty habit of burning out eventually, and were often replaced with the gas model. I don't know how many people burned distillate after WW II. During the war, farmers took whatever the dealers could get, and I understand that sometimes it was "take the distillate model or somebody else will get it."
I tried distillate just once, in my father's 10-20. What a hassle! You make sure the carb has no distillate in it (drain it), then turn on the gas cock. Start engine normally, and make sure the radiator is covered (curtain on the 10-20, cranked shutter on an H). When you are pretty sure the engine is hot enough (steam coming out the radiator cap on the 10-20, heat gauge on the high side on an H), you turned off the gas and turned on the distillate. This meant getting down from the seat, of course. As long as the tractor is working, the distillate works great.
As soon as you stop for a break, to clean out the plow, to chat with your neighbor across the fence, the engine cooled off and would begin to sputter and cough when you opened her up again. If you thought about it in time, you would pull up the curtain or close the shutter before you stopped, so the engine would remain hot enough.
Once was enough for me. I don't know if anyone ever tested a distillate engine to compare horsepower on gas or distillate/kerosene. The low compression would not have been very efficient on gas, I would think.
Anybody ever done a comparison? It might be an interesting thing to do at a pull sometime, if a distillate/kerosene engine was still available with all the original equipment.

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Tom Windsor

01-05-2008 20:24:51




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 Re: H distillate in reply to Zach Bouchard, 01-05-2008 17:20:56  
Not sure about what I would pay for the tractor...have paid more and have paid less...depending on the condition of the motor.BUT...The front end loader if it works is worth $250.00

tw



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old

01-05-2008 18:10:45




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 Re: H distillate in reply to Zach Bouchard, 01-05-2008 17:20:56  
Sounds a bit high to me since it has at least one bad rear tire and they are around $400 each now days. The problem with the H is there so common that they are not worth all that much. I have 3 of them I have been trying to sell for years and so far I still have them I'm about ready to say to heck with them and put them back to work in the hay field next year

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Zach Bouchard

01-05-2008 17:44:47




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 Re: H distillate in reply to Zach Bouchard, 01-05-2008 17:20:56  
It does have a starting tank. I don't own the tractor and its a long drive to see.



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Andrew Z

01-05-2008 17:34:47




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 Re: H distillate in reply to Zach Bouchard, 01-05-2008 17:20:56  
With that tag its a high compression gas engine. the hood may be from a distalate one? but i would check the engine tag to conferm this it too should have the X1 on the stamp on the block. (its located right above the oil fill area.

Andrew



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D Slater

01-05-2008 17:33:35




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 Re: H distillate in reply to Zach Bouchard, 01-05-2008 17:20:56  
If the tag is original X1A stands for gasoline with low speed first and reverse. Hard to say what parts tractor may have had switched after all the years that have past. If it has the starting tank check the engine serial # to make sure it has a X1 suffix. Should match tractor serial # also.



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