k0ua
Epic Contributor
There's your answer! :drink:
Since your a 1911 guy, I'll add a little eye candy....two of my hi-cap 1911s
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Are you a member of USPSA?
There's your answer! :drink:
Since your a 1911 guy, I'll add a little eye candy....two of my hi-cap 1911s
![]()
Are you a member of USPSA?
Yep. TY23298 is my member number![]()
I have an older SV 2011 with a Caspian slide in .40 set up for limited.. I sold my open .38 super.
Very cool! I may shoot more Limited next year...mostly to mess with two friends...both team SV :laughing:
K0ua, N8VCF here. I used to do a lot of contesting, mainly VHF,UHF, and micro. Weak signal stuff. I was a member of the N8FMD contest group for a long time.
Since you like 1911's I thought you might appreciate this. It's my 1914 colt 1911 army modelView attachment 332004
My first post here, Hello to all.
I think I'm about to pull the trigger on a Mahindra 4035 or a 5035 with hst. The 4035 is big enough for the work I have to do right now, just don't want to wish I had a little more tractor down the road. I don't have a bailer right now, but I hope to get a smaller round bailer or square baler at a later date.
My problem is this I have 13 acres of hills and I'm constantly needing to change direction, so hydrostatic drive is something I have been looking at. My wife also could use the tractor on the 5 or so easy use (not flat, but nearly flat) acres. I would like to use the box blade and loader to do some light to medium shaping of the hills to make them more bush hog-tractor useable.
My questions are is the hydrostatic drive the way to go? Is it durable enough to get long service out of it without high repair cost?
Do you think this would be the way to go for use on hills? I have a gear tractor right now 2 wheel drive it has been an ok tractor it only gives me fits on days that end in y. looking for a serious upgrade.
I just got a 4035HST and love it. I'm like you, I needed allot of directional changes so powershuttle was out. I considered running hay as something that might be done about 10 years or so in the future once many other projects are completed and the 4035HST will provide what was in my mind ample overhead on the PTO for the smallest of the small balers (square balers don't have as high of PTO requirements as a round baler). I honestly hope to be able to afford a 60HP tractor in ten or so years once I start doing hay, as others have stated you can't have too much power for hay work. Having my current tractor able to run the smallest of the balers means if something happens and I can't get the 60 later on I do have something I can fall back on even though working with smaller equipment is more work for the operator. If my plans were to definitely use my current tractor, I would have gotten a 5035HST just to have a bit more overhead.
Don't let the HST naysayers change your mind. Read how each is to be operated, make your choice according to how YOU will operate it.
LOVE me them 1911s!
How much bailing do you do? Square or round? I don't have a need to bail as of yet, but was trying to get enough tractor to maybe run a larger square bailer, or a small round one. But that would be down the road more than another year.
Hydrostatic is the only way to go.
You won't lose enough hp compared to shuttle-shift to ever notice the difference.
First time you change gears or forward-to-backward on incline and you feel machine slip into neutral and roll you'll pucker up stomping brake. Hydrostatic is just a foot-tap. Ours operates just like a skid steer..