The cramped engine compartment is a P.I.T.A. I don't weld but I finally found some one who said he could install a detachable floor plate in the engine box for clean out & maintenance and stifle the loud muffler. These are my two biggest complaints.
I've always looked at PT's as kids toys.....or fun toys for city folks playing farmer....![]()
Its definitely not an ag machine. Doesn't have the pulling power to pull dirt plows or stumps. Its hardly a kids toy. Many are sold to landscapers for professional use. It will plain and simple run circles around other machines its size when it comes to moving landscaping material, snow plowing, mowing, tiller, etc.... Its quicker and more nimble with a heavier lift capacity. Its also simple to work on and highly customizable. And.... its made right here in America. :united-states:
Pound for pound, the PT425 is pretty formidable. Yeah. Formidable
forキmiキdaキble
/ˈf?mədəbəl,f?ˈmidəbəl,fərˈmid-/
adjective
adjective: formidable
1. inspiring fear or respect through being impressively large, powerful, intense, or capable.
If you like being nit picky... you should note the two "or's" in MossRoad's definition. By your own admission it looks "handy", "nimble", "practical" and "variable in it's abilities". That sounds like a machine that could "inspire respect through being impressively capable".After a chest thumping proclaimation like this post I had no choice but click on the little tractor for video proof. Yep handy "little" implement. Nimble. Practical for light work. Variable in it's abilities. Formidable,,,, nope. Does just what it's designed to do with no fear or respect through being impressively large, powerful, intense, or capable.![]()
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Nah, they are tools just like tractors. Smaller than some and equal to others. I once debated between a PT425 and BX24. Very comparable in many ways. I'd be happy to have either as a much more flexible solution to working around the house or for smaller tasks that don't require a full size CUT. My 40hp CUT is too big to mow around the house and frankly only about a quarter of the tasks I do with it could not be done by the PT or BX with just a bit more time. I'm a fan (of both the PT and BX TLB).I've always looked at PT's as kids toys.....or fun toys for city folks playing farmer....![]()
If you like being nit picky... you should note the two "or's" in MossRoad's definition. By your own admission it looks "handy", "nimble", "practical" and "variable in it's abilities". That sounds like a machine that could "inspire respect through being impressively capable".
It sounded to me like much of your opinion was based around the PT4xx's size. They actually do weigh quite a bit, and when matched up against the average person's home tractor they could be considered "impressively large, powerful, intense, or capable" in comparison. The work-to-size ratio is probably very high when compared other tractors. I'm curious though... do you consider your tractor "formidable"? How about when it's up against a D10?Point being... everything looks small when next to something bigger, and its all relative to what it is being compared against.
That all being said, formidable is the not first word that I would pick to describe the PT4xx, but IMHO the average person would not be crazy for thinking it was.![]()
Have you looked at their 45 degree slope mower? Its hardly a kids toy.I've always looked at PT's as kids toys.....or fun toys for city folks playing farmer....![]()
Why did you have to put little in quotes? That indicates intentional.After a chest thumping proclaimation like this post I had no choice but click on the little tractor for video proof. Yep handy "little" implement. Nimble. Practical for light work. Variable in it's abilities. Formidable,,,, nope. Does just what it's designed to do with no fear or respect through being impressively large, powerful, intense, or capable.![]()
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Have you looked at their 45 degree slope mower? Its hardly a kids toy.![]()
Where was I being nit picky???
My opinion is based on it's configuration. I believe my Yamaha Rhino has more underbelly clearance. It appears to be a very capable machine on relatively level and smooth terrain.
Nah, they are tools just like tractors. Smaller than some and equal to others. I once debated between a PT425 and BX24. Very comparable in many ways. I'd be happy to have either as a much more flexible solution to working around the house or for smaller tasks that don't require a full size CUT. My 40hp CUT is too big to mow around the house and frankly only about a quarter of the tasks I do with it could not be done by the PT or BX with just a bit more time. I'm a fan (of both the PT and BX TLB).
Maybe, but I wasn't kidding.....I want one!Like Moss said...All tongue in cheek....Moss knows I was just kidding him....LOL
Intentional or not, here's where you got folks riled up. "little". Why did you have to put little in quotes? That indicates intentional.
Anyhow, I had an International Harvester IH2500b for about 10 years. Its an 8000# 50PTO HP tractor loader with cab. I used it at my tree farm to get the larger tasks done, like cutting in the road from the highway and brush hogging between the rows of trees. Once those large tasks were done, that machine was no longer needed or practical. I went to downsize to a machine that was correct for my needs. I considered Kubotas, JDs, NH, and others. Kept coming back to this machine. I use it to not only maintain my 1 acre home property, I also use it to maintain my "city folks playing farm" (thanks Brin) 20 acre tree farm. I've got real farm number with the government and everything since 1989, so I've been playing farm for 25 years. I'm currently harvesting firewood off of it on steep sandy slopes with the PT425, maintaining a plot of mixed hardwoods for veneer timber and mowing about a mile and a half of hiking and running trails that a large conventional tractor could not do in a safe or timely fashion. I'm going far more places on that property than I ever could with the big IH and leaving almost no footprint thanks to the articulation. Its a highly capable machine, which fits the definition of formidable when applied to the correct tasks. There's quite a few PT owners on TBN that also own conventional tractors. They'll tell you its strong and weak points. And they'll tell you they really, really like their PTs. :licking: