Digital Rights/Restrictions Management (DRM) technologies affecting new tractors are behind the continuing rise in popularity of the models. Particularly in the midwest, farmers are finding that 40-year-old tractors do the job with less trouble and expense.
Tractors manufactured in the late 1970s and 1980s are some of the hottest items in farm auctions across the Midwest these days — and it's not because they're antiques.
Cost-conscious farmers are looking for bargains, and tractors from that era are well-built and totally functional, and aren't as complicated or expensive to repair as more recent models that run on sophisticated software.
"It's a trend that's been building. It's been interesting in the last couple years, which have been difficult for ag, to see the trend accelerate," said Greg Peterson, the founder of Machinery Pete, a farm equipment data company in Rochester with a website and TV show.
Previously;
Reeducating Legislators on the Right to Repair (2019)
John Deere Just Swindled Farmers Out of Their Right to Repair (2018)
US Copyright Office Says People Have the Right to Hack their Own Cars' Software (2015)
(Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Friday January 10 2020, @12:57AM
I did both. Hell are farm equipment was mostly out of 1920. Bucking sleigh to bring the hay to the barn. House pull rake and side cutter that both worked by the wheels turning by the tractor. Hay chopper and saw that was powered by 12 inch belts on a pullley/pro was on side of 1950 international tractor same as on old stream tractors. We had 26acre farm with fruit trees too.
All worked very welll but slow
Did learn to drive at age 4