Electric Tractor Conversion
If you’ve got an old tractor sitting in your barn collecting dust, an electric tractor conversion might transform it into one of the most useful machines on your property. The process involves swapping out the internal combustion engine for an electric motor, battery pack, and controller while keeping the original transmission and mechanical parts intact.
In 2024/2025, a typical DIY conversion costs between $2,100 and $9,500 excluding the donor tractor itself. Most small farm builds use 15-30 kW continuous motors with peaks up to 45 kW, paired with 20-25 kWh lithium iron phosphate battery packs running at 48-144 V nominal. That’s enough power to handle cultivating, mowing, or light loader work for 4-8 hours on a single charge.
The concrete benefits stack up quickly for small farm operators. A 30-50 acre vegetable farm can eliminate thousands of dollars in annual diesel costs. You’ll skip oil changes, fuel filter replacements, and exhaust repairs entirely. The machine runs quieter too—ideal when working around livestock or in orchards where noise matters. Real-world examples include converted Allis Chalmers G cultivators from 1948-1955, Massey Ferguson 65C projects that retain the original clutch with software control, and home-built International 300 conversions targeting 72 V brushless DC motors with regenerative braking.
What you’ll learn in this guide:
- How to select a donor tractor based on chassis design and intended use
- Planning your electric powertrain: motor types, voltage systems, and gearbox retention
- Battery pack design using LFP cells with proper mounting and safety
- Mechanical conversion steps: motor mounting, adapter plates, and drivetrain integration
- Electrical system wiring, controls, throttle setup, and charging solutions
- Build process, testing protocols, and lessons from real conversions
Choosing the Right Donor Tractor
Not every tractor makes a good candidate for conversion. The critical factor is chassis architecture—specifically, whether the engine block serves as a structural member of the frame.
On tractors like the Ferguson TE-20, the engine integrates directly into the frame structure. Remove it, and you’re left with a vehicle that needs extensive steel reinforcement before it can support any load. This escalates complexity, cost, and fabrication time dramatically.
Compare that to an Allis Chalmers G (1948-1955), where the engine simply bolts in as a non-stressed component. Pull it out, and the frame remains fully functional. These tractors have simple electrics, abundant parts availability in regions like the US Midwest or Tasmania, and enough space in the engine bay for batteries and controllers.
Ideal donor characteristics by era:
| Era | Dæmi | Kostir | Ókostir |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-1960 | Allis G, Farmall Cub | Simple electronics, cheap ($500-2,000), manual transmissions | Rust-prone frames, limited hydraulics, lead paint concerns |
| 1970s-1990s | Massey Ferguson 65C, John Deere 214 | Good parts availability, adequate space for batteries, balanced weight | Some electronic complexity, higher acquisition cost |
| Modern (CAN-bus) | Various | Samþætt kerfi | Controller integration nightmares, not recommended |
Matching power to use case:
- Cultivating: 10-15 kW continuous, high torque at low RPM (electric excels here)
- Mowing: 15-20 kW steady draw
- Loader work: 25-40 kW peak, mid-size tractors with robust transaxles
Frame strength matters because you’ll be adding 150-300 kg of battery weight. Check for rust, cracks, and the ability to carry that load. A John Deere 214 garden tractor’s heavier frame handles electric upgrades better than lighter Toro models, for example.
Planning the Electric Powertrain
The electric powertrain replaces your diesel or gasoline engine with a traction motor, controller, battery pack, and supporting electronics. Planning this system correctly determines whether your converted machine actually works for farm tasks.
Core components you’ll need:
- Traction motor (drive motor)
- Motor controller (Curtis-style or integrated)
- Battery pack with BMS
- DC contactor (main power switch)
- Fuses and disconnects
- Charger (onboard or external)
- Throttle interface (potentiometer)
Motor Selection
The choice between motor types affects cost, maintenance, and performance characteristics.
| Mótortegund | Spenna | Hagkvæmni | Viðhald | Cost Range |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DC Series | 48-72 V | 80-85% | Brush replacement | $800-1,500 |
| AC Induction | 72-144 V | 88-92% | Minimal | $1,200-2,500 |
| Permanent Magnet (PMSM) | 96-144 V | 90-95% | Minimal | $1,500-3,000 |
For reference, GMT offers a 25 kW PMSM system at 144 V with liquid cooling, capable of 45 kW peak. It integrates the controller and includes an adapter for gearbox mating. This kind of kit simplifies the project but adds cost.
Sizing Your System
A 30-40 hp diesel engine translates to roughly 15-30 kW electric continuous power. The key difference is torque delivery—an electric motor produces maximum torque instantly from zero RPM, making it better suited to heavy pulling at low speeds than a diesel that needs to rev up.
For farm tasks with variable loads, duty cycle matters. Light cultivating might average 20% throttle, meaning a 20 kWh pack delivers 4-6 hours of runtime. Loader work peaks at higher draws, stressing controllers rated for 400-500 A.
