I know very little about tractors. I kind of assumed that the bigger, more expensive models such as the
L4701 and MX series might be more akin to trade tools where as the L01 series more akin to homeowner stuff. For that reason, I was entertaining the thought of buying a more "serious" machine and was surprised to find a steeper discount on used vs new on the bigger machines. I think I am discovering that my assumption that these bigger models are "trade tool" grade might be incorrect. Perhaps they are just fancy "homeowner" equipment and the "real" tractors don't start until you get into ag-business stuff.
Geotech, I think you were right in concept, the dividing line is just one step larger than you put it initially. In the Kubota product line, the "trade tool" models tend to start with the M series rather than L4xxx or MX - and most of the trade tool size are going to be 70 hp and above.
A case in point: Our Kubota
M59 TLB (Tractor/Loader/Backhoe) is large - but still argueably within the top end of the homeowner size. It has 60 hp, weighs 8000 lbs, & I doubt that it's resale will ever drop much below 2/3 of it's new price....if that. We just love that machine, it's a winner.
Contrast that with our John Deere 310 TLB. This is a true "trade tool" TLB built the same year as our Kubota
M59. Everyone knows the JD 310 - it's the standard yellow backhoe/loader that you see on construction sites everywhere in the world. As a "trade tool" our JD310 has a cab and every bell and whistle including 4wd & extendahoe, 50% more HP than the Kubota, and weighs twice as much. And yes, its resale value is pathetic. When I bought it used a few years ago it had already dropped below 1/3 of new price - and is worth even less than that today. BTW, it runs fine; needs nothing. Very comfortable and trouble free. Fires right up at -20, the heater, AC, and air suspension seat in the cab are awesome, controls are all push-button, and the loader is rated in tons rather than lbs.
You can buy a JD310 just about like ours for roughly the cost of a new Kubota B series. And ten years from now that B series Kubota will probably be worth more.
rScotty