DO NOT LOAN OUT YOUR TRACTOR... long

/ DO NOT LOAN OUT YOUR TRACTOR... long #21  
Loaning out a $20 shovel or $50 chop saw is one thing. A $15,000 (or higher) tractor is a whole other level of "borrowing".

A broken shovel is nothing. A broken tractor......not even close to the same.
 
/ DO NOT LOAN OUT YOUR TRACTOR... long #22  
Borrowed a rear blade from a friend of mine and he mentioned it would be good to flip the edge bar on it, since it was never done before. I used the blade and before returning it started to take the edge off.

Well, I was able to loosen up only two out of 8 plow bolts, plus some other bolts were just stretched and spinning free (holding the 3pt to the blade). Out came my grinder, I cut them all, replaced bolts with new grade 5 where possible and headed down to TSC for new plow bolts - but they did not have the size. I had to go to Deere dealership to get them, but as a result I returned the blade in better shape than it was - say it is a piece of my personal pride to fix things and a small pay back to friend.

As a side note, the rear blade works completely different now when the edge is sharper:)
 
/ DO NOT LOAN OUT YOUR TRACTOR... long #23  
CDsdad said:
No in-laws, they hate me.
I don't have in-laws, I have out-laws. At least that's what I call 'em :)
 
/ DO NOT LOAN OUT YOUR TRACTOR... long #24  
loaned a new extension ladder to a really good friend once .... He kept asking if I needed it back ....I didn't....he had it over a year -- no problem for me, if I needed it I knew where it was....One day he showed up with a brand new ladder. Something happen? I asked. No he said, "I borrowed a new ladder - now I'm returning a new one" Like I cared....but hey .. that's the way to be.
 
/ DO NOT LOAN OUT YOUR TRACTOR... long #25  
I have friends and family on both sides of this one. For the most part I try not to lend out anything that costs more than the friendship is worth. That way if it get's ruined I can right it off and keep my friends. For some friends that's about the cost of a sheer bolt and no more - they don't borrow stuff. I have one friend that would flat out replace anything with brand new stuff if it even got a scratch on it. That one goes both ways, we lend to each other, and take care of each other's stuff.

RobJ said:
my tractor is always broke when someone wants to borrow it. I can pull something off the engine in no time, flatten a tire.

Great line! :)

RobJ said:
But I do borrow stuff. People gladly loan me broken stuff because they know i'll fix it first and they;ll get it back running. not a big problem for me, I still get to use itand the don't mind paying for the parts.

Any chance you'd want to borrow my 6610? :)
 
/ DO NOT LOAN OUT YOUR TRACTOR... long #26  
Spiveyman said:
Any chance you'd want to borrow my 6610? :)

Maybe a little far to go and get it. :)

It's not as bad as this Int. 384 that graced the floor of my garage for a week is it?

Rob
 

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/ DO NOT LOAN OUT YOUR TRACTOR... long #27  
RobJ said:
It's not as bad as this Int. 384 that graced the floor of my garage for a week is it?

No, no it's not that bad. I'm just not very "handy" when it comes to fixing stuff. :) That's a hillarious picture! Did you get that thing running?
 
/ DO NOT LOAN OUT YOUR TRACTOR... long #28  
Back to the subject, I bet someone backed into it with a car when he was not there and drove away. If the guy has always been on the level and he's a friend you should believe him. That could bend the lift bars on the three point hitch.
 
/ DO NOT LOAN OUT YOUR TRACTOR... long
  • Thread Starter
#29  
ihookem said:
Back to the subject, I bet someone backed into it with a car when he was not there and drove away. If the guy has always been on the level and he's a friend you should believe him. That could bend the lift bars on the three point hitch.

No sign of any damage to the back of the hog, could they have rammed into the tire??

Doesn't appear to be any damage to the lift arms...amazingly. I do wonder about any stress it may have caused the axle and frame.

And he still says he hasn't any idea...I believe him.

Thanks for all the replies...
 
/ DO NOT LOAN OUT YOUR TRACTOR... long #30  
Yeah, I have had trouble with loaning things out too.
2 years ago I loaned my old tired Oliver 70 to a friend for a weekend for some post hole digging. He liked it so much that he wanted to buy it, but still no cash, and it hasn't come back home yet!

