bmaverick
Elite Member
- Joined
- Sep 17, 2013
- Messages
- 4,144
- Location
- Beloit-WI
- Tractor
- Yanmar YM2610, retired JD 850, retired DYT-4000
Well, as technology increases, so does the cost to repair or even own a tractor.
If the tractor breaks, your dealer is the only one to fix the modern machine.
I'm happy to own a restored gray Yanmar now.
I can not afford dealer repairs.
Farmers lobby for the right to fix their own tractors
Farmers lobby for the right to fix their own tractors | News & Observer
Just some clips from the article ....
Farmers trying to fix the computers that run the machines could be in violation of the federal Digital Millennium Copyright Act. That means if a tractor stops working, the owner has no choice but to call the dealer. He can't check the system codes himself. 4 states consider requiring manufacturers to make diagnostic and technical information available to farmers, independent repair technicians.
John Deere, in a 2014 comment to the U.S. Copyright Office, said the people who buy its tractors don't own the software that makes them run. Instead, each has an implied license for the life of the vehicle to operate the vehicle.
In some cases, the company said, software could be subject to third-party restrictions and accessing it could violate copyright, trade secret or contractual rights.
But farmers work when they can, and every hour matters when storms, frost and mud leave them with few suitable days. A malfunctioning combine can bring the fall harvest to a standstill.
Waiting for a dealer to diagnose and fix a problem could mean hours, days or weeks lost.
If the tractor breaks, your dealer is the only one to fix the modern machine.
I'm happy to own a restored gray Yanmar now.
Farmers lobby for the right to fix their own tractors
Farmers lobby for the right to fix their own tractors | News & Observer
Just some clips from the article ....
Farmers trying to fix the computers that run the machines could be in violation of the federal Digital Millennium Copyright Act. That means if a tractor stops working, the owner has no choice but to call the dealer. He can't check the system codes himself. 4 states consider requiring manufacturers to make diagnostic and technical information available to farmers, independent repair technicians.
John Deere, in a 2014 comment to the U.S. Copyright Office, said the people who buy its tractors don't own the software that makes them run. Instead, each has an implied license for the life of the vehicle to operate the vehicle.
In some cases, the company said, software could be subject to third-party restrictions and accessing it could violate copyright, trade secret or contractual rights.
But farmers work when they can, and every hour matters when storms, frost and mud leave them with few suitable days. A malfunctioning combine can bring the fall harvest to a standstill.
Waiting for a dealer to diagnose and fix a problem could mean hours, days or weeks lost.