Gearbox Retention vs. Direct Drive
Most successful conversions retain the original gearbox and clutch. The Massey Ferguson 65C project demonstrates this approach—software-controlled clutch engagement with a 4-speed transmission preserves torque multiplication for hills and varied loads.
Allis G conversions typically bolt the motor directly to the bellhousing via the original clutch disk, keeping the transmission for gear selection. This maintains authenticity, allows PTO drive, and handles variable farm loads better than direct-drive setups that would overspeed motors on flat ground or struggle on inclines.
Battery Pack Design and Installation
Modern conversions favor lithium iron phosphate (LFP) chemistry over older lead acid batteries for good reasons. LFP offers 3,000-5,000 charge cycles at 80% depth-of-discharge, no thermal runaway risk, and better energy density—critical when you’re mounting 150-250 kg of cells on farm machinery.
Typical Configurations
A 20-22 kWh pack provides adequate capacity for small farm work. Here’s how the numbers break down:
| Configuration | Cells | Nominal Voltage | Getu | Weight |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 16s1p | 16 prismatic LFP | 51.2 V | 20 kWh | 150-180 kg |
| 24s1p | 24 prismatic LFP | 76.8 V | 20 kWh | 160-200 kg |
| 48s1p | 48 prismatic LFP | 153.6 V | 25 kWh | 200-250 kg |
Higher voltage systems (144 V nominal) pair with more powerful motors like the GMT 25 kW PMSM but require more cells and more complex BMS configurations.
Physical Packaging
The Allis G conversion approach offers a proven battery box design:
- 3/4-inch plywood inner structure for cell mounting
- Steel angle-iron outer frame for crash protection
- Galvanized sheet metal lid for weather resistance
- Bottom ventilation slots to prevent condensation
- Removable design for battery service access
This box typically mounts where the fuel tank sat, or in the engine bay space freed by ICE removal. Anderson SB-175 connectors make the pack removable for indoor charging or replacement.
Mounting Location Considerations
Where you place 150-250 kg of batteries affects how the actual tractor handles:
- Engine bay: Space-efficient but heat accumulates from motor
- Behind operator seat: Keeps weight centered but limits rear visibility
- Fuel tank replacement: Often balances weight well on row-crop tractors
- Under bonnet extension: Requires fabrication but maximizes space
Front-heavy setups from forward battery placement may need rear ballast—a consideration when your old tractor already had specific weight distribution for traction.
Safety Requirements
Farm equipment operates outdoors in dust, moisture, and temperature extremes. Critical safety elements include:
- 300-400 A main fuse sized for maximum expected current
- BMS with cell balancing and isolation monitoring
- IP67-rated connectors for weather exposure
- Clear high-voltage labeling on all battery components
- Physical guards preventing accidental contact
Mechanical Conversion: Motor Mounting and Drivetrain
The mechanical work transforms your donor vehicle from an ICE machine to an electric vehicle. This phase requires precision fabrication but uses standard shop tools—nothing you can’t find at Harbor Freight.
ICE Removal
Start by draining all fluids and disconnecting the battery. Then remove:
- Engine assembly (save clutch disk, bellhousing bolts, pilot bearing)
- Fuel tank and all fuel lines
- Exhaust system and muffler (no more exhaust fumes)
- Radiator and coolant hoses
Careful documentation during teardown saves headaches during reassembly. Note which bolts go where, and bag them by location.
Lead paint warning: Pre-1980 tractors likely have lead paint. Use appropriate respiratory protection during teardown, or consider encapsulation rather than removal if possible.
Motor Mounting Plate Fabrication
The adapter plate connects your electric motor to the original bellhousing. This requires:
- Precision steel plate (1/4” to 3/8” thick) cut to match bellhousing bolt pattern
- Center bore aligned to transmission input shaft within 0.5 mm
- Motor mounting holes matching your chosen drive motor
- Pilot register to center motor shaft on gearbox input
Some builders use splined couplers to mate the motor shaft directly to the transmission input. Others retain the original clutch disk by mounting it to a motor pulley, as documented in Allis G projects. Both approaches work—the clutch retention method preserves the ability to shift gears smoothly.
Frame Modifications
Reuse existing engine mounting points where possible. Add a steel cradle that supports both the motor and battery box, distributing weight across the frame rails. This construction approach minimizes welding while providing solid mounting.
Ancillary Systems
Two systems need attention beyond the main drivetrain:
- PTO: Direct motor drive to PTO risks overload. A separate auxiliary motor ($500-1,000) adds complexity but preserves full PTO functionality.
- Hydraulics: If your tractor has a hydraulic pump, plan how to drive it—off the main motor via belt, or with a dedicated electric pump. The cost and complexity trade-off depends on how much you rely on hydraulics.
Electrical System, Controls, and Charging
The control system ties everything together. You’ll build out a “control bay”—typically mounted where the engine electronics lived—containing power handling and interface components.
