jake98
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Nov 10, 2007
- Messages
- 1,881
- Location
- Dingmans Ferry PA
- Tractor
- 53 Cub, 70's JD 410, Kioti 25hst
How well would you trust him grading up against some new siding you just installed?
Jake
Jake
How well would you trust him grading up against some new siding you just installed?
Jake
Ditto that.. it's an experience issue.
I run my geared tractor right up against my cabin, shed, cars, trucks. And it isn't a lawn mower either, its a good sized CUT. If I hit something it has nothing to do with gearing and everything to do with negligence and an HST isn't going to protect anyone from that.
And you should see my BIL moving hay bales with his geard JD ag tractor. Not only loading and unloading, but you should see him dumping them and then unrolling them by pushing them with the front wheel, never slowing down! That's precision.
That has a lot to do with it, but obviously in some tasks one type excels over the other. Since I have both there are definitely some tasks for which I prefer gear and some for which I prefer hydro. If the tractor is smaller, I found that I can till with a bigger tiller on a hydro tractor than a gear tractor because the infinite creep speeds. Mowing with a RFM around a lot of obstacles is another task for which I prefer hydro. However, mowing without hundreds of obstacles I greatly prefer gear. Overall, I don't really have a preference for most tasks though. Since I put thousands of hours on gear tractors before I ever even saw a hydro tractor probably tells the story that I'm rather comfortable with gear. I just don't like some of the older non-sync gears I used to have. I absolutely hate to have to stop each time I need a different gear. I guess I do have a preference against those gear tractors.
That's what they do with those round bales, they unroll them?..
You guys are great at batting this old debate around and I appreciate it! One thing we have found from frugile new tractor operators that buy gear drive tractors is that we now see that people learning how to grade with gear drives are taking clutches out between 500 and 1000 hours not the normal two thousand plus! Clutch petal wear shows that they leave their feet on them a lot, often wearing through the rubber pad in the lower left or right corner. When this happens they just paid the price difference of the gear to hydro, !
Agreed. Anyone with any experience with a manual transmission should know better than that.
And speaking of dealers and HST, I'm just guessing but there must be more margin on the HST tractors than the simple ones because when I was shopping I was always steered toward the HST machines. Even after chosing the 4400 most of them wanted me to drive an HST thinking it would change my mind. I hated it.
Agreed. Anyone with any experience with a manual transmission should know better than that.
And speaking of dealers and HST, I'm just guessing but there must be more margin on the HST tractors than the simple ones because when I was shopping I was always steered toward the HST machines. Even after chosing the 4400 most of them wanted me to drive an HST thinking it would change my mind. I hated it.
Yup. That's why I said that the only real difference for me is when trying to pull a large tiller with a tractor that is close on HP to handle the tiller at full depth. The hydro has infinite creeping ability. The gear does as well, but at a cost. The same goes for jockeying around all sorts of things when mowing. Again, the gear tractor can do it just fine, but with a certain cost.
There is no additional mark-up here
What are the costs you are referring to?
We could also add the steering wheel spinner to the hydro/gear debate.That gives four different items that could mixed and matched.
Throw in some implements and have a real Brouha ehh!![]()