Needless to say, he won't be borrowing any of my other things!
 
/ DO NOT LOAN OUT YOUR TRACTOR... long #31  
Kendall69 said:
I can tell you tons of stories of borrowed equipment - AND LOST FRIENDS.

Even my Big Bobtail trucks friends and relatives ALWAYS want to borrow them, they're nearly 100k each. What I always say is Uhaul is $29.99 a day, here's $30.00 I'll be glad to pay. No one has ever taken my money.
The ole "my liability insurance won't allow it" always works.

And when they want to borrow money, sorry it's all tied up in CD's and the penaties would kill me.

And when they want my wife - just make sure she's home in time to cook dinner:)

Seriously though the liability of loaning out equipment IS SCARY at least. If you friend got hurt on your tractor, your friends insurance company would come after YOU, and your friend wouldn't have a say so in it. The manufacturer od the cutting equipment, tractor, dealer, you etc. would all be listed on the suit.

Sad as it might me, it's true.
The liability reason is the best advise and very true. I don't mind helping a friend out , but I will be on it and doing the work.
 
/ DO NOT LOAN OUT YOUR TRACTOR... long #32  
Swampvol, If you get a chance snap a picture or 2. Maybe if we saw the actual damage 1 or 2 might figure it out. Might save a good friendship? Frank
 
/ DO NOT LOAN OUT YOUR TRACTOR... long #33  
swampvol said:
.............the pin on the hog bent away from the tractor, looked at the other pin.. the same thing. looked further and noticed on both plates that hold the a-frame hitch to the front side of the hog had broken at the bolt slots...one on each side.

WTH did he do? My initial thought was that he backed the hog into something, but there was no sign of that at the tire or back of the hog. I called him up more po'ed than I am now and his response was "I don't know, I didn't hit anything..I had to tighten the top link to get the back of the hog up to get it on the trailer..did it buckle? I didn't feel anything??"

There is no way in **** he didn't feel it..whatever it was........

Here's a guess - if he was clearing trails and backed into some blow downs or other debris to push it out of the way, then lifted the three point hitch with the back end of the mower still stuck in the brush pile and unable to lift it, that could bend the pins and do the other damage you found. He might not have felt anything. The fact that he noticed the top link needed to be shortened later is proof it happened while he was using it. A rookie move, but quite possible. If this is actually what happened be glad the damage wasn't a lot worse - with all that leverage, the top link might have broken out.
 
/ DO NOT LOAN OUT YOUR TRACTOR... long #34  
He should fix it, wash and wax the tractor, and worship the ground that you walk on for at least three years. Bad borrower there, anything that I ever borrow always comes back to the owner better than when I borrowed it.
I learned that from a guy that borrowed an extention cord from me. It came back wound up better than it did brand new. Simple thing, but it means that he really appreciated it, even though it was just a cord.
My 2 cents...
:) :) :)
 
/ DO NOT LOAN OUT YOUR TRACTOR... long #35  
some one said "And when they want my wife - just make sure she's home in time to cook dinner"

I always say you can have mine if you take over payments
 
/ DO NOT LOAN OUT YOUR TRACTOR... long #36  
lug nut said:
There are three things that I won't loan out: my truck, my wife and my tractor.

As to what may have happened to your bush hog, maybe he hung it on a tree or stump?

My brother borrows my tractor sometimes and always brings it back full of fuel and clean. I'm beginning to wonder if he didn't borrow my wife :eek: . My 10 year old daughter is 5'2" and I'm only 5'8" (wife's 5'3") and my brother is 6'4" Hmmmm!!!!!!:D. At a picnic this past summer, someone asked my wife "Is her dad tall?" and of course my brother was close by and said we'll let you know once the DNA tests come back!!!!:D. He keeps going back to when we were kids and dad said "You boys share everything that comes in the house" (meaning toys, food, etc. he later had to amend the statement to exclude females!!!!!)

Anyways, back to the topic, he is the only one besides my dad that I allow to use the tractor if I'm not around. My other two brothers don't get it without the operator.
 
/ DO NOT LOAN OUT YOUR TRACTOR... long #37  
I have a simple rule. If I borrow anything out I go with it.
 

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