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The Rural Voice, 2019-07, Page 32 Fawcett’s was established in 1977 on a former pig farm. “My grandfather started the business as a way to combat declining swine prices,” said Liz Fawcett, the third generation of the family working at the business located on the original farm site. Keith Fawcett had approached the bank about borrowing some money to expand and improve his pig business. When he was refused a loan he decided to supplement his farm income by starting his own business in the farm workshop – salvaging tractors. That shop has expanded several times under Liz’s parents, Jeff and Donna Fawcett, to become the largest tractor salvage operation in eastern Canada, employing 31 people. The barn that was once full of pigs is now full of tractor parts. Tavares, Liz’s brother-in-law, described the tractor salvage business as currently being in a time of transition. Younger farmers more familiar with electronics are gaining the confidence to fix the complex guidance and computer controlled functions. “You will have young farmers not afraid to plug the tractor into their lap top,” suggested Tavares of those trouble-shooting diagnoses. He suggested there was also a cautious transition for the farmers who bought their very first tractor after switching from horses to horsepower. They, too, had to become familiar with the machine’s operation before taking it apart and putting it back together. The difference in those two vastly different eras is the shelf life of spare parts for late model tractors. While tractor manufacturers once carried parts for tractors 20 or 30 years or more, 10 years is the standard length of time now for carrying replacement parts by tractor manufacturers. “That is not very long in the useful life of a tractor,” said Tavares. This basically reflects the shorter shelf-life characteristic of all electronics as part of a throw-away rather than repair manufacturing philosophy. The electronic control units (ECU) on newer tractors have to function or the tractor is disabled. If it is not repairable the owner may simply decide to replace the ECU, especially if it is a higher-priced model. However that unit may have to come from France as tractor manufacturing is now an integrated process spread round the world. “The tractor owner might have a thousand acres of crop to put in and doesn’t want to wait three days for a part,” said Tavares. If Fawcett can immediately supply the needed ECU it will shorten the time for the farmer and that has a value, said Fawcett. The price applied to salvaged parts is actually based on age and availability. The rarer the part the higher the price. Eight out of 10 customers for parts are private individuals, said Tavares adding, “Usually we can come to some price agreement.” While farms have grown much bigger and far fewer, there is still a ready supply of salvageable tractors available. 28 The Rural Voice Top: Three generations Of Fawcetts run the tractor parts business. They are (left to right) Keith and Barb Fawcett, Jeff and Donna Fawcett, Micah and Audrey (Fawcett) Tavares, Liz Fawcett. Right: Micah Tavares, sales manager, and Liz Fawcett are the third generation of the Fawcett family involved with the businesss standing with some of the used gears salvaged from tractors.