Two Teens Team Up to Tackle A Remarkable Farmall F-20 Complete Tractor Restoration

When Charlie Bortner and Wyatt Myers spotted a 1938 Farmall F-20, they knew it needed a lot of work. A 6-month FFA project turned into a two-year undertaking, and the finished project is polished perfection that is breathing new life.
When Charlie Bortner and Wyatt Myers spotted a 1938 Farmall F-20, they knew it needed a lot of work. A 6-month FFA project turned into a two-year undertaking, and the finished project is polished perfection that is breathing new life.
(Matt Mormann )

When Charlie Bortner and Wyatt Myers spotted a 1938 Farmall F-20, they knew it needed a lot of work. A 6-month FFA project turned into a two-year undertaking, and the finished project is polished perfection that is breathing new life.

Both Bortner and Myers wanted to enter into the FFA competition, and once they had their eyes set on the Farmall F-20, they jumped right in.

“Me and Wyatt stumbled upon the FFA tractor restoration competition, and we decided that it'd be kind of fun to enter. And so the restoration started,” explains Bortner, an 18-year-old with McCook FFA.


Watch Bortner and Myers highlight their Farmall F-20 restoration in Tractor Tales below. 


The iron required a complete restoration, and the boys decided it was a challenge they’d try to tackle, as they took on the restoration project one step at a time.

“Anything that could come off, effectively came off,” says Bortner. “We had the transmission completely disassembled to the point that the rear axle housing was removed from the tractor, sealed  and put back on. We had the whole entire tractor sandblasted, painted individual pieces. Just if a piece could come off, it came off.”


Related Story: Ultimate Gift: FFA Members Restore Their Adviser's Family's Farmall As A Surprise Retirement Gift


After two years of work, the boys can step back and admire just how far they’ve come in that time.

“Just looking at it makes me feel like wow, I can't believe what we actually accomplished,” says Myers, a 17-year-old  McCook FFA member.

“It's unreal. It truly is,” adds Bortner.

What was intended to just be their project for FFA turned into a feat with meaning, as Bortner learned a love for Farmalls ran in the family.

“After we got done restoring it, I took it to my great grandpa. He didn't tell me this before, but he ran an F-20 on his family farm,” Bortner says. “And just hearing his stories over this tractor, and his stories about it, made this restoration so much better.”

At a young age, Bortner and Myers are learning the power of hard work with a classic red Farmall F-20 as a piece of iron the boys will cherish forever. 

Watch more Tractor Tales on the Farm Journal YouTube

Tags

 

Latest News

AgDay Markets Now:  Darren Frye Says Grain Markets Post Higher Week but Will Need These Factors to Keep Rallying
AgDay Markets Now: Darren Frye Says Grain Markets Post Higher Week but Will Need These Factors to Keep Rallying

Darren Frye, Water Street Solutions, says the wheat rally came on weather and technical buying, which also helped corn and soybeans post a higher week. He's not sure it can continue without a bigger weather issue.

Why Did Jerry Gulke Make Some Last-Minute Planting Changes on His Farm?
Why Did Jerry Gulke Make Some Last-Minute Planting Changes on His Farm?

Gulke Group president Jerry Gulke explains why he made the last-minute decision to switch 200 acres of corn to soybeans.

Wheat Outlook 5-30-90 Days (4.26.24))
Wheat Outlook 5-30-90 Days (4.26.24))

Recap of the week's price action, advice and outlook broken down into the next 5, 30 and 90 day segments.

Grains Close Higher for the Week:  Does the Market Need to Rally and Add More Risk Premium or Not?
Grains Close Higher for the Week: Does the Market Need to Rally and Add More Risk Premium or Not?

Grains end mixed Friday but higher for the week led by wheat.  Cattle make new highs for the move helped by stronger cash.  Can the markets continue to move higher?  Darren Frye, Water Street Solutions, has the answers.

APHIS To Require Electronic Animal ID for Certain Cattle and Bison
APHIS To Require Electronic Animal ID for Certain Cattle and Bison

APHIS issued its final rule on animal ID that has been in place since 2013, switching from solely visual tags to tags that are both electronically and visually readable for certain classes of cattle moving interstate.

A Margin Squeeze is Setting in Across Row-Crop Farms, and 80% of Ag Economists Are Now Concerned It'll Accelerate Consolidation
A Margin Squeeze is Setting in Across Row-Crop Farms, and 80% of Ag Economists Are Now Concerned It'll Accelerate Consolidation

There's an immense amount of pressure riding on this year’s crop production picture, and with a margin squeeze setting in across farms, economists think it could accelerate consolidation in the row-crop industry.