GeneV
Elite Member
Yeh, I'm having a hard enough time selling the mower deck for my Massey, let alone the whole tractor. But maybe it's a regional thing, dunno.I doubt that strategy works anymore.
Yeh, I'm having a hard enough time selling the mower deck for my Massey, let alone the whole tractor. But maybe it's a regional thing, dunno.I doubt that strategy works anymore.
Yeh, I'm having a hard enough time selling the mower deck for my Massey, let alone the whole tractor. But maybe it's a regional thing, dunno.
Been doing this my whole life. Once did a service call to the home of an NHL hockey player and heard his wife complaining all about the cost of everything that needed fixing. Came home to tell the wife that we lived in a much nicer house and it was paid for while we were living on 1/4 of the income.This reinforces in my mind the value of investing time and effort into learning how to repair and maintain your own machines. It allows you to keep things for far longer and potentially buy used or broken equipment for a much more reasonable price.
Having those skills has proven over and over to me at least that you can have a much higher standard of living than what your income would otherwise dictate
I have a 2010 GC2610TLB bought new, and then bought a Zero Turn because I knew I wouldn't be happy taking off the loader and hoe to cut the grass. I got a deal on a 54" machine after the original owner traded it for something bigger and it didn't cost much more than a mower attachment.I'm in the same camp of "keep the Kubota and buy a zero turn".
Workmaster 50, 60, 70 series. Biggest difference in these three tractors is horsepower. Same engine just basically supplies more fuel to increase horsepower. Most people go with 70 series for maximum pto horsepower for hay baling.What model work master is involved? I’m considering a used wm 40 and like to have a baseline to compare. Thanks
Paying ridiculous prices causes inflation. Let them set on the lot for awhile unless you can pay the inflated price and still make money by doing it.Pumping trillions of dollars into the economy has its effects
Where can we find such data?Have you seen the price of steel over the same time frame?
Think it was $170-ish per ton in 2005 and it's as high as $1,800-ish per ton now.
Not really. It has a small effect. Increasing the money supply increases inflation. Paying more for something increases prices on that thing and associated things, not generally the whole economy. Gas/diesel would be an exception, as almost everything is dependent on getting somewhere using fuel...even EVs. Another exception is wages (unless those increases are tied to increasing productivity).Paying ridiculous prices causes inflation. Let them set on the lot for awhile unless you can pay the inflated price and still make money by doing it.
Where can we find such data?
Seems as if there must be a commodities market that tracks the bid/ask futures etc.
Google works great...Where can we find such data?
Seems as if there must be a commodities market that tracks the bid/ask futures etc.