RickB
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Sep 18, 2000
- Messages
- 15,190
- Location
- Up the road from Dollar General WNC
- Tractor
- Just a Scag
There are 4 in 1's that will pair with your LA525 too.
I'd take a look at the Wicked Toothbar and all of the reviews/pics on the page. It is excellent for ripping up and digging.Is there an attachment that excels at pulling out shrubs and bushes such as Olive and Rose? I'm envisioning something like a grapple that opened and clamped vertically with tines close together so when clamped could grab on to the stalks near the ground. Maybe a narrow (say 16") QA front bucket or spade. My grapple isn't effective the stalks just slip through the tines so what I am mostly doing is crawling under to get a strap around the base then pulling them out.
Who said anything about at the same time? An operation that is big (think business farming, not hobby farming) is going to buy more volume on a regular basis.I kinda doubt that EA has many customers buying 4+ attachments at the same time.
I don't see them as having "high volume" customers.
I suspect the majority of their customers buy one, or possibly two, attachments on the same order.
EA production issues are likely primarily supplier related.
I would suspect that a BIG operation does not buy many CUT sized attachments, like those mfg. by EA.Who said anything about at the same time? An operation that is big (think business farming, not hobby farming) is going to buy more volume on a regular basis.
I do agree their issues are supply chain based.
I'd take a look at the Wicked Toothbar and all of the reviews/pics on the page. It is excellent for ripping up and digging.
Travis
I use this to pull brush and small treesView attachment 712027
Some big operations are an organized group of small operations. Rather than one gigantic acreage or facility, the business operates farms or does landscaping in many counties or states. While they may own some larger pieces of equipment, they use many compacts as they are more practical for many functions.I would suspect that a BIG operation does not buy many CUT sized attachments, like those mfg. by EA.
"Some"?Some big operations are an organized group of small operations. Rather than one gigantic acreage or facility, the business operates farms or does landscaping in many counties or states. While they may own some larger pieces of equipment, they use many compacts as they are more practical for many functions.
Yes? Not sure what is confusing. There are some big operations with many acres of contiguous land. They use things like a CaseIH 9250 and have scant use for small attachments. Other big operations are essentially a series of small plots that are better worked with a smaller tractor. Most big operations tend to have at least a few smaller units for specialized work."Some"?
Wow. Any chance they could ship it to Reno, Stockton, Marysville, Oakland etc? Or maybe a different carrier could have the capacity for it. FedEx Ground sounds expensive.Nice job Avenger. I ordered mine just about when you did. Was told it would be available for pickup in Sacramento on Sep. 7th. No such luck. Its been in the carrier's warehouse in Tennessee for 10 days and apparently nobody knew it. Estes said there warehouse in Sacramento CA. Is over full and cannot recieve any more deliveries. I had to find this out myself. EA is attempting to get FedEx to pick it up at the shippers place and get it going.![]()
Wow. That illustrates what I've read about transport problems being a major cause of supply chain difficulties. One article I saw said there aren't any more qualified drivers to be found anywhere to move the trucks, both big semi's that need a class A license, and even short-range box trucks.Expensive ain't my problem. It's EA's. Estes said all other terminals are full as well. Fedex looks like its my best bet at this point.