AKfish
Super Member
- Joined
- Oct 1, 2004
- Messages
- 5,419
- Location
- Alaska
- Tractor
- JD 5115M; JD 110 TLB; JD 4720; Ford 9N; JD X300R
That's a good deal! 220 hours is 3 oil changes... unless he worked the snot out of it and slacked on the maintainance that tractor has got years and years of trouble free work ahead of it.
If you're pretty close friends - then you should have a pretty good assessment of how he takes care of things. The best deals on used equipment come about from friends that upgrade, sellout or get divorced! You know the history of the machine (kinds of work) and how the previous owner managed the machine.
My guess (as other's have more or less said as well) is that he's likely got around $27K, maybe $28K into the package if every implement was purchased new and depending upon make/model. But, if it's all OEM John Deere - he's cuttin' more than $10K off what he paid.
I'd be a bit leery of expecting the 990 to handle heavy rock work (or any CUT for that matter...) the buckets and teeth will suffer right from the start unless you reinforce and harden everything and even then you'll have to measure each chore carefully before jumpin' in there and rippin' stuff up!!
The hoe is reasonably easy to take off and install - once you've done it several time. One of the keys is to locate the hoe on a firm, level spot and use good wood blocking. Makes it a snap to back straight into the hoe, hook up the hydraulics and raise, lower and release the pins and off you go!
AKfish
If you're pretty close friends - then you should have a pretty good assessment of how he takes care of things. The best deals on used equipment come about from friends that upgrade, sellout or get divorced! You know the history of the machine (kinds of work) and how the previous owner managed the machine.
My guess (as other's have more or less said as well) is that he's likely got around $27K, maybe $28K into the package if every implement was purchased new and depending upon make/model. But, if it's all OEM John Deere - he's cuttin' more than $10K off what he paid.
I'd be a bit leery of expecting the 990 to handle heavy rock work (or any CUT for that matter...) the buckets and teeth will suffer right from the start unless you reinforce and harden everything and even then you'll have to measure each chore carefully before jumpin' in there and rippin' stuff up!!
The hoe is reasonably easy to take off and install - once you've done it several time. One of the keys is to locate the hoe on a firm, level spot and use good wood blocking. Makes it a snap to back straight into the hoe, hook up the hydraulics and raise, lower and release the pins and off you go!
AKfish