Old tractor don’t just sit in a shed. They remember things. Long mornings when the fog was still low. Fields that hadn’t been measured with GPS, only with footsteps and guesswork. When I talk about old tractors, I’m not talking... Read more
Anyone who has spent time around old tractors knows this feeling. You don’t just climb onto them. You step into a history that smells of diesel, grease, and dry soil. Old tractors don’t start with a soft hum. They cough,... Read more
I’ve driven both. Brand-new tractors with shiny paint and that new-machine smell, and older used ones that already had a few stories baked into them. If I’m being honest, most days I trust a used tractor more. A machine that... Read more
I’ve spent years around tractors. Old ones, new ones, shiny showroom models, and dusty machines that have clearly seen ten harvests too many. And I’ll say this straight—buying a used tractor is not a step down. It’s a step sideways,... Read more
An old tractor doesn’t shout for attention. It sits quietly in a shed, or under a neem tree, paint faded, metal warm from years of sun. Some people see scrap. I see stories. Every dent has a reason. Every oil... Read more
Anyone who has actually worked in the field knows this truth early. A tractor is a tool, not a showroom item. It earns its respect by starting on cold mornings, pulling when the soil fights back, and not giving up... Read more
I’ve driven brand-new tractors that smelled like fresh paint and factory grease. I’ve also spent far more hours on second hand tractors with faded decals, loose levers, and engines that only start after a short conversation with the choke. If... Read more
Old tractors don’t announce themselves. They sit quietly at the edge of a shed, paint faded, metal warm from years under the sun. But if you’ve ever owned one, or even driven one for a season, you know they have... Read more
A used tractor doesn’t impress you at first glance. The shine is gone. The decals are faded. Sometimes the seat has a small tear that tells you someone sat there for years, not minutes. But if you’ve spent any real... Read more
A Purana Tractor is not something you buy with shiny dreams. You buy it with need, with memory, and sometimes with stubborn trust. I’ve worked with new tractors too, the kind that come with screens and sensors, but nothing feels... Read more