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Pedal Tractor Business Booms
If you want to restore, buy or customize an old pedal tractor, check out Magnuson Pedal Tractor Parts. Former dairyman and tractor-pulling enthusiast Tom Magnuson has turned a fun hobby into a full-time business. Magnuson makes and sells pedal tractor parts, restores, customizes and even makes his own limited edition 1/4-size working replicas.
“A lot of what I do is restoration, welding parts and patching panels, cleaning old tractors up to look like new,” says Magnuson. “One customer gave me a box of parts for a rare Ford model. I worked on it for a week, stripping it and heating and straightening parts. When it was done, it was worth nearly $6,000. However, most restorations take only a few hours and are worth less than $1,000.”
As a former tractor puller, Magnuson has a special fondness for the sport. He customizes pedal tractors for full-size “pullers”. He even carries polished aluminum rear wheels he has custom-built.
“I have orders for three of them now,” he says. “Guys order ones customized to look just like the tractors they pull with, complete with sponsor graphics. They take them to the pulls and set them next to their full-size tractors.”
Magnuson started out by restoring a single pedal tractor in 1988. He enjoyed it so much he began collecting quarter-scale models. At one point he had nearly 100 in his collection, one of nearly every cast aluminum, scale model built since 1948. The exception was an extremely rare Deere model.
In 1998, he sold his dairy herd and invested the proceeds in pedal tractor parts and inventory. While he no longer maintains his full collection, he now has more than 200 pedal tractors in inventory for needed parts or resale.
When parts are hard to find and the demand warrants it, Magnuson will cast his own. He also makes accessories not available elsewhere, including weight brackets ($12) and suitcase weights ($7 each) to fit them. His high crop drop housings ($125/pair) have working chain drives. He even offers an exact reproduction of a 900/901 Ford tractor-trailer canopy for $175.
In recent years, he has taken this process to a new level, making numbered, special editions of rare, full-size tractors, modeled after full-size tractors he owns.
He may spend two weeks doing detailed blueprints for a tractor. A friend uses the plans to carve a model out of wood. That model is used to make molds for casting a limited number of the collector editions.
“I do a limited number to protect the value of the tractors,” explains Magnuson. “The molds alone can cost as much as $18,000. I made as many as 100 from a mold when I started, but now I’ve cut back to as few as 25 before I destroy the molds.”
Magnuson’s newest limited edition is for an Oliver 1655. He says he took the first four to a collector’s show this spring. He sold four in half an hour and took orders for half a dozen more. The 2-wheel drive models were priced at $1,100, and 4-wheel drives were priced at $1,200.
Magnuson prefers people call rather than send emails. In one conversation, he can find out what shape the tractor is in, what needs to be done and disclose how much original or replacement parts will be.
Magnuson is always in the market for pedal tractors or parts people wish to sell, whether, as he says, they are “dead, or alive, original or broken”. Knowing what collectors pay for pedal tractors, he also can advise on what a tractor is worth.
“I’ve restored pedal tractors worth as much as $15,000, but most are worth less than $1,000,” says Magnuson. “Most people have no clue what their tractor is worth. People will ask me to restore a tractor for their kid to use and find out it’s worth $4,000. Do you really want to leave that in the front yard?”
Contact: FARM SHOW Followup, Magnuson Pedal Tractor Parts, 2630 Prairie Ridge Rd., Verona, Wis. 53593 (ph 608 437-5061; cell 608 445-7361; info@pedaltractor.com; www.pedaltractor.com).



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2011 - Volume #35, Issue #5