gunny0628
Gold Member
I hate to weigh in on this since I have been listening to the arguments of gear vs. hydrostatic on these forums for 20 years. But...
It all depends on how you will use the tractor and the terrain you have. We have rolling terrain with a couple steep places, plus a ditch in which we place brush. I'll tell you it's comforting to be able to "creep" to the edge without worrying about it rolling into the ditch when changing directions. The hydrostatic almost serves as a "dead man" switch - foot off the pedal and the tractor stops mostly. In addition (at least on mine NH and soon-to-come RK) you can have right foot on the hydro and the left on the brakes for pinpoint control. As to the power loss, check the requirements of the implements you will be using - for non-PTO ground-engaging implements (box scraper, 2-bottom plow, etc.) and loader work, weight and traction are more the issues. The biggest PTO issue for me is brush cutter and rear tiller - 40hp engine/33hp PTO on my NH has never been an issue for 72".
Weight and HP are not a problem for me on the RK55HC.
My two-cents.
I’m going to be mowing 7 acres with a brush cutter and finish mower. Some smaller work with box blade and blade. And then loader work moving manure from one pile to another. I’ll be making a shooting berm. And moving and clearing deadfall trees and brush with the grapple. The loader is 72” and the grapple is 60”. The brush cutter and mower are 72”.