On Display: Cookstown man’s Ferguson TE20 is one of the oldest examples known to exist
and live on Freeview channel 276
When Ferguson enthusiast Raymond Browne stumbled across the TE20 covered in briar and brambles, he knew straight away it was an early model.
But it wasn’t until days later he realised he had discovered TE20 ‘Number Six’, which rolled off the assembly line during the first week of production in 1946.
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Hide AdMr Browne, explained: “I had been at a breaker’s yard looking for parts for a TE20 that I’d bought a few months earlier in June 2019.
“I noticed a tractor in the bushes and saw tell-tale pointers, like a long air filter housing and the variable stay at the top of the radiator.
“Those features told me immediately, it was an old one.”
But it was so overgrown, further investigation was impossible that day.
Instead, the Cookstown man returned later with heavy-duty recovery equipment to extract the tractor and transport it home.
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Hide AdOnly once it was in his yard did the excitement really start to mount.
As he pressure-washed the mud and foliage away, the number six emerged on the bell housing.
“I couldn’t believe it,” he admitted.
“To say I was over the moon doesn’t even come close.”
Other crucial pointers to the genuine age also checked out, such as the power unit, which was typical of the first few.
The tractor had an American-built Continental engine - a stop-gap to fill in for the planned standard unit.
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Hide AdDevelopment of the standard motor had been held back by steel shortages and rationing in post-war Britain, Mr Browne explained.
Those same logistical setbacks also slowed production of Ferguson’s TE20 and just 315 were produced in 1946, making the early types even rarer.
“The engine was in relatively good condition with the crank and pistons still OK, so it hadn’t been worked too hard in its life,” he added.
Likewise, the cast iron gearbox needed surprisingly little work for a 75-year-old vehicle, despite being full of rainwater.
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Hide AdMr Browne replaced four bearings, but noted that the selectors were still serviceable.
The front axle and steering needed more attention.
The steering box seals needed replacing along with the pivot pin, king pin bushes and bearings, and wheel hub bearings were also replaced.
The chains and shackles were badly born, so the Cookstown man replaced them from his extensive store of parts, amassed over years from farm sales and ‘barn finds’.
Warped brake drums were also addressed in-house.
“The drums were out of true but that was sorted out using my own lathe here,” Mr Browne said. Items like the original starter motor, regulator and dynamo were sent away to undergo reconditioning with a specialist before refitting.
Among the final jobs were the tinwork, tyres and paintwork.
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Hide AdWhile the mechanicals were in relatively good shape and mostly repairable, the years had taken their toll on the tinwork.
He stated: “It was pretty much all rotten and I needed to replace it with appropriate parts from my stores.”
Only the grille tee-piece had to be manufactured – otherwise the tin is original Ferguson vintage for this tractor.
With genuine period tyres and authentic paint work, TE20 Number Six was back to its original splendour, and will be on show alongside several other beloved Little Grey Fergusons as part of the marque’s 75th anniversary celebrations at the Newark Vintage Tractor and Heritage Show.
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