You might check out Sunbelt or United to see how they dispose of their machines. I have a friend who has purchased a crane and a telehandler from Sunbelt at a reasonable price for machines that did not have a ton of hours and was well maintained.
around here I can rent a newish machine (with 100 hours on the clock not some worn out POS) for CDN$2200/wk or CDN$5500/mo for a 10 ton machine, CDN$2600/wk for a 16 tonne (works out to about $100/hr with fuel and I'm in the seat)True, but when you look at a week long rent, even 4 times per year, that's getting to pretty close to equal with a years payments on a purchase or long term lease.
On long term lease; often You are responsible for maintenance. Think leasing a car vs renting a car. You dont do tires/PM service or repairs on a rental, but a lease, you do.
Depends completely on your rental market and need. Also, and this is kinda Key, if week you need a Cat-315, but 4 other weeks you need a Cat-305; and maybe next year something different; 100% Rent. If you consistently need a Cat-305, many times, or you need it available at all times; purchase.around here I can rent a newish machine (with 100 hours on the clock not some worn out POS) for CDN$2200/wk or CDN$5500/mo for a 10 ton machine, CDN$2600/wk for a 16 tonne (works out to about $100/hr with fuel and I'm in the seat)
I can get a guy with a late model 35 tonne machine for CDN$250/hr including operator and fuel.
If I finance a new 8 Ton KX080-5 I'm looking at CDN$3K-4K per month for 60 months at 0% and I'm in the seat, on the hook for R&M. I'm spending CDN$1K every 200 hours to service my TLB, a mini-ex will cost even more. In my case I can rent for 2 weeks what I would spend in one month on finance with a 60 month obligation.
I've had good luck in the past buying old equipment and selling 3-5 years later for what I've paid. These days I'd rather operate a new machine and get the job done quickly and not have to worry about maintenance and breakdowns.
That might be a little extreme.One thing that I have left out of the conversation; as many others do... OP, are you any good on a hoe? If you have never ran one, its very simple, and intuitive, But, a guy that has 10,000 hours on one, will get more done in 2 days then you will in 2 weeks. The flip side, many of the small owner operators aren't really very good either. They watch Dirtperfect too much, and get a business loan, and charge you to learn how to do the job.
Hiring out is not cheap, but depending on skill, time, finances, its not always a bad choice. Thing is, $40,000 worth of budget just doesn't go far in earth moving. I would expect a small contractor, who is pretty decent, maybe with a helper (or not), to be roughly $2000-2500/day.
On used equipment, fiancing can be hard/expensive; eating up the cost savings pretty fast. Banks dont like used equipment loans, and charge a premium for them. If it comes down to fiancing a 1200 hour CAT-305 for $50,000 @ 12%; vs a new Sany for $72,000 @ 5%; I'm pretty sure I'd go Sany (or Takekuchyi, or Case).
On that specific topic; Farm Credit looks like used equipment loans can be as low as 6.75%. They do a ask for more info than some banks; such as a assets vs debts; not just a simple income and credit. Seems like going rate is about 9.99% of used equipment; but shop that as well.That might be a little extreme.
I financed my used excavator at 7%. Nobody needs to pay 12%, unless they have junky credit.
4 years ago it would have been 4%.
I know you set on a heavier machine but being the owner if a IHI NX15, a 4000 lb machine i could do everything you ask unless the boulders are the size of a car. Plus you could move it in a car trailer as i do pulling it behind a Montero. Thus you have the option to to do some small work for locals without hiring a equipment mover. It came with a 12 inch bucket, i made a 8 inch tooth bucket for water and power lines. Then made a 36 inch non tooth bucket for cutting swale ditches, back filling and also for leveling along with the front blade.. I personally think once you own one you will not sell it and if you do i believe the smaller machine would be a easier sell.. But best of luck on whatever machine you decide onI have so many projects in mind for the next 3-ish years (landscaping, retaining walls/terracing gardens, digging up boulders in the fields, root cellar, trenching for utilities for a few projects, etc) so I'm looking into buying an excavator. The rental options near me are very limited, and I have a long trailer-unfriendly driveway, so just getting an excavator here and back would take up a rental day (plus, the few rentals within an hour drive are 3-ton). Contractors are usually scheduled pretty far out too, and I don't want to wait around to get stuff backfilled so I can move on to the next project. I'm pretty well set on something between 5 and 8 tons. My biggest concern is usability in my rocky soil, so I ran it by a contractor who's had 304, 308 and 312 machines out at my place for various jobs. He thinks even a 4-ton would be fine for most of it, but moving some of the heavier boulders wouldn't be possible on the small end. I'm certainly not going smaller than 4-ton.
I've spent quite a bit of time perusing machinery trader and FB marketplace. Lots of options out there:
I don't want to keep the excavator forever (more precisely, my wife doesn't want me to keep it forever), and I expect I might put a couple hundred hours on it in a few years. Resale after that time is top-of-mind. I'm willing to spend the money to get a nice machine, and the conventional wisdom is that a name-brand excavator holds value well, but then I'm worried about finding a buyer who can purchase it without financing or perhaps taking a bath on resale if the economy tanks. And the more I spend, the more exposed to the possibility that I way overpay due to my lack of knowledge about excavators. I'm also not opposed to getting an older machine that's a bit sloppier around the corners and harder to work with, but still digs holes faster than a shovel, but then I'm worried about all the issues with high-hour machines. Any nuggets of wisdom? My gut instinct is to get a beater and embrace the adventure. Should I get over my fear of investing in a newer machine? I know so little about excavators (how difficult major repairs are, how often they need major repairs) that I'm having trouble evaluating the value proposition.
- $35-45k for 3500-5000 hour name-brand (Cat/Deere/Kubota/etc) machines usually from the kinda-shady used equipment dealers/lots. I always gotta wonder about the history of these sorts of things. I get especially nervous when they're also selling gray-market machines (and not listed as gray-market, but it's a model number that was never sold in the US). As an example, $35k for a 5000-hour 2006 Kubota KX161-3 that's clearly had a hard life, and despite a new engine needs attention elsewhere.
- $45-55k for nicer off-brand machines that are going to be harder to get service, especially where I live. For example, $45k for a 5000-hour 2014 Hyundai Robex 80cr-9 that looks to be well-maintained (two owner), has a new-ish track, etc.
- $55k+ for low-hour name-brand machines. For example, $65k for a nice-looking 500-hour 2019 Cat 305E2 CR with a few buckets.
And I recognize there's a non-zero probability that I'll fall in love and never sell it.