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On the ground, when farmers or dealers talk about a seizing tractor, they’re rarely talking about an engine locked solid with no oil. Most of the time, they mean a bank seized tractor. A machine taken back because loan payments stopped. I’ve stood in yards where these tractors sit in a line, dust thick on the bonnet, paperwork tied to the steering with string. No polish. No sales talk. Just machines waiting for a second chance. These tractors come from real farms. Not showrooms. They’ve ploughed fields, hauled trolleys, pulled sugarcane loads at night. Then money got tight. The bank stepped in. That’s how a seizing tractor enters the market.