Are we in the USA really this far behind?

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   / Are we in the USA really this far behind? #31  
From what I have seen on this forum many, if not most of the posters here, use their tractor as little more than a glorified lawn tractor. In fact I do much of what many here do with an old Craftsman lawn tractor and a shovel. Yes, I would much rather have a nice new CUT but I do not have the where-with-all to purchase one at this time. The tractors shown all do a specialized job and do it very well. In most cases far better than the typical compact tractor ever could.

Around here most farmers are doing tasks that tractors were made to do since their inception, and many tractors in use today were in use during the Carter administration. This is not the case in much of the world and new practices and tools are a must. So, yes, in many ways the US is very far behind the rest of the industrialized world.
 
   / Are we in the USA really this far behind? #32  
I know (y). It would be like a mini log skidder that could crawl through the woods anywhere the firewood is. I'll take mine with a front mounted mower/rotary cutter, snowblower and put my tiller on the back.
That's how I use mine...

 
   / Are we in the USA really this far behind? #33  
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   / Are we in the USA really this far behind?
  • Thread Starter
#34  
I should've have clarified that I wasn't referring to the articulation pivot points. I was referring to the tilt left/right pivot point. Yes articulated loaders work just fine, however the pivot is on the rear axle. While on these Isodiametric tractors, the front half pivots in relation to the rear half, to create the same articulation of the front axle on a conventional tractor. A loader puts tremendous stresses on this pivot point.


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However, these can still be used with a loader and most of the times with a forklift mast, just no the conventional way.

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Sure, it can have front loaders as well but these have very low lifting capacity. These tractors also have around 60% of the weight in the front.


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The yellow "3-Punkt-Lift" rear loader is rather cool.

Edit: I guess its not really rear mounted in the sense that the operator would be facing the loader. I like the engine weight counterbalancing the loader. Looks like the bidirectional would add some versatility even in compact tractors.
 
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   / Are we in the USA really this far behind? #35  
Not enough ground clearance and too short of tires for rough low traction ground
 
   / Are we in the USA really this far behind? #36  
How so? The only thing I can think of is headlight standards.
Look at any piece of equipment they make vs what we have.
 
   / Are we in the USA really this far behind? #37  
I know (y). It would be like a mini log skidder that could crawl through the woods anywhere the firewood is. I'll take mine with a front mounted mower/rotary cutter, snowblower and put my tiller on the back.
There is a reason skidders are BIG. put much weight out back of a small articulated, and steering control is all but gone.
 
   / Are we in the USA really this far behind? #38  
   / Are we in the USA really this far behind? #39  
From what I have seen on this forum many, if not most of the posters here, use their tractor as little more than a glorified lawn tractor. In fact I do much of what many here do with an old Craftsman lawn tractor and a shovel. Yes, I would much rather have a nice new CUT but I do not have the where-with-all to purchase one at this time. The tractors shown all do a specialized job and do it very well. In most cases far better than the typical compact tractor ever could.

Around here most farmers are doing tasks that tractors were made to do since their inception, and many tractors in use today were in use during the Carter administration. This is not the case in much of the world and new practices and tools are a must. So, yes, in many ways the US is very far behind the rest of the industrialized world.
Sometimes its due to extreme regulations for example, in Europe. Our older tractors here would not meet their safety standards or emissions standards. They may be forced to purchase new machinery, where we may be allowed to continue using equipment thats 20-30-40-50 years old.
 
   / Are we in the USA really this far behind? #40  
Sometimes its due to extreme regulations for example, in Europe. Our older tractors here would not meet their safety standards or emissions standards. They may be forced to purchase new machinery, where we may be allowed to continue using equipment thats 20-30-40-50 years old.
Here in Scandinavian the only requirement I know of is ROPS and a newly requirements for seatbelts. The ROPS was mandatory in 1964 and I do belive Sweden was doing the same in 1963, Denmark and Finland I do not know but probably around the same time. If you use the tractor privately this do not apply.
 
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