I don't understand something.

/ I don't understand something. #61  
have a very old 89 hp 10,000 lb. tractor that I bought for sentimental reasons, but it is still a brute that builds adrenaline in your veins when the power is called for.
If you tried to sell it you probably wouldn't get much. Yet as you say, it's there when you need it. My father had a 1975 (?) Ford 4400 gas tractor like that. It was only a few years old when he bought it and got a lot of use for the first 10 years or so... not so much once he retired but it was always there. He thought about selling it a couple of years before he died but the first potential buyer gave him such a lowball offer that he parked it back in the barn and never moved again. After he passed away that was the first thing my brother wanted to sell, but I resisted. He kept showing me similar tractors on Tractor House and other sites thinking that $4000 was a good price. It was in the barn and had set for so long that I didn't want to mess with it inside for fear of fire, so had to wait for him to help me drag it out. It hadn't been in the daylight 5 minutes when somebody offered me a low price for it... I wasn't 100% sure that I could get it running so told him I'd think about it. Then my brother got involved so I had to agree to sell it... then found out it had to be running first. It took me a day to get it started, then it went down the road for a pittance... $3000 or some stupid amount like that.
 
/ I don't understand something. #62  
Is your dog house fully ready with indoor plumbing? You are going to need it.

I think pretty high of my dog. I don’t think living in his house would be that insulting.
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/ I don't understand something. #63  
Some people have more than one machine. My father's 2008 L2800 has >400 hours on it. I put that many on in two years. Yet when he bought it he also had 2 8Ns, a John Deere L, and his Ford 4400. He sold the L and one of the 8s, gave me the other because it needed quite a bit of work. Then he bought a nice running TO35 which he used for mowing and other chores.

Other people want a tractor but only use it for dedicated reasons. One person in town has an LS which he only uses for his garden. He's very frugal and intends to keep it for the rest of his life.

125 hours per year is quite a bit for a homeowner.
I have a Kubota L6060 with a bucket, grapple, box blade and more. I used it less than 100 hours last year, but it can do more work in a day that I could do in a month by myself.
 
/ I don't understand something. #66  
OK, I don't understand a lot of things, but that's another thread.


My little squirt is approaching 4 years old (wow, has it really been that long?) and it approaching 500 hours, or around 125 hours a year.. I don't use it very much. It sits for weeks sometime between tasks if I don't have to mow.

But I keep seeing threads and posts about 20, 30, 40 year old tractors with hour readings that work out to 20 hours a year or less. Is it that they have more than one machine and each gets lesser use than if they only had one? How do you spend $20,000 or so on something you use so little?
People spent 1/4 million on a boat they use, sometimes 4 months a year. Hours a year is deceiving. Some folks let their machine idle as they getting and do something before hopping back in. Others shut them off for a quick Pee break.
I have 100k miles on my motorcycle, friends have Bikes that are older then mine, 4k miles.
 
/ I don't understand something. #67  
OK, I don't understand a lot of things, but that's another thread.


My little squirt is approaching 4 years old (wow, has it really been that long?) and it approaching 500 hours, or around 125 hours a year.. I don't use it very much. It sits for weeks sometime between tasks if I don't have to mow.

But I keep seeing threads and posts about 20, 30, 40 year old tractors with hour readings that work out to 20 hours a year or less. Is it that they have more than one machine and each gets lesser use than if they only had one? How do you spend $20,000 or so on something you use so little?
I have 800 hrs in 8 years on a 72hp cab tractor. Mainly mowing 50 acres and road maintenance.

CT
 
/ I don't understand something. #68  
I also just enjoy bushhogging in the open air (no cab), even if it takes longer.
That's cute. 100 degrees, dust and bees. No thank you.

