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Farm Machinery
Machinery
Today's biggest tractor price difference
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<blockquote data-quote="jorgenbg" data-source="post: 4688820" data-attributes="member: 31720"><p>Trust me. UK usually have cheap tractors. Norway on the other hand, is very expensive. Lots of imports form UK.</p><p></p><p>The rule between dealers is that a tractor has to have at least 400 hours on the clock before it can be sold to Norway. I bought a new tractor through an independent dealer in UK, and the local dealer here did not take it well. </p><p></p><p>From what I understand, the currency rates are usually fixed for 6 months at the time between manufacturers and import. Dealers need this to have a price list. When the currency change in that period of time, buying abroad can be good and bad. </p><p></p><p>When the euro went sky high against the norwegian krone, even our dealers started to export. Mainly eastern europe I think. </p><p></p><p>So, when you search the big interweb and find a cracking deal in Germany. Maybe its just a cracking deal?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="jorgenbg, post: 4688820, member: 31720"] Trust me. UK usually have cheap tractors. Norway on the other hand, is very expensive. Lots of imports form UK. The rule between dealers is that a tractor has to have at least 400 hours on the clock before it can be sold to Norway. I bought a new tractor through an independent dealer in UK, and the local dealer here did not take it well. From what I understand, the currency rates are usually fixed for 6 months at the time between manufacturers and import. Dealers need this to have a price list. When the currency change in that period of time, buying abroad can be good and bad. When the euro went sky high against the norwegian krone, even our dealers started to export. Mainly eastern europe I think. So, when you search the big interweb and find a cracking deal in Germany. Maybe its just a cracking deal? [/QUOTE]
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Today's biggest tractor price difference
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