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I've weighed it up and my assessment was thus: I would tow it in the field, take the drawbar and Foster wheels off and burn it. I would probably get a ton or so of iron out of it, minus the plates and useful ironmongery. So say £200, possibly less given I'd have to cart it to the scrapman. I could move on the plates, wheels and drawbar, possibly the stub axles also, say another £3-400 in total. So i valued it at £400 given I'd be doing the work. I also know I've allready parted money to buy the two wooden wheel hubs that came off it some time ago. If anyone matched his valuation they are either an idiot or they seriously want that box. And there is not so many idiots about as there used to be. If what Piers says is true, and I have no doubt that it is, if you can buy a half decent one for £500, why would anyone pay any more than beer money for a tired one? But it does go to show you the economics, and gives you an idea why they get burnt.
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chris give martin shepard a call he's got some, they'd be worth about 100-150£ they're in good order, but check first that your hubs will fit as the cast iron hubs use a tapered spigot/ axle and some of the iron ones aren't or are smaller/ larger. I can't remember but it'd be worth getting a vernier round it first other wise you may be into sleeving axles/ boring wheels.
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Chris
I'll give you are more accurate valuation on a set of iron wheels. I'd buy all the sets I could get at £150-200. The shepherd hut builders love them, they go mad if you either have axles or the stubs. Oddly i find a matching set of wheels is worth more like Piers valuation of a decent box.
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^ ^ ^ That would be about my limit, price wise; but then I am not a shepherd's hut builder..!
Hedd's quite right though, I sold a set of iron wheels from a rotten straw elevator to a hut-builder for more than enough to fund the purchase of a very tidy straw elevator with plenty of cash to spare. |
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My box has local history to where I live, and being only 42" is getting pretty rare. As my friend in the village said to me when I got it, "they ain't making any more, and everyone gone makes the others more valuable". I know it's going to cost me far more than its worth, but next year when I thrash with it for the first time, I know that all the cost will be worthwhile, as I know I will have saved a bit of agricultural history for the next generation to enjoy ! And if I make any bread from the wheat, I can always claim that this is the most expensive loaf ever made, and possibly get a contract supplying Harrods ! |
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it's staying on landrover rubbers for now.... most I paid for a drum was 1500, though that had family history so to me was priceless, least paid I was given them. I currently have 3 a foster a ransomes and a humphries, 2 working and one project. I agree having scrapped one before for parts, and that's not so so easy as it sounds if your going to salve all the shafts and the bearings metal parts etc, etc.... weigh in around 200£ plus wheels, the fronts may make shepard huts but the rears are too big and in honesty both are too heavy, better off with straw elevator or similar, they do fit on portables though...and could make a tender cart... |
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