rScotty
Super Member
- Joined
- Apr 21, 2001
- Messages
- 9,502
- Location
- Rural mountains - Colorado
- Tractor
- Kubota M59, JD530, JD310SG. Restoring Yanmar YM165D
OK, we did need some tractor parts - and wanted to get out and see the countryside for a few hours yesterday anyway. So that was all the excuse needed to take a nice afternoon trip to look in on some old tractor dealers we've bought from years ago. John Deere (green) and Kubota both.
To my surprise, both dealers were well-stocked with new tractors and bling. Not so much so with spare parts, but from what I had been reading on TBN I hadn't expected to see that many new tractors on dealer lots.
The JD dealer sure had changed though. They had mostly new people with uncaring attitudes and no knowledge of what they had or not. They actually got rude when I handed them an invoice from a previous year and said I'd like to buy all the same maintenance parts & here are the part numbers...said all those part numbers were old and couldn't be cross referenced.
So JD was a disappointment. I used to love to window shop there, & maybe drive the new models around the lot...but today couldn't get out fast enough. Bought 4 gaskets, vowed to myself to do all my JD parts shopping online, and don't expect to ever go back.
Next stop was the Kubota shop - which was also well supplied with new tractors as well as some old faces that I remembered from 20 years ago. Friendly shop. It turns out that although there are lots of new tractors on their lot, they don't actually have many tractors for sale. Every time I pointed to another new one it was sold and either waiting for optional parts or for credit approval. Maybe that was the case at JD, too. Anyway, at Kubota they didn't know how long it would take to get another. "Several months at least", was their estimate.
Got back home and realized I'd bought $25 worth of parts and burned more than that in gas. Nice way to spend an afternoon, but sure made me realize the value of online shopping.
rScotty
To my surprise, both dealers were well-stocked with new tractors and bling. Not so much so with spare parts, but from what I had been reading on TBN I hadn't expected to see that many new tractors on dealer lots.
The JD dealer sure had changed though. They had mostly new people with uncaring attitudes and no knowledge of what they had or not. They actually got rude when I handed them an invoice from a previous year and said I'd like to buy all the same maintenance parts & here are the part numbers...said all those part numbers were old and couldn't be cross referenced.
So JD was a disappointment. I used to love to window shop there, & maybe drive the new models around the lot...but today couldn't get out fast enough. Bought 4 gaskets, vowed to myself to do all my JD parts shopping online, and don't expect to ever go back.
Next stop was the Kubota shop - which was also well supplied with new tractors as well as some old faces that I remembered from 20 years ago. Friendly shop. It turns out that although there are lots of new tractors on their lot, they don't actually have many tractors for sale. Every time I pointed to another new one it was sold and either waiting for optional parts or for credit approval. Maybe that was the case at JD, too. Anyway, at Kubota they didn't know how long it would take to get another. "Several months at least", was their estimate.
Got back home and realized I'd bought $25 worth of parts and burned more than that in gas. Nice way to spend an afternoon, but sure made me realize the value of online shopping.
rScotty