oldpilgrim
Elite Member
My 3016 fit and finish is as good as any tractor I looked at before buying it..
My local Deere sold the Mahindra for a few years and then stopped all of a sudden, I don't know why, I don't think they sold many as I see very few around. I looked at them and they seemed to be pretty well put together. I would have considered one if there was a dealer close by but there isn't. Deere seems to have my neck of the woods locked down.
I guess that's a way to keep selling green. Take on another brand, don't push it hard, then drop the line because "it doesn't sell" and keep selling green. Rinse, repeat with another brand.
Out of all the small compact 40HP machines, I couldn't find a better earth-mover than the 4035HST. Loader, backhoe, and ballasted to the hilt gets ya somewhere around 8k. There are not many piles of stuff you can push against that you will not move. The traction it develops with loaded R1s is amazing. The balance of power, weight, and footprint is pretty much ideal for dirt work in tight quarters.
Tractors are good, any of the implements made by Kodiak suck.
The 1980s and 1990s Kubotas are where Kubota made a name for themselves. Very good machines.
ABSOLUTELY! I understand later units were not as good, though still good machines.
I'd say you understand wrong then. Do you have any data or hard facts to show that Kubotas "later units" produced after the 1990's are "not as good"?
No hard facts only comments from farmers who have them. These comments pertain to "Farm" tractors not compacts and refer to build quality not reliability
I certainly agree that the 80s and 90s Kubotas were very, very good tractors that cemented the brand and paved the way for improved tractors in general. I would not say that the quality of newer Kubotas has fallen off that standard at all. I will say that some competition has narrowed the gap. You can't go wrong with Kubota. Competition is good, lots of good brands these days.
I think you're absolutely right, although I think there is more to it than that, and more than what I stated above about them being just as guilty as everyone else at being a good solid profit seeking business that has resulted in a couple things they've had to make adjustments to after the initial release.
I think also there was a pretty major decline in quality of all manufacturing of products we had here in the states for quite some time in the 70s and 80s.
Brands that were some of the originators of the market were being bought out, going under, or started buying other manufacturer's stuff to put their names on. In contrast it was in the 70s and 80s that Japanese manufacturing was really taking off and starting to develop some genuinely high quality stuff. That's when most of the Japanese automakers also entered the US market.
Japan was the best it had ever been at manufacturing of all types at this time. To quote a character from a movie of the 80s "What do you mean, Doc? All the best stuff is made in Japan." which at the time was a very popular mindset and held a lot of truth. Kubota had a quality product when quality was a rather uncommon thing and made them as much of the tractor landscape as Toyota or Honda are in the auto market are today.
You are correct that in the subsequent years, the gap has been closed rather than any sort of decline in Kubota, Japanese manufacturing, or anything else. Manufacturing in all countries is flourishing, I think partly due to the "information age" where anyone that wants to learn a subject can do so. We have many amazingly smart people figuring out new technologies and new ways to apply our technologies and they can share and build off each other easier and more productively than any other time in history. I don't really think there are any inherently "bad" brands.
The 1980s and 1990s Kubotas are where Kubota made a name for themselves. Very good machines.
New owner picked up my B7200D last Weekend. A new Kubota similar to the Max28Xl goes around 20K in New England. I could not bring myself to spending that much.