John Deere plastic hoods

   / John Deere plastic hoods #1  

WVAhills

New member
Joined
May 10, 2012
Messages
23
Location
West Virginia
Tractor
John Deere 4400
John Deere have to really be proud of the 4000 series tractors that you see in different places without hoods because people do not want to pay a ridiculous abhorrent price for a plastic hood made out of cheap GE made plastic. That is a statement for there quality. Good advertisement
Now that I vented I was wondering if anyone has heard of an aftermarket hood , has anyone ever been able to duplicate one out of metal, is there some type of laser imaging technology that one could be made ?
 
   / John Deere plastic hoods #2  
John Deere have to really be proud of the 4000 series tractors that you see in different places without hoods because people do not want to pay a ridiculous abhorrent price for a plastic hood made out of cheap GE made plastic. That is a statement for there quality. Good advertisement
Now that I vented I was wondering if anyone has heard of an aftermarket hood , has anyone ever been able to duplicate one out of metal, is there some type of laser imaging technology that one could be made ?

I am sure it would cost tens of thousands of dollars to scan and setup tooling for an aftermarket hood. Probably not enough demand to justify it.

I cracked part of the front hood on my smaller Deere yard tractor, and that experience and cost was one of the reasons I shopped Kubota later on when buying a big tractor. That Deere hood shattered and left jagged sharp edges, and was downright dangerous to be around. It needed to be replaced for safety reasons, not for cosmetics.

I am not a fan of those plastic body parts. I see zero advantage as an owner. I am sure Deere sees many advantages as a manufacturer.
 
   / John Deere plastic hoods #3  
I repaired all the cracks with a fiber glass kit from autozone. It reinforced the hood and made it more sturdy. It might crack agian but I will just put more fiberglass rather than buy an expensive replacement hood.
 
   / John Deere plastic hoods
  • Thread Starter
#4  
John Deere is making a FORTUNE on these hoods , at the time the plastic feed stock for these hoods was made I am guessing it cost about 80 cents a pound to make before it was molded into the shape of a hood. I bet they did not have over $5.00 a pound at the most in the plastic by the time it was molded into a hood, how many pounds does the hood weigh ? It should be illegal to price gouge like this..
They should have mixed thermoplastic rubber pellets/crumb in with plastic pellets. The thermoplastic rubber is strong and flexible ,it may have been $1.10 a pound back in the year 2000.
 
   / John Deere plastic hoods
  • Thread Starter
#5  
I patched mine for the last three years , but if the hood slips of your finger about 2 inches before it closes it should not be enough force to crack a hood 3/4 of the way across it.. What happened to Mr. John Deeres slogan "I will never put my name on a product that does not have in it the best that is in me " Pretty sad when a man who started the company making plows out of the finest steel around that his company would be putting cheap plastic hoods on the tractors that his company made. Oh well... I got that off of my chest for now.
 
   / John Deere plastic hoods #6  
Side grills, dash & all, my 5303 is going on 9 years now, so far so good, i know there will be the day though.

Ronnie
 
   / John Deere plastic hoods #7  
I am sure Deere sees many advantages as a manufacturer.
Yeah, they get to sell you multiple hoods that way. I thought those plastic hoods were unbreakable. Just watch John Deers, Kubota bashing videos. I have a 20 year old Kubota hood. It had suffered a few dings, but is still in one piece. My other Kubotas hood suffered a hard blow. It has battle scars, but is still in one piece. Has anyone considered a different brand hood? They are probably equally as expensive, but at least are metal.
 
   / John Deere plastic hoods
  • Thread Starter
#8  
I am partial to Deere as well , it aggravates me that they shoved one into the customer and they know it. I bought the John Deer X 758 signatures garden tractor for mowing purposes and I love , it has a much better hood etc , they finally started using more rubber in the hoods , impact resistant.
One of my favorite old tractors is a Farmall 140 , had it on the farm growing up , learned to drive on it.
 
   / John Deere plastic hoods #9  
I owned a dozen John Deere garden tractors since 1970 and only had 1 fiberglass hood break in the leading edge when I bumped a wall while parking, but it was a 1965 model garden tractor and that happened about 6 years ago. I dropped stuff on them accidentally occasionally, dropped a 5-10# rock out of a FEL onto a new hood and it just bounced off with no mark. In all those years I never broke a hood, but no doubt they can break if abused.

If I was fortunate enough to own a Japanese tractor with a steel hood that had a bunch of dents I would probably buy a new hood or pound it out and have a crappy looking tractor. Maybe I would paint it orange.
 
   / John Deere plastic hoods #10  
If I had a little green tractor that was probably made it Taiwan, then I would have already had to buy new hood. The 20 year old Kubota was owned by a city crew, and we all know what good care they take of their equipment. They also left it outside most of the 20 years. We all know what sun does to plastic. My Kubota hood is certainly a little worse for wear, but is still in one piece. The same 20 year old Kubota garden tractor had fiber glass fenders, and they are way worse than the hood. It the John deer hood is so good, then why does this thread exist?
 

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