CT
 
/ I don't understand something. #69  
And we sold our 2014, Polaris 6x6 which about 100 hours on it. :unsure: (do wish we HAD a compact tractor)
 
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/ I don't understand something. #70  
I had a Ford 1700 that I bought in 1980 until I traded it on my Deere 3005 in 2009. It was my only tractor for all those years, and I used it a lot. But it only had about a thousand hours on it when traded. Retirement clearly has done something about my hours of tractor use. The 2009 Deere has 800+ hours on it, my Kubota B2650 bought new in 2019 has 300+ hours, and my Kubota B2710 bought used in 2011 has 1000+ hours, six-hundred of which are mine. Go figure.
 
/ I don't understand something. #71  
We had two older tractors without hour meters, a Farmall H and Ford 9N, both of which have no telling how many hours on them. Both are on their second engine rebuild. They were semi-adequate for the property I grew up on but inadequate for the steep, hilly 70 acres of trees, meadows, 1/2 mile private road with three short driveways, etc. where my parents and I live. My father had somehow managed to mostly maintain the property until he aged out of heavy manual labor and wouldn’t let me do anything in the way of maintenance outside of the couple of acres deeded in my name. The road got to being near impassable with his car so he just drove his truck all the time. The trails were impassable. A couple of the meadow areas were being taken over by saplings. It was just getting out of control.

So just out of curiosity, had a landscaper with a CTL and all the equipment needed plus some quote getting the place back in shape: about $15,000 and that didn’t account for ongoing chores such as brush hogging, ditch cleaning, trail and road maintenance, etc.

Renting gets really expensive and time consuming for jobs that are ongoing, even if intermittent.

So I have a Mule, a Kubota L4701 with third function and top/tail, a ZTR for the lawns, and a few implements in addition to the 3 point stuff my father already had. Dad gave me his flatbed equipment trailer in exchange for putting $750 and some sweat into getting it roadworthy again. About $50K in equipment. Between 190 ton of rock and materials to replace a failing retaining wall, about $6k in materials to get the place in reasonable shape.

When I first got the tractor, my father said it would probably have 5 hours on it in the first year. More like 150 hours in the first year. Second year, after the push to work down the deferred maintenance more like 40 hours.

That’s not a lot but part of that is because the Kubota is a good fit for the work. Recently had to clean out a ditch and touch up a gravel path. Manually would have been most of a day. Older tractors, a couple of hours. Rental: probably would have left it until there were more jobs to bundle with it and spent a whole day as just hauling back and forth would have taken half a day or better. Kubota with the hydraulic tilt and toplink: 15 minutes. Actually noticed it while moving beehives with the forks (boxblade already on it for counterweight) and spent 15 minutes after moving the bees before putting the tractor away. There’s just no substitute for that.
 
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/ I don't understand something. #72  
I see an awful lot of posts stating that you can't get a truck for under 80,000, yet never seem to have a problem finding them for half that. It all depends on how badly you "need" all of the bells and whistles.
I'm a sucker, give me my heated seats and hydraulic everything :p
 
/ I don't understand something. #73  
15 years ago I bought a new tractor in a crate complete with FEL and backhoe. $13K delivered to my door.

First task, move snow (my old tractor had developed major problems).

Second task, dig in new septic system. Backhoe paid for itself in one job. It has done many more since then.

15 years of moving winter snow, FEL paid for itself. Has only been off the tractor once but has been modified to do many tasks.

Of course neither implement work without the tractor.

My tractor is a tool, just like a hammer or the lathe. Used when I need it, sits when I don't.
I could have done by hand everything the tractor did, or I could have paid someone else to do it. I could have rented the equipment.

Renting would have cost as much money wise and been way more inconvenient. I can use my tractor any time I want for 2 minutes or a full day with no waiting.
I can't begin to estimate how much it would have costs to pay someone to do what my tractor has done or will do. Not to mention waiting for them to get to my job.
I also can't fathom how much back breaking labor it has saved me, not to mention the time factor.

All maintenance, modifications and repairs are done by me. Considering the initial costs and efforts it takes to keep it going, that little tractor has been one of the best investments I have ever made. The 20' beaver tail car trailer runs a close second. Both sit for long periods of time but when ya need 'em, ya need 'em!

