What does "take it to the dealer" mean for you?

   / What does "take it to the dealer" mean for you? #71  
Say what?
Messicks (7 locations)
Ag Industrial (2 locations)
Forrester Equipment (2 locations)
B&R Equipment (2 locations)
He said "we have several options for good New Holland dealers within an hour drive." I have ONE New Holland dealer that Google Maps puts at 58 - 70 minutes from me, depending on route and time of day. One.

If I extend the circle out to 1.5 - 2 hours, then there are three or four, but that's an awful long way to go for service when I have three Deere dealers within 10 - 20 minutes of my house.

For real AG equipment, New Holland has more dealers than anyone other than Deere in eastern PA.
That's believable, esp. given how close I live to New Holland PA! :ROFLMAO: But your "anyone other than Deere" under-sells the disparity, as I can reach any one of five Deere dealerships faster than the closest NH dealership.

I'd have actually thought Kubota was second to Deere, in terms of local dealer count, but I'm looking at CUT's and you're talking Ag machinery.
 
   / What does "take it to the dealer" mean for you? #72  
You live in Philadelphia, and theres only one NH dealer within an hour?
I have 5, but live 20 miles outside the city.
AG Industrial Rising Sun 40 minutes
AG Industrial Douglasville 45 minutes
Messicks Mount Joy 60minutes
Messicks Peach Country Tractor Richwood, NJ 60 minutes +
 
   / What does "take it to the dealer" mean for you? #73  
Guess I will find out tomorrow. My new Kioti ck4020 hst with 10 hours is going through engine oil. Over 2 gallons as of yesterday. Today the transmission low speed will not move the tractor. There are no oil leaks and the tractor is not smoking. The only thing I can guess at is that the oil is going into the hst. Dealer is supposed to pick it up in the morning.
Holy crap
 
   / What does "take it to the dealer" mean for you? #74  
You live in Philadelphia, and theres only one NH dealer within an hour?
I'm 35 miles NW of Philly. Ag-Industrial is 58 - 70 minutes from me. All others listed on their deler locator are 1.5 hours or more.
 
   / What does "take it to the dealer" mean for you? #75  
Whats so hard about driving 1.5 hrs. I used to haul horse and cattle across many states. Its all good.
 
   / What does "take it to the dealer" mean for you? #76  
Whats so hard about driving 1.5 hrs. I used to haul horse and cattle across many states. Its all good.
I never said it was a big deal, I was only answering to a post claiming there were more closer. But at the same time, if given the choice, I'd go with the brand who stocks parts 10 minutes from my house over one that requires a 3-hour round trip for each parts counter visit.
 
   / What does "take it to the dealer" mean for you? #78  
To those commenting on post #2 I have tried using the emojies on the smily face and only get a bunch of text. As a result I can't use emojies.
I can't do quotes either.
As for "take it to the dealer" back in the day I would do what hay dude does, yell for the service truck as the cost of repair was cheaper than the lost crop.
 
   / What does "take it to the dealer" mean for you? #79  
I've only had one issue with my new Kubota, and it ended up being an insurance issue. The insurance that they offered when I bought my tractor. that one job paid for what I paid for the insurance 4 times over. They sent a mechanic to the house, and it didn't cost me anything but the deductible. That was a $7000.00 fix. They did the first service while he was there and all that cost me was for the filters and oil used.
I bought the tractor from Hoober, and I would never buy anything or have them fix anything on my tractor. That's a sorry outfit and not worthy of me even driving by their store. It's sad too, they are only about a half hour away from me. I found Land & Coats sales and service and no one else will ever work on my tractor. Sadly, they are 2 hours away from me, but they have gone overboard for me when I need something done even though I didn't even buy the tractor from them. I would have to weigh out the difference of taking it up there or having them come to me if that day does come, I need something fixed. Right now, it's still under warranty so I guess I'll have them come here if I do have problems.
 
   / What does "take it to the dealer" mean for you? #80  
We regularly hear people say "take it to your dealer", or "it's under warranty, so call the dealer". To actually do any of that, what's involved for you? For me, it's a lot of work, a lot of $$, and a lot of time, so really it's the step of last resort. Here are some examples:

My Kubota dealer is 45min to an hr away. I could trailer my tractor or small excavator there, but that will consume roughly 6 hrs to get the trailer ready, load up, drive an hr (it will take the full hour pulling a heavy load), unload, drive home, and unhook and stow the trailer, then do it all again to pick the machine up once it's fixed. My larger excavator would have to be trucked, so I'd guess $500 each way, or $1000 total, and I can't get a tractor trailer in to my place, so I'd have to track the machine out to a location to meet the truck, which of course means the machine needs to work enough to move it around. And I'd still have to make at least one round trip to the dealer to go over the problem and make sure they know what's needed. So that's 3 hrs.

Then there is the actual dealer work. Most are very backed up, so a good chance your machine will sit for a week, if not multiple weeks before it's even looked at. Then any repairs will take at least another week because they will need parts and nobody seems to stock anything other than maintenance and common wear parts. And if their first "guess" at what to replace doesn't work, then you can stay another week while the guess again, and maybe again and again. And of course there is the possibility that the dealer won't be able to reproduce or actually fix the problem, and that you get the machine home and the problem still exists.

Mobile service is an option, but very expensive with billable travel and work time. But it is an option for spending $$ rather than spending your own time. But scheduling and time to repair isn't any better, and possibly worse.

The bottom line is that you will be out 3-6 hrs of personal work time, and up to $1000 in trucking, plus loss of use for weeks to months.

It's mostly the same for my Deere. The dealer is only about 20 minutes away which is a plus, but the tractor would have to be trucked. And from what I can tell they have zero direct experience with 6 series tractors, and only limited experience with 5 series.

All this is probably the biggest reason why I always end up doing work on the machines myself. It takes less of my personal time, and gets things running again faster.
So my 2009 John Deere 4320 started to run rough. I couldn’t figure it out so I took it to the dealer. They drained all the diesel out I had just put in and put more diesel in. They called me a couple days later and said they couldn’t figure it out and they called the John Deere techs and they said they wanted to run a bunch of tests. I asked how much it would cost. All they said was it is really expensive. I just went an picked it up and brought it home after paying a $719 dollar bill for basically nothing. It was a joke.
 

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