[Farmall] Yuma auction
John & Jan Paur
johnjanpaur2 at directcon.net
Mon Mar 5 18:03:57 PST 2007
Nice report Karl. Sorta satisfied my yearning to go even tho I knew I
wouldn't. Be careful what you say about 70 yr. olds tho. John
----- Original Message -----
From: "Karl Olmstead" <olmstead at ridgenet.net>
To: "Farmall/IHC mailing list" <farmall at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Sent: Monday, March 05, 2007 3:23 PM
Subject: [Farmall] Yuma auction
> Went, saw, but didn't conquer. I attended the first part of the Dome
> Valley
> Museum auction in Yuma that ran Friday, Saturday and Sunday. As
> advertised,
> there were well over a thousand tractors. In general, folks agreed that
> it
> was the worst-run auction that they had ever seen. Single auction stage,
> so
> they had to sell about 1300 items a day. Friday's auction ran from 9 a.m.
> until 1:30 a.m. on Saturday. 768 items of "collectibles" went first, much
> to the disgust of us tractor guys. I attended virtually none of that
> action, but did see a doll house go for $900. Most of the toys went for
> about $100 apiece.
>
> The tractors finally started at 6:30 p.m. I was amazed/dismayed at the
> prices. A really rough F-12 on round spokes (with both cast hubs
> obviously
> cracked) that I felt was worth maybe $200 went for $700. It looked like
> rough 10-20s were going for around $1700. John Deeres weren't going as
> high
> as I expected. The best bargains I saw were small crossmotor Case
> tractors,
> at around $3500. I expected them to be $10K, based on rarity. Titans ran
> $10K to $20K. A very late F-20 (with turning brakes), stuck, no tag, went
> for $900.
>
> There were two tractors I really wanted. One was an oddball. It was a
> late
> O-12, OS 3049, with all the O-14 features.. long shifter, tail seat, foot
> brakes down low, long steering column. It had one brake pedal on each
> side.
> It also had some decent non-IHC citrus fenders. I don't know if it was an
> IHC experiment, or somebody who REALLY wanted an O-14 and converted a late
> O-12. Nonrunning, cracked water jacket.
>
> I intended to offer $3500 for it, but dropped it to $3000 when I realized
> it
> had an O-12 tag. It sold for $3900.
>
> The other tractor was a real O-14, s/n 3899. It looked to have been
> restored ten or twenty years ago. Cracked water jacket. Good
> conventional
> fenders. Both brake pedals were on the right side (down low, as they need
> to be on a tailseat O-14). I decided to go whole hog and offered $5K for
> it, which is more than I have ever paid for an antique tractor. It sold
> for
> $7500. I left at that point, around 9:30 p.m. I had been at the auction
> thirteen and a half hours by then.
>
> My fallback position was to buy a good forklift. I figured that everybody
> would be so focussed on tractors that the JCB 930 forklifts might go
> cheap.
> Wrong. A rough one went for $11K. Another, the best looking, which had a
> starter ring gear problem, went for $13K, and the one I wanted (and was
> willing to spend $7500 for) went for $15K. The two better ones were 1998
> vintage, and ran very nicely. I'll admit that they are $20K forklifts,
> but
> it never hurts to hope....
>
> So I left, at one day and one hour into the three day auction. There were
> a
> couple of O-12s left, but I knew they'd go for more than I wanted to pay.
> Over at the parts yard, where they held the Sunday auction were a couple
> of
> pairs of tiptoe steel wheels for F-12 and a duckbill F-20, but it was a
> mess, as was the parts yard. There were two wide front F-14s, but the
> front
> axles were heavily welded, and one of the tractors was parked behind at
> least 100 feet of junk. I guessed that it would take at least a week to
> dig
> it out. The parts yard and building were chaotic; junk and dirt piled
> everywhere, trees growing up through tractors, and nowhere for the auction
> crowd to stand around while items were being sold.
>
> Loading up was going to be a major problem. Must of the museum was soft
> blow sand, and people were getting stuck left and right, even with empty
> trucks and trailers. The auctioneer had arranged for one extendable boom
> forklift with 10K max capacity, but it would have taken him a week or two
> to
> load the 1000 plus tractors. And that was at the museum; there was
> virtually no room to maneuver or move stuff out of the way at the parts
> yard.
>
> So I got home a day early. 1000 miles, 700 of that with my 28 foot
> flatbed
> behind the truck. I hauled a tractor over to a friend's near Quartzsite,
> AZ
> and left the trailer there. When I came back, I loaded up a rough F-14
> that
> he had given me a couple of years earlier and hauled it home, so I didn't
> come home empty handed.
>
> Now I know. I've attended my obligatory big antique tractor auction, and
> if
> I never attend another, that'll be just fine. Too many people with way
> too
> much money. There were folks from 47 states and 18 countries present.
> The
> auction building had 2000 seats, and they probably filled 1500 of them.
> The
> best part of the weekend was feeling like a teenager again; the average
> age
> of the attendees had to be 70 or better.
>
> I did come to one realization, though. For prices like they were getting
> at
> Yuma, I'd happily sell every tractor I own and use the ample proceeds to
> buy
> one or two REALLY nice tractors. And maybe retire a year or so earlier,
> too.
>
> -Karl
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Farmall mailing list
> http://www.antique-tractor.com/mailman/listinfo/farmall
>
More information about the AT
mailing list