Major Components
| Þáttur | Spec Example | Starfsemi |
|---|---|---|
| Main contactor | 500 A, 144 V rated | Master power switch |
| Motor controller | Curtis 1238, 650 A | Speed/torque control |
| Pre-charge resistor | 100 ohm, 50 W | Prevents inrush current |
| Cooling fan | 48 V DC | Controller thermal management |
| BMS | 16-48 cell | Cell balancing, isolation |
| Fuse panel | 400 A main + branch fuses | Overcurrent protection |
| Disconnect | Manual lever type | Service isolation |
Wiring Strategy
Separate high-voltage and low-voltage systems completely:
- High-voltage (traction): #2 AWG welding cable, Anderson SB-175 connectors, short runs, secure routing away from operator
- Low-voltage (controls): #16 automotive wire, crimped terminals (soldering acceptable with proper strain relief), separate harness
This separation prevents control faults from energizing high-voltage circuits and simplifies troubleshooting.
Throttle Implementation
Most conversions use a 5K ohm potentiometer actuated by bicycle brake cable. The cable links to the original hand or foot throttle lever, maintaining familiar operation. The controller reads pot position and modulates motor power accordingly.
Safety Interlocks
Farm equipment demands robust safety systems:
- Ignition key switch in series with main contactor
- Seat switch (prevents operation with nobody in seat)
- Neutral or brake interlock (tractor won’t start in gear)
- Emergency stop button (red mushroom type, clearly visible)
- Lights for night operation
Charging Options
A stacked Mean Well power supply setup charges LFP packs effectively at 56-58 V output (for 48 V nominal packs). Wire to a NEMA 6-50R outlet (typical welding plug) through a 30 A double-pole switch. This provides 3-6 kW charging, refilling a depleted 20 kWh pack overnight.
Onboard vs. external charging is your choice—onboard adds weight but enables charging anywhere with a suitable outlet.
Build Process, Testing, and Real-World Use
With components sourced and plans finalized, the actual conversion follows a logical sequence. Expect the project to take several weekends for experienced builders, longer for first-timers.
Build Sequence Checklist
- Teardown and cleaning (lead paint precautions, document everything)
- Frame inspection (check for rust, reinforce if needed)
- Motor adapter fabrication (machine shop or DIY with careful measurement)
- Trial motor fitment (verify alignment before final mounting)
- Battery box construction (plywood, steel, weatherproofing)
- Battery pack assembly (cell installation, BMS wiring)
- Control bay wiring (contactors, controller, fuses)
- Low-voltage harness (throttle, interlocks, lights)
- Software configuration (AC systems require parameter setup)
- Ground testing (wheels off ground, verify operation)
- Road testing (controlled environment first)
Safe Initial Testing
Before driving, jack the rear wheels off the ground. Power up the system and test:
- Forward and reverse direction (swap motor phase wires if reversed)
- All gears engage smoothly
- Brakes function (don’t rely on regenerative braking alone)
- PTO spins correctly
- Emergency stop kills power immediately
Many builders check YouTube videos of similar conversions to understand expected behavior before first power-up.
Performance Expectations
Based on documented builds:
| Metric | Typical Value |
|---|---|
| Runtime (light duty) | 4-6 hours on 20 kWh |
| Runtime (loader work) | 2-3 hours on 20 kWh |
| Recharge time (3 kW) | 6-7 hours |
| Recharge time (6 kW) | 3-4 hours |
Winter storage requires attention—store batteries indoors at 50% charge to maximize life. Cold weather reduces capacity temporarily but doesn’t damage LFP cells.
Common Issues and Improvements
Lessons from early conversions point to several areas requiring attention:
- Transmission wear: Electric torque stresses gears differently than ICE. Refurbish brakes early rather than relying on regen-only stopping.
- BMS false trips: Tune cell balance thresholds after initial break-in cycles
- Noise: Gearboxes sound louder without engine noise masking them
- Instrumentation: Add voltage and current displays for better monitoring
Looking Forward
Projects like the Allis G kit conversions, Massey Ferguson 65C EV, and various homebuilt efforts are proving the concept works reliably. As battery costs drop and component availability improves, expect more standardized tractor EV kits in the late 2020s. What starts as a barn project today could become a mainstream option for small farm operators looking to replace aging diesel machinery with capable, quiet electric alternatives.
Helstu atriði
- Select donor tractors where the engine isn’t structural—Allis Chalmers G style frames work best
- Size motors at 15-30 kW continuous for typical small farm tasks
- LFP battery packs (20-25 kWh) provide 4-8 hours of practical runtime
- Retain original gearbox and clutch for torque multiplication and familiar operation
- Separate high-voltage and low-voltage wiring completely
- Test thoroughly with wheels off ground before driving
Converting that old tractor in your barn isn’t just a weekend project—it’s a practical investment in quieter, cheaper farm operations. Start by assessing your donor tractor’s frame integrity and mapping out your actual power requirements before ordering components. The conversion community continues to grow, with forums, videos, and documented builds providing guidance for every step of the process.