850 tach hours in 15 years for a 3 acre hobby farm (and saving the neighbor's asses from time to time)
You detail almost exactly my experiences.
 
/ I don't understand something. #74  
I have a 50hp tractor and two acres and I maintain my mom's 40 acre place an hour away. 2 years old with 160 hours.
 
/ I don't understand something. #75  
A newbie, and after 2 years and 600 hours, I feel that there has been nothing in my life (relating to the types of projects that require this type of equipment) as economically, timely, and emotionally advantageous to help support my lifestyle than the Tractor. It's orange but color isn't necessarily a deciding factor.

These tools take on more, and deliver more than our inexperienced minds can fathom BEFORE we actually learn how beneficial they can be across the spectrum of work and maintenance (two very different aspects of use) that surrounds many of us.

Only 2 years... but 600 hours, hmmm... Given the beauty of hindsight, what would I change...

Well, issues close to me at this point, inflation. And although that doesn't typically come into play in an average environment of purchase, hindsight's eye would have said buy everything you think you will need within a 5 year window. If it's financed at 0% there is a minimal buy in at purchase in a higher price point for "matched to the manufacturer implements and equipment".

But that buy in quickly fades over a couple of years as general price increases roll in. (Which I opted out of ☹️). My mindset was always a minimalists view with respect to spending future income $ today ... as that is exactly what financing is.

This does matter moving ahead as generally there are lots of expenses we can generate by being able to do this type of work ourselves. Excavating and or repairing foundations, repairing sanitary systems, building barns or garages, maintaining not only our land but helping others as well..... those costs can prevent us from expensing implements as we move through that 5 year window. Forgoing the equipment that could actually better help us to complete those projects. Now I'm leaving leaving some of the labor for those same projects on the table, and on my back... (rear remotes, mowing decks, land planer/box, grapple)

Thinking ahead, rolling in those implements that could best get us through that 5 year period could have been extremely beneficial both short and long term.

The second realization that actually surprised me because I didn't think I could afford it, was buying new over used. But I had enough foresight to comprehend "long term" use, at least within the confines of my life span!

At this time... everything is almost "point and click". It's turnkey in its real sense. I don't have to repair it to use it, and using it doesn't mean I have to repair it (generally speaking -sans general maintenance). It starts cold or hot weather -extreme or not, and it runs, nonstop when I need it to.

And probably the third thing that I realized as important on my "I'm lucky I decided on that" list is comfort and convenience.

The top of that list is the cab. Hands down the most important part of my decision that I never knew I made correctly until after 2 full years of use.

Looking back at the bitter cold, blowing wet snow. Changing how I move firewood for burning (our main heat source) in that environment has changed from manual to tractor, and pulling a cart by hand in the bitter cold after shoveling a path in 3 ft deep
Snow to do that.... well, that change alone is priceless...

I did decide on a backhoe... yes at a cost that blew me away at the time. But of all the implements I didn't get, this one, one that I did get, has been the second most used and convenient items I could have ever imagined having on hand!

And last but not least are interior comforts.... having items in the cab that mimic the comfort of the things we might have close to us when doing other things. That brings a serenity to an environment that for all intents and purposes doesn't need that, but having a soft cloth seat to sit in... music, ample exterior lighting, and air conditioning.

There are no words to express how any or all of that can add to the overall satisfaction of getting work done in an environment that is anything but "cold metal".

Think long and carefully before you commit yourselves on what you think you might want/need. Not so much for those Musk types out there, for they can upgrade whenever they want and the costs aren't an issue.

But making the right choice for a lifetime investment as many here seem to have done in the past can be a difficult task. Good luck to everyone on their choices 🙂
 
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/ I don't understand something. #76  
I have an 80's (SAME) tractor and an early 00's (Farmtrac)tractor. I use each tractor for different tasks. The SAME is 75hp and the Farmtrac is 95hp. Since the Farmtrac is more comfortable to sit in for long periods, it gets used much more often. Also, having the SSQA makes it my goto for moving round bales and such. I replaced the hour meter on the Farmtrac before hay season (May) this year and have already put 115 hours on it. I'm not sure how many hours I placed on the SAME as I didn't make note of what it was at at the beginning of summer. Might be like 5 or 10 hours at most.
 
