Folio
Bronze Member
I'm in my third season with my 3032e, coming up on 300 hours. I'm a rookie to modern tractors and bought it new without the benefit of the good advice on this site. My decision was influenced solely by the helpfulness and honesty of the JD dealer I bought it from compared to brief visits to other dealers in my area. I'm NOT a mechanic, so dealer service was my first priority, but I'm so new at all this that I didn't even ask anyone to allow me a test drive! So dumb!
At first, I was thrilled by the machine. It did everything I asked of it. I live on 30 acres of neglected, flat, dry land pasture bordered by a seasonal creek lined with heavy-duty oaks and mountains of dead fall. There was over 10 years of manure and straw to clean from several loafing sheds and hundreds of yards of fence line to replace. Old garden beds needed to be renovated and re-tilled. The driveway--a third of a mile long--needed to be re-conditioned. I've run into problems, to be sure, but I can't always tell how much is operator error and how much is machine limitation.
The more I worked this little workhorse, the more I've come to appreciate its advantages and hate its weaknesses. I'd love to have a grapple in front and a TNT on the back. No dice. I wasn't smart enough to ask for additional hydraulics in the original deal. I can't unload the FEL when I occasionally would like to. The ROPS doesn't fold down when working inside the loafing sheds or under low lying tree limbs. Its short wheel base makes working a box blade a time-consuming nightmare.
So I've recently found myself looking for alternatives. More horsepower? Additional hydraulics? A different color? A bigger bucket? A wider stance? A cab, even? More weight?
More I look around, though, the more satisfied I am with what I have. It's not perfect--could be much better than it is--but it's what I have and what I can live with.
Seems to me there's grace in compromise.
At first, I was thrilled by the machine. It did everything I asked of it. I live on 30 acres of neglected, flat, dry land pasture bordered by a seasonal creek lined with heavy-duty oaks and mountains of dead fall. There was over 10 years of manure and straw to clean from several loafing sheds and hundreds of yards of fence line to replace. Old garden beds needed to be renovated and re-tilled. The driveway--a third of a mile long--needed to be re-conditioned. I've run into problems, to be sure, but I can't always tell how much is operator error and how much is machine limitation.
The more I worked this little workhorse, the more I've come to appreciate its advantages and hate its weaknesses. I'd love to have a grapple in front and a TNT on the back. No dice. I wasn't smart enough to ask for additional hydraulics in the original deal. I can't unload the FEL when I occasionally would like to. The ROPS doesn't fold down when working inside the loafing sheds or under low lying tree limbs. Its short wheel base makes working a box blade a time-consuming nightmare.
So I've recently found myself looking for alternatives. More horsepower? Additional hydraulics? A different color? A bigger bucket? A wider stance? A cab, even? More weight?
More I look around, though, the more satisfied I am with what I have. It's not perfect--could be much better than it is--but it's what I have and what I can live with.
Seems to me there's grace in compromise.