/ I don't understand something. #77  
15 years ago I bought a new tractor in a crate complete with FEL and backhoe. $13K delivered to my door.

First task, move snow (my old tractor had developed major problems).

Second task, dig in new septic system. Backhoe paid for itself in one job. It has done many more since then.

15 years of moving winter snow, FEL paid for itself. Has only been off the tractor once but has been modified to do many tasks.

Of course neither implement work without the tractor.

My tractor is a tool, just like a hammer or the lathe. Used when I need it, sits when I don't.
I could have done by hand everything the tractor did, or I could have paid someone else to do it. I could have rented the equipment.

Renting would have cost as much money wise and been way more inconvenient. I can use my tractor any time I want for 2 minutes or a full day with no waiting.
I can't begin to estimate how much it would have costs to pay someone to do what my tractor has done or will do. Not to mention waiting for them to get to my job.
I also can't fathom how much back breaking labor it has saved me, not to mention the time factor.

All maintenance, modifications and repairs are done by me. Considering the initial costs and efforts it takes to keep it going, that little tractor has been one of the best investments I have ever made. The 20' beaver tail car trailer runs a close second. Both sit for long periods of time but when ya need 'em, ya need 'em!

850 tach hours in 15 years for a 3 acre hobby farm (and saving the neighbor's asses from time to time)
OMG. In a crate huh ? That means you had to do whatever a dealer would normally have to do to rep that tractor for delivery. That's a heck of job and you needed some heavy lifting people or devices too. You have more spunk doing that than most of us...
 
/ I don't understand something. #78  
OMG. In a crate huh ? That means you had to do whatever a dealer would normally have to do to rep that tractor for delivery. That's a heck of job and you needed some heavy lifting people or devices too. You have more spunk doing that than most of us...
It wasn't really that hard. I had to use a front end loader at a nearby business to get the crates off of the semi-trailer and onto my trailer. I put the backhoe in the pickup box, the FEL on the front of my car trailer and the tractor on the back. Backed into the garage and dropped the ramps in the shop.

A handy-man jack and a floor jack was all I had at the time. Some boards, pipes and gravity did the rest. Once the FEL was on, it was easy to get the BH out of the pickup box. Did it all myself in a few days.

Doing the assembly myself was easy and I got to make sure it was done right. Also, ALL the factory fluids were swapped out with quality products. I don't think it would have made 100 hours on that foreign crap that was in it!
 

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/ I don't understand something. #79  
OK, I don't understand a lot of things, but that's another thread.


My little squirt is approaching 4 years old (wow, has it really been that long?) and it approaching 500 hours, or around 125 hours a year.. I don't use it very much. It sits for weeks sometime between tasks if I don't have to mow.

But I keep seeing threads and posts about 20, 30, 40 year old tractors with hour readings that work out to 20 hours a year or less. Is it that they have more than one machine and each gets lesser use than if they only had one? How do you spend $20,000 or so on something you use so little?
I spent a good chunk of my retirement savings on my used Kubota B2710, but there has been NO buyers remorse. I use it to plow my driveway in Winter, and drag it in Summer. I just bought a grapple to handle and cut my firewood, so I no longer have to climb onto the wood pile with a chain to the bucket. I may not put a ton of hours on it, but it's saved me any number of heart attacks and other injuries...
 
/ I don't understand something. #80  
I purchased my tractor new July1 2020, got it for a layover and pre Covid price. Now I have 272h on it, I do mowing jobs of pastures on the side and what not. But main intention was to clear snow on the 30 acre ranch I live on with 6 houses. Since I got a tractor we haven't had a real winter "/ Now I have a skidding winch for it, my tractor is priceless to